News | Oct. 3, 2022

First Flight Test of Mission Computer Alternative on T-45 Successful

By Air Combat Electronics Program Office

The Navy’s Air Combat Electronics program office recently completed the first test flight of the T-45 Goshawk trainer aircraft’s Mission Computer Alternative (MCA), which is intended to improve readiness for the legacy system.

The program office collaborated with the Naval Undergraduate Flight Training Systems program office, which manages the T-45 aircraft, and Air Test Evaluation Squadron (VX) 23 to execute the March 30 flight at Naval Air Station Patuxent River, Maryland, and test out the design replacement for the existing Mission Display Processor.

“The flight was flown successfully, proving MCA is on the right track,” said Lt. Alex Mensing, VX-23 test pilot. “We know what needs to be improved and will continue to work together to bring an accurate and reliable system to the fleet.”

Naval Undergraduate Flight Training Systems program office sought out MCA as a mission computing solution primarily to address the potential obsolescence issues the Navy may face on an aging platform. They plan to leverage the MCA to support additional capabilities such as required navigation performance/area navigation (RNP/RNAV).

The MCA is a Hardware Open Systems Technologies (HOST) conforming mission computer that drastically reduces schedule for regular hardware and software updates associated with mission computing. It can be economically and rapidly adapted to support platform requirements and processing needs. The system is on track to provide RNP/RNAV in the near future.

“The Navy developed this mission computer technology using [Open Architectures] standards, bringing the government one step closer to getting much needed capabilities and functionality to the fleet cheaper and faster,” said Capt. Margaret Wilson, Air Combat Electronics program manager.

The Navy will leverage investments made during the MCA’s development to support and minimize development cost of future MCA iterations, and lower the hardware and software logistics lifecycle funding footprint by using common, commercial-off-the-shelf hardware and software development designed to OA standards.

“We are very excited to be leading the way in bringing OA standards to the warfighter with the MCA,” said Jeff Williamson, the program office’s common mission computers team lead. “This technology will enable accelerating new capabilities to the fleet, at reduced cost, while paving the way for it to be employed in the Naval Aviation systems that our warfighters already have.”

From the Air Combat Electronics Program Office.