Pentagon Makes Surprise Move
Orders for the V-22 Osprey and all its variants have been
canceled by every military branch. One former booster in the
military, who requested his name be kept from you, explained, "When
I was a young Lieutenant, the Osprey looked like a pretty good bet
-- fast, VTOL, and all that. But, as I matured and the Osprey
didn't, it started to look like less of a good thing."

He continued, "Now that I'm wearing these two stars, I realize
just how long it's been. Heck, that program's been canceled more
often than my credit cards -- and its track record is just as
bad."
Operating limitations aside, the Osprey could be a good machine,
if it just didn't have to perform in combat and near-combat
situations. The BA 609, which incorporates a lot of Osprey
technology, promises to be one great machine, for the handful of
PGA stars who can afford one.
What to do with all those V-22 parts?
Because the Osprey was, above all, a jobs program, the fact that
nobody really wanted one wasn't an obstacle to its production. The
result is several warehouses, full of Osprey parts -- and only one
way to move them.
The world's biggest kit aircraft!
The DoD has just announced that the V-22 Osprey
will be offered as a kit aircraft, known as the 'Osprey
EX.' Since it's really already been paid for seven or
eight times, the Pentagon can offer civilian buyers who sign the
proper waivers some really good deals -- just 3 cents a pound over
scrap value. That makes an Osprey kit cost just $24,000, plus
crating and shipping (typically about $55,000).
In a flight test by a leading kit airplane magazine,
the writer extolled the handling of the Osprey: "Virtually
everything I imagined it could do, it could do -- faultless hover,
gentle descents -- and, with no loading except me and the DoD's
sales rep, it also demonstrated incredible vertical performance.
This machine accelerates (empty) like it's running from dozens of
angry families!" [Note: the key word was, 'imagined,' as no one
from the magazine actually was ever in such a machine.
That's not a requirement of their 'test pilots,'
however --ed.]
It's not a trivial project...
Estimated assembly time, once the proper tools are
procured (tool kit, $63,529) is approximately 70,000 hours. There's
a two-hydraulic-system option (not recommended) that takes
just 62,500 hours to assemble. The DoD recommends the Osprey EX
model be assembled in a hangar. 14,000 square feet is considered
"an adequate size," workspace, according to our official
source.
Builders shouldn't be discouraged by the high build times --
there's a 'quick-build' kit available, as well.
For just an extra $32 million, a '51% kit' is offered. That cuts
assembly time down to just three lifetimes or so. Most customers
are opting for this, we're told.
The DoD will not be maintaining any spare parts for the machine;
but its current inventory, built over two decades, should last
"long enough for the Zoche engines to come on
line, anyway," according to our man at the Pentagon.