New Views Of Northrop Grumman’s Totally Notional Long-Range Stealth Fighter

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New Views Of Northrop Grumman’s Totally Notional Long-Range Stealth Fighter​

A series of new ads, which follow a similar one from 2021, give us new looks at Northrop Grumman’s conceptual NGAD-like tactical jet.
BYOLIVER PARKEN, TYLER ROGOWAY|PUBLISHED MAY 17, 2023 5:14 PM EDT
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Northrop Grumman has once again incorporated what seems to be its notional Next Generation Air Dominance (NGAD) crewed platform concept into its latest advertisements. This follows another ad from 2021 that teased the same design, although that ad didn’t offer a wide-angle view of it.


The main video itself, which is only 15 seconds long, plays on the company’s past ‘hangar’ setting. In it, we see three Northrop Grumman employees discussing women’s contribution to military aviation history at the company’s “Advanced Aeronautics Hangar.” Referencing the all-female crew of Grand Forks Air Force Base – which in 2014 recorded the longest, full-scaled pilotless flight by a military aircraft without aerial refueling (34.3 hours) – the trio goes on to ponder the possible contributions they each could make to aviation history in future at the company.

In the video, an E-2D Advanced Hawkeye airborne early warning aircraft can be seen to the right, the latest E-2 variant currently in use with the Navy which is set to continue flying as a “digital quarterback” well into the 2040s. Behind the E-2D, we see the nose of what appears to be an EA-18G Growler.
What we can only assume is a notional NGAD-like crewed tactical jet concept can be seen to the left in the video. Unlike Northrop’s 2021 ad, which shows the nose of what appears to be the same concept in greater detail, the new ad provides a better view of the airframe as a whole. As we stated in our previous piece, the aircraft certainly seems to fit the NGAD bill – being quite large with an assumed premium on range, payload, and low observability (stealth) with no vertical tails. Top-mounted low-observable air intakes can also be seen. The design also features a very long chine line around the airframe as well as a B-2-like 'beak' nose and a single pilot cockpit.


Close-up shot of the notional NGAD concept seen in the ad. <em>Northrop Grumman/YouTube screencap</em>

Close-up shot of the notional NGAD concept seen in the ad. Northrop Grumman/YouTube screencap

A view of the notional NGAD concept's nose seen in the 2021 ad. <em>Northrop Grumman</em>/<em>YouTube screencap</em>

A view of the notional NGAD concept's nose seen in the 2021 ad. Northrop Grumman/YouTube screencap

Two other videos from the same series give us a partial head-on view that has a strong B-21 Raider vibe and an even wider view at a distance of the design in question.


<em>Northrop Grumman advertisement screen capture</em>

Northrop Grumman advertisement screen capture

<em>Northrop Grumman advertisement screen capture</em>

Northrop Grumman advertisement screen capture

How accurate the concept seen in the ad is to what Northrop Grumman has come up with in terms of a crewed NGAD platform design is unknown. Although clearly there would be differences due to the sensitivity of such a design, it's still interesting to see what they are sticking in even as a placeholder. It’s also possible that the concept seen in the videos is loosely based on elements of a real-life NGAD demonstrator that has been flying with the Air Force for several years now. However, we still don’t know who built this experimental demonstrator aircraft. It could belong to Boeing or Lockheed Martin. And just because the demonstrator belonged to any one of these companies does not mean the production version that is now being competed will, as well.

While Northrop’s current workload producing the B-21 Raider next-generation stealth bomber is certainly high, producing the crewed component of NGAD would be a huge win for the company, and it certainly has an advantage with the work it has done on the B-21. That program is also, by most all accounts, relatively on time and budget, which is a stunning achievement. The crewed NGAD aircraft will likely have just as much in common with the next-generation bomber, with many shared technologies, as well as potential efficiencies, carrying directly over. There will also be other big opportunities beyond the crewed component surrounding NGAD as the program spins up, which Northrop would also want to be involved with.
Comprising a so-called ‘family of systems,’ NGAD refers to the multi-faceted U.S. effort to field next-generation tactical air combat capabilities. While procurement of a new crewed jet, currently under development, remains at the core of the NGAD program, it also includes the development and production of potentially thousands of Collaborative Combat Aircraft (CCAs), new weapons, sensors, networking and battle management capabilities, lasers, advanced jet engines, and more. What's more is that NGAD will fit together, at least to a large degree, with the shadowy Long-Range Strike (LRS) family of systems of which the B-21 is the centerpiece.

Artwork depicting Northrop Grumman's notional NGAD fighter concept has much in common with the CGI aircraft in the commercials. <em>Northrop Grumman</em>

Artwork depicting Northrop Grumman's notional NGAD fighter concept has much in common with the CGI aircraft in the commercials. Northrop Grumman

The Air Force and Navy also have parallel initiatives in developing their own NGAD programs, inclusive of the above components. The Air Force recently indicated it envisions a notional fleet of some 200 NGAD combat jets, which will cost “hundreds of millions” apiece. While the fleet size of similar aircraft for the Navy remains unclear, the service’s proposed budget for the 2024 Fiscal Year saw almost $1.53 billion allotted to supporting the development of a Next-Generation Fighter aircraft, or F/A-XX, under its own NGAD program. This was a major boost indicating just how fast the program is maturing.
With that said, the latest ad certainly contributes to the intrigue surrounding the NGAD program and Northrop Grumman’s possible involvement within it, or at least its ambitions to build the crewed component of it.
 
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Afif

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@Gary If this thing becomes real, pilots siting in 5th gen cockpits are gonna sh*t their pants!

Looks like straight from a sci-fi movie, just like YF-23 was.

Hope this time Northrop Grumman wins the competition for NGAD.
 
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Lordimperator

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@Gary If this thing becomes real, pilots siting in 5th gen cockpits are gonna sh*t their pants!

Looks like straight from a sci-fi movie, just like YF-23 was.

Hope this time Northrop Grumman wins the competition for NGAD.
They made manned ver. of EDI from "Stealth" movie
 

dBSPL

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Northop still has a very special place for me because of their innovative approach and crazy designers. I think if Northop had a leading role in the main combat platforms and not mostly a supporting role, US combat aviation would be 20 years ahead of where it is today. However, until these concepts become concrete, they pass through the hands of many generals waiting in the corridors of the US defence bureaucracy with hammers in their hands, and then they enter into a political competition (never underestimate Lockheed) in the end.


Also, not to spam the thread, but I would argue that the Turkish air force will put such an air superiority platform into service earlier than the US air force, even if it will be unmanned and have a lower lift capacity. When I say this, I am certainly not claiming that we are close to the accumulation and infrastructure of the USA, which has more than 50 years of experience in this field. In the 1990s, there were many companies working on almost every detail of some of the projects we are currently working on with DARPA funding. This is not what I mean. However, I don't know whether it will be called ANKA-4 or KAAN-II, we will succeed earlier.
 

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U.S. Air Force to award sixth-generation fighter contract in 2024​

Reuters
A U.S. F-22 Raptor, based out of Al Udeid Base in Doha, Qatar, receives fuel from a 28th Expeditionary Air Refuelling Squadron KC-135 Stratotanker during a combat air patrol mission over an undisclosed location in Southwest Asia

A U.S. F-22 Raptor, based out of Al Udeid Base in Doha, Qatar, receives fuel from a 28th Expeditionary Air Refuelling Squadron KC-135 Stratotanker during a combat air patrol mission over an undisclosed location in Southwest Asia, in this picture taken September 13, 2019 and released by U.S Air Force on September 18, 2019. Russ Scalf/U.S. Air Force/Handout via REUTERS



May 18 (Reuters) - The U.S. Air Force intends to award a contract in 2024 for its sixth-generation fighter jet as it races to retain its edge against rapid advances in Chinese military technology, the service said on Thursday.
Lockheed Martin Corp (LMT.N), Boeing Co (BA.N) and Northrop Grumman Corp (NOC.N) are expected to compete for the Next Generation Air Dominance program, which will replace Lockheed's F-22 Raptor with a fighter built to battle alongside drones.




The announcement came amid a
Boeing, Lockheed and Northrop did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
The Air Force released a classified solicitation to industry on Thursday laying out the technical requirements. Details have been mostly kept secret but in 2020 the Air Force disclosed that at least one prototype of the jet had flown.
The new fighter will "survive, persist, interoperate, and adapt in the air domain, all within highly-contested operational environments," Air Force Secretary Frank Kendall said in a statement. "No one does this better than the U.S. Air Force, but we will lose that edge if we don't move forward now."

The Air Force plans to spend $2.3 billion on the program in fiscal 2024, and an additional $595 million to continue engine development for the new fighter.

Reporting by Valerie Insinna Editing by Chris Reese
 

Gary

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@Gary If this thing becomes real, pilots siting in 5th gen cockpits are gonna sh*t their pants!
How am I not surprised ?
Looks like straight from a sci-fi movie, just like YF-23 was.

Hope this time Northrop Grumman wins the competition for NGAD.
tbh, it looks .....mehhh

Northrop has a track record over delivering B-21 within budget and on time, so maybe give them a chance is a the way to go.
 

NEKO

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Air intakes is located above, is that even a good idea? Its a fighter right and not a bomber/strike/attack plane?
 

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