Ribbon Cutting at Pt. Mugu Naval Base for MQ-4C Triton

A historic ribbon cutting ceremony took place last Thursday morning at Naval Base Ventura County for a special surveillance system. The Unmanned Patrol Squadron One Nine (VUP-19) celebrated the base’s re-purposed, WWII-era hangar, now housing two MQ-4C Triton unmanned aerial vehicles.

“Today is really a historical event for the Navy, Naval aviation and our nation,” said Rear Admiral Trey Wheeler, Commander Patrol and Reconnaissance Group Pacific. “The Triton will provide our fleet commanders an awareness of the maritime battle space that we’ve never had.”

The first Triton arrived at the base in November 2017; the second arrived in April 2018.

The aerial vehicles are used, worldwide, for maritime surveillance and as a patrol aircraft. The system provides real-time intelligence during reconnaissance and rescue missions as well as search excursions over both land and sea.

“It’s a next generation system,” said Brian Chappel, Sector Vice President and General Manager of the Autonomous Systems Divsion at Northrop Grumman. “It’ll fly up to 60,000 feet. It can go many thousands of miles, be up in the air for 30 hours at a time all while keeping watch over large portions of the ocean and helping the Navy understand where threats are and keep our ships and sailors safe.”

Triton is powered by an industrial Rolls Royce engine and its 131-foot wingspan allows the unmanned aerial vehicle to fly long distances for more than 24 hours without refueling. A ground crew of four is required to operate the system.

Chappel told NewsChannel 3 that the VUP-19 Squadron is beginning its operational test at Pt. Mugu and is about ready to go operational.

“Anytime you have such a game-changing capability as this, you really need to make sure you’re getting it right,” Chappel said. “The folks here at Pt. Mugu and the Navy are going to be helping us out to test it and get it ready for that operational deployment.”

Photo:The first two operational MQ-4C Triton aircraft at home in their newly refurbished hangar at Naval Base Ventura County, Point Mugu. The insignia of Unmanned Patrol Squadron (VUP)-19, the Navy’s first unmanned patrol squadron, can be seen behind them – Northrop Grumman

Source: KEYT

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