Hypersonic aircraft company Hermeus has completed testing of its first fully-integrated vehicle, Quarterhorse Mk 0. This non-flying prototype validates all major aircraft subsystems in a real-world environment.
Mk 0 is the first of four aircraft in the Quarterhorse programme, which will culminate in a vehicle capable of surpassing the all-time airspeed record held by the SR-71. Each aircraft will progressively increase in complexity allowing, Hermeus to distribute programme risk across multiple vehicles and accelerate learning.
The vehicle was designed and constructed within six months, and all test objectives were completed in just 37 days of deployed testing.
Among the objectives completed were:
Testing took place at the Arnold Engineering Development Complex (AEDC) in Tullahoma, Tennessee. Hermeus made the deliberate decision to perform these ground test operations on an Air Force base, allowing the team to interface directly with Air Force range and regulatory authorities.
“This was the first time our Flight Test team had an opportunity to work in a deployed test campaign with external stakeholders,” said Hermeus vice president of test, Don Kaderbek. “The more the team works together and establishes their battle rhythm, the smoother flight testing will go.”
“Leveraging rapid and iterative design is how Hermeus will accelerate aircraft development on timelines that are relevant to our customers,” commented Hermeus CEO and co-founder, AJ Piplica. “Test campaigns measured in days instead of months or years, represent the pace required to mature hypersonic technology and field transformative aircraft.”
Hermeus’ first flight vehicle, Quarterhorse Mk 1, is actively being built and scheduled to fly in 2024.