DuPont Aerospace DP-1
The DuPont Aerospace DP-1 was a subscale prototype for a fixed-wing VSTOL transport aircraft, intended to take off and land like a helicopter and fly like an airplane. The fullscale aircraft, named DP-2, was designed to travel at high subsonic speeds with a greater range than its rotary-wing equivalent, and to allow troops to rappel from the aft cargo ramp. The development of the 53% scale DP-1 aircraft was originally funded in the early 1990s as a backup to the V-22 Osprey program, which was undergoing significant technical and political challenges.[1] During the construction of the test aircraft, program management changed the requirements, and mandated that the vehicle be tested as a UAV. This change added significant cost and time to the project, but in September 2007, the DP-1 autonomous prototype achieved sustained, controlled tethered hovers of 45 seconds at the Gillespie Field test site.[2]
| DP-1 | |
|---|---|
| Role | VSTOL transport demonstrator | 
| National origin | United States of America | 
| Manufacturer | DuPont Aerospace | 
| First flight | September 2007 | 
| Produced | 1 | 
On June 13, 2007, the U.S. House Committee on Science and Technology held a hearing about the fate of the DP-2.[3] In August 2007, funding was finally cut, after a total of $63 million spent over nearly two decades.[2]
References
    
- Slattery, Chad (May 2014). "The Puzzle of Vertical Takeoff". Air & Space/Smithsonian. Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved 2017-11-18.
 - Warwick, Graham (December 2, 2007). "DuPont's V/STOL makes the headlines again". FlightGlobal. Retrieved 2013-06-30.
 -  "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-06-12. Retrieved 2007-06-12.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) 
- "DP-1 UAV achieves autonomous tethered hover"
 - "The Aircraft That Can't Fly; Congress' $63 Million Boondoggle" (ABC News)
 - DP-2 Profile at Global Security
 - "Hunter's Folly: $63 Million Aircraft Can't Fly" (Wired)
 - "Heavily criticized plane is defunded" (Copley News Service)