Meet the X-76, DARPA’s “SPRINT” Tiltrotor Plane
Meet the X-76, DARPA’s “SPRINT” Tiltrotor Plane
The X-76 is not intended for mass production or combat service. Instead, it will serve as a testbed for new aerial innovations, which could be seen on future combat aircraft.
DARPA has officially designated the experimental aircraft for its SPRINT (Speed and Runway Independent Technologies) program as the X-76, marking the symbolic next step in an ambitious effort to reshape military aviation. Bell Textron is developing the plane, which recently passed its “Critical Design Review” and is now entering the build phase.
The program’s goal is straightforward in concept, but technically difficult: to eliminate the long-standing aviation trade-off between speed and runway independence.
Why Is DARPA So Interested in Tiltrotor Aircraft?
For decades, military planners have faced a choice: develop fast fixed-wing aircraft that require long runways, or slower, vertical-lift aircraft like helicopters that can operate anywhere. Runways represent a major vulnerability in wartime: fixed air bases can be targeted by missiles or air strikes, whereas dispersed operations are difficult to execute with traditional aircraft.
To overcome this problem while preserving the better qualities of fixed-wing aircraft, the Department of Defense has previously invested in tiltrotor aircraft such as the V-22 Osprey, which can take off and land like helicopters but fly at speeds closer to a fixed-wing aircraft. DARPA’s SPRINT program seeks to push the envelope further on the tiltrotor design.
What to Know About the X-76 Design
The X-76 is a stepping stone more than a platform intended for military use. It is not being designed to serve as an operational aircraft, but merely as a technology demonstrator, to test new propulsion and flight concepts. The program is a joint effort between DARPA and US Special Operations Command (SOCOM). Bell Textron was selected in 2025 to develop the aircraft after competing concepts were evaluated.
The X-plane designation places the X-76 in a long lineage of American aircraft that were used to push the envelope of aerospace technology—including the sound barrier-shattering X-1, the X-15 hypersonic rocket plane, and the X-37B space drone, which remains in use today.
From a technical perspective, the most distinctive feature of the X-76 is the Stop/Fold rotor system, which allows the aircraft to transition between helicopter-like and jet-like flight modes. For the vertical flight phase, wingtip prop-rotors generate lift allowing the aircraft to hover and take off vertically like a helicopter. While transitioning between phases after sufficient forward speed is reached, the rotor blades stop spinning, feather, and fold into nacelles. Then, for the cruise phase, drag is reduced dramatically as a separate turbofan engine provides high-speed forward flight. This system was designed to overcome rotor drag at high speeds—one of the key aerodynamic challenges of vertical-lift aircraft.
DARPA has set a series of aggressive performance goals for the X-76 demonstrator:
- A cruise speed of 400–450 knots (460–518 mph);
- Vertical takeoff and landing capability;
- The ability to operate from austere or unprepared surfaces
If successful, the SPRINT program could transform how military forces deploy aircraft—granting operational flexibility through aircraft that could launch from dispersed locations, while reducing dependence on large airbases. Runways would no longer be critical, easy-to-target chokepoints, and aircraft could be relocated rapidly to a diverse array of locations.
The X-76 is just a stepping stone, but if the concept works, the scaled-up application of the technology could soon change the way wars are fought.
About the Author: Harrison Kass
Harrison Kass is a senior defense and national security writer at The National Interest. Kass is an attorney and former political candidate who joined the US Air Force as a pilot trainee before being medically discharged. He focuses on military strategy, aerospace, and global security affairs. He holds a JD from the University of Oregon and a master’s in Global Journalism and International Relations from NYU.
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