I'm curious why the idea came up that you won't need a plane guard for a V-22. Over to the LSOs to talk about what would be needed to keep COD guys night current. I do know that the C-2 and S-3 airframe have trapped at night without spontaneously exploding, so be that as it may. I see speed and pressurization as an issue involving range. See below.
You can fit a C-2 into the standard deck cycle, usually commencing first or last. You can't do that with a V-22; it lands like a helo and would fuck up everything. This isn't a showstopper per se; we land helos in between, before, or after the fixed-wing deck cycle all the time. But it's one more thing to make the Handler up the dose on his/her blood pressure meds. But as I understand it, the plopter has some pretty vicious downdraft compared to a -60 series. What does that do to the Prowler or soon-to-be baby Hornet maintainers who are the "low man on the scrotum pole" getting kicked in the balls trying to get the "comer" 30X/40X/50X up for the COMPTUEX Alpha Strike next cycle? Do they have to strike below and lose maintenance time? I'm asking because I don't know.
Is the plopter fuselage big enough to carry a J52, F404, F414, or F135? I'm asking because I don't know. If not, you'll have to sling that bad boy, and what does that do to range/max speed? I'm asking because I don't know. Otherwise, find some other way to get engines to and from Mom after AM3 Schmuckatelli doesn't do his PC preflight properly and you FOD an engine during a night go. Seen it happen. Oh, did I mention you're stuck in the ass-end of nowhere after the evil dictator got uppity again? Great, your logistical chain is utterly fooked, you haven't had fresh vegetables for 3 weeks, and there are no dip clearances for a lilypad between you and say, Bahrain. Can the plopter sling-load that engine out to Mom, or does it cut its range enough that you have to get it FedExed to USS Supply Ship for the scheduled UNREP? Again I'm asking because I don't know. Seen that happen, thankfully not at the same time the engine actually got FODed. But I don't think it's a coincidence that Lockheed showed the C-3 loading an F-135 engine in its propaganda piece. Didn't they have an "oh shit" moment when they realized they'd made the engine too big to fit on a C-2? Let's fix our fuckup by selling the government a new airplane which fits the engine that was too big for the last one. Brilliant!
Enough about engines. Say something else totally unexpected breaks, and the only part is at NADEP or the boneyard. Seen it happen, with a jet down for a week plus. Logistics are king for Naval Aviation maintenance. The delta between the time it takes the C-2, V-22 or C-3 to get the needed part to Das Boot can directly impact the weight of the hammer CAG has available to launch an alpha strike on Day 1 against some mustachioed psychopath with a fancy uniform and bad haircut. Effective CODs == up jets faster, and that's not even getting into the morale implications of mail and fresh lettuce. After 2 months in the Red Sea, I will never look at a fresh salad the same way again.