Scott C. Donnelly
Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer at Textron
Thanks, David, and good morning, everyone. During the quarter, Aviation experienced a strike on the expiration of its existing labor agreement with the IAM. The work stoppage caused disruptions to our aircraft production and service in our Wichita facilities. On October 20, the IAM ratified a new five-year contract ending a four week strike. As employees return to work and production and delivery activities recover, the resulting disruptions will impact our 2024 financial results. In the quarter, Aviation delivered 41 jets, up from 39 last year and 25 commercial turbo props, down from 38 in last year's third quarter.
Aftermarket revenues grew 5% for the third quarter of 2023 versus 2023 and our year-to-date aftermarket revenues were up 8% as compared to prior year. Aviation continued to see strong demand in the quarter booking over $1 billion in new orders. Backlog grew $162 million ending the third quarter at $7.6 billion. During the quarter, Aviation delivered the 400th Cessna Citation Latitude. Latitude has been the best-selling aircraft in the midsized jet segment since it was introduced into service in 2015.
At NBAA this week, Aviation also announced the Gen 3 updates of the Citation M2, CJ3 and CJ4 reflecting continued investments in this product portfolio. At Bell, revenues were $929 million, up $175 million over last year and segment profit was $98 million, up $21 million as compared to the third quarter last year. During the quarter, the U.S. Army announced approval of Milestone B for the FLRAA program. This significant milestone establishes FLRAA as a program of record and transition the program to the engineering and manufacturing development phase. This phase includes continued digital modeling, detailed hardware and software design and fabrication of hardware as Bell proceeds to critical design review and the first flight planned for 2026. As a result of Milestone B and the subsequent EMD award, Bell's backlog grew by $2.3 billion in the quarter now totaling $6.5 billion.
On the commercial side, Bell saw increased order activity in the quarter. Bell delivered 44 helicopters, up from 23 in last year's third quarter. Textron Systems revenues and profits were slightly lower compared to last year. In the quarter, Systems completed two major milestones in the Army's FTUAS program, a modular open systems approach conformance evaluation and a prototype aircraft flight demonstration. The team will now proceed to option four of the competitive program, which includes delivery of a production representative aircraft system for Army testing and evaluation.
Systems expanded its U.S. Navy Aerosonde operations with awards for two new land-based sites and three new maritime sites. Also in the quarter, Systems delivered two prototype ripsaw and three robotic vehicles to the U.S. Army for testing as part of Phase 1 of the robotic combat vehicle program. The Army is expected to down slide to Phase 2 for production represented prototype in mid-2025.
Moving to industrial. The segment experienced lower revenues and operating profit in the quarter driven by continuing softness in specialized vehicles end-markets. Specialized vehicles will continue to take cost actions to align with lower production volumes.
Moving to Aviation. The Nuuva 300 continued integration testing, including a full system power on and flight simulation run conducted this quarter. The team is now focused on preparations for the aircraft's first hover flight, which is expected in Q4 of this year. Also, during the quarter, the Nexus eVTOL program continued to progress on the wing and empennage assemblies and outfitting of the ground control station, preparation for the start of flight testing, which is expected to begin in 2025.
Finally, as we announced yesterday, we are making some important executive changes at Textron. Our CFO, Frank Connor, has notified us that he intends to retire from the company on February 28, 2025. Dave Rosenberg, our current Vice President and Investor Relations, has been elected as our new Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer succeeding Frank. Dave has more than 24 years of experience in the Aviation industry and has served in a series of financial strategy positions at Textron Aviation, Beechcraft and its predecessor companies. In addition, Scott Hegstrom has been elected Vice President of Investor Relations replacing Dave. Both elections are effective March 1, 2025. I want to thank Frank for his outstanding leadership and significant contributions to Textron during the 15 years and to congratulate Dave and Scott on their new appointments.
With that, I'll turn the call over to Frank.