SPACE MART SPACE DAILY SPACE WAR TERRA DAILY MARS DAILY SPACE TRAVEL GPS DAILY ENERGY DAILY
  Space Industry and Business News  
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
  
Search All Our Sites at SpaceBank
Aviation Transformation Includes New Aircraft, Upgrades

Bell's ARH.

Washington (SPX) Aug 30, 2005
Many changes are in store for Army aviation, beginning with a contract for 368 new Armed Reconnaissance Helicopters. "ARH is the next significant step in modernizing and transforming Army Aviation," said Col. Mark Hayes, TRADOC system manager for reconnaissance and attack, located at Fort Rucker, Ala.

The $2.2 billion contract with Bell Helicopter Textron Inc. -- awarded July 29 with a signing ceremony Aug. 29 -- calls for delivery of 38 of the new aircraft by fiscal year 2008, with the remainder delivered by fiscal year 2013.

"The ARH will have a larger, enhanced engine," said Col. Greg Gass, deputy director of the Army Aviation Task Force in the Pentagon.

In addition, an upgraded tail rotor from the Bell 427 provides greater directional stability and control authority and the upgraded glass cockpit provides greater accuracy, has better display ergonomics, and is more user friendly than the current display, said Gass, comparing it to the current OH-58 Kiowa helicopter.

The ARH will also incorporate an exhaust infrared suppressor. "This device suppresses heat from the helicopter so that it is less detectable by the enemy," Gass said.

"The ARH will replace the current Kiowa Warrior, one for one," said Lt. Col. Neil Thurgood, program manager for ARH, located at Redstone Arsenal, Ala.

"The normal flying hours for the Kiowa is 14 a month, but it is flying about 70 hours a month per aircraft," said Gass. "That is a lot of strain on an aircraft. The ARH can sustain the current flying requirements."

The ARH is one of many initiatives resulting from the cancellation of the Comanche project in 2004, Gass said, which took the Army into a new phase of Army Aviation Transformation.

"We wanted to optimize our fleet for the joint fight and reduce logistics," said Gass. "We are restructuring our maintenance and sustainability so that it won¿t be so burdensome ¿ more flexible, more deployable, more agile and more modular."

"The decision to restructure Army Aviation through the termination of Comanche really permitted us to take some of the investment ¿ known and tested technologies ¿ and integrate them quicker into old and new systems," Gass said.

"Reinvesting the gains we made with the Comanche project helped reduce the process of acquisition and saved time," said Gass. "We are at war, and we wanted to make it happen quicker."

"The Army Aviation Center at Fort Rucker, Ala. ¿ recently designated the Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Center of Excellence ¿ brings war fighting capabilities to the field by developing new concepts, programs and training for aviation Soldiers worldwide," Hayes said.

New concepts and programs are already developed to transform Army aviation.

"A request for proposals was issued in July 2005 on the Light Utility Helicopter," said Gass. "The first equipment is expected on the ground in fiscal year 2007."

The LUH will conduct light general support in permissive environments and Homeland Defense, and will replace the legacy UH-1 Huey.

"The Future Cargo Aircraft will replace the C-23 Sherpa," said Gass. "It will provide tremendous capability in getting critical supplies to forward deployed forces, because it will be able to land on a very short runway ¿ about 2,000 feet, which is a better capability than anything else we have out there."

"Comanche money provided us the new buys [aircraft] as well as allowed us to recapitalize the current fleet," said Gass. "The Apache, The Chinook, UH-60, all will receive upgrades."

One of the investments is in Aircraft Survivability Equipment. ASE provides counter measures to aircraft to defeat surface-to-air missiles and other threats to aircraft, said Gass.

"We are upgrading ASE and outfitting all rotary-wing aircraft with the common missile warning system ¿ upgraded missile detection ¿ through an accelerated process because of the need and desire to get the best equipment to the field," said Gass.

"Our program is really about trying to use the current existing state-of-the-art technology and getting it to the war fighter as quickly as possible," Thurgood said.

"We will restructure and transform into a modular, capabilities-based, maneuver force, which will provide significant contributions to the War on Terrorism and the future of Army aviation," Hayes said.

Click here to see a video of the Armed Reconnaissance Helicopter in flight - ARH video.)

Community
Email This Article
Comment On This Article

Related Links
SpaceDaily
Search SpaceDaily
Subscribe To SpaceDaily Express
Aerospace News at SpaceMart.com


Northrop Grumman To Provide New Air Data Inertial Reference Units To Lufthansa
Woodland Hills CA (SPX) Jan 12, 2006
Lufthansa will be one of the first commercial air carriers worldwide to benefit from the latest air data inertial reference units from Northrop Grumman. Inertial reference units provide aircrews with essential aircraft operational data such as aircraft position, velocities, attitude, altitude, air speed and many other parameters.






Memory Foam Mattress Review

Newsletters :: SpaceDaily Express :: SpaceWar Express :: TerraDaily Express :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News
  • Combat Feeding Spearheads Radio Frequency Identification
  • The Future of Satellite Broadband, Vis-A-Vis Terrestrial Competition
  • Tests Of A New Flying Broadband System At Esrange
  • Blue Sky Offers Online Tracking System for Transportation Asset Management

  • Russia Launches Two Japanese Satellites
  • US Satellite Successfully Placed In Orbit
  • Largest Communications Satellite Ever Built Launched Into Orbit
  • Sea Launch wins Multiple Launch Award with PanAmSat

  • Lockheed Martin's System Helping FAA Train New Controllers
  • Aviation Transformation Includes New Aircraft, Upgrades
  • China Issues License To Egypt Manufacturer To Build Fighter Jet Trainer
  • Japan, US Consider Floating Runway For US Military Training: Report

  • Command And Control Operational Prototype Success At Exercise
  • Scalable Network Technologies To Supply Software For Battle Systems Laboratory
  • South Korea's Air Force Trains Up On New Electronic Countermeasures System
  • Raytheon Reaches DCGS Milestone For DCGS Block 10.2 System

  • Aerospace Targets Airborne Laser Project
  • Physicists Describe A New Mechanism For Metallic Magnetism
  • Plastic Spaceships
  • New Look At DNA Hints At Origin Of Ultraviolet Damage

  • NGC Appoints Jake Volkert Vice President And Division General Manager
  • WildBlue Appoints David Leonard As CEO
  • Army Promotes Top Space Planner
  • Space Imaging Names Jim Youker As U.S Executive Sales Director

  • Canada Looks To Satellite To Assert Arctic Sovereignty
  • Earth From Space: Sandstorm In Rajasthan, India
  • Russian Satellite On Track Despite Communication Problem
  • Crop Circles In Kansas

  • Galileo Satellite Payload Testing Underway
  • Air Force Space Command Continues GPS Modernization
  • Satellite Keeps Railway Safety And Efficiency On Track
  • Comtech Receives Movement Tracking System Order for Its NextGen Transceiver

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement