29 FEBRUARY, 2016 - BY: JAMES
DREW - LOUISVILLE
Mitch Snyder, the
chief executive of Bell Helicopter, does not imagine the company offering any
future conventional clean-sheet helicopter to the US military after completing
delivery of the AH-1Z Viper and UH-1Y Venom.
Snyder, speaking on the eve of
the Heli-Expo convention, is putting his faith in tiltrotor technology and
other “future of flight concepts” to address long-term military requirements.
“We’re going to pursue upgrades
to continue to evolve the Yankee and Zulu, but as far as looking at new clean-sheet
type platforms, all of our platforms for the future in the military are not
what you’d classify as a helicopter,” he says.
The newly appointed CEO has made
investments in futuristic flight technology a strategic priority, particularly
aircraft types that can move from one location to another faster and safer than
ever before.
"Given the military
requirements we are seeing, there's nothing there saying they want to go slower
[than 230-250kt]," in the future, he says.
Those aircraft must also be
highly manoeuvrable in hover for military operations. “There’s lots of
technologies out there, and we’re proving it with the tiltrotor,” he says.
Bell expects to continue
producing its four-bladed attack and utility H-1 variants, which are 84%
common, well into the 2020s. Snyder says both types are involved in
competitions around the globe, but there is currently more interest in the
AH-1Z gunship, as seen by Pakistan’s recent procurement.
Bell/US
Marine Corps
In terms
of the next-generation of vertical lift, Bell is investing heavily in its
third-generation tiltrotor, the V-280 Valor for the US military's
Joint-Multi-Role Technology Demonstrator (JMT-TD) effort. Competing against the
Sikorsky-Boeing SB-1 Defiant, Bell will propose a production-model V-280 for
the US Army’s upcoming Future Vertical Lift-Medium programme.
A mock-up of the V-280 is on
display at the show this week, alongside flight-test prototypes of the
company’s commercial 525 Relentless and 505 Jet Ranger X.
As part of his future flight
strategy, Snyder wants to capture more US government science and technology and
prototype demonstrations through the various military laboratories as well as
Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency and NASA. To win those, though, he
says the company must present truly innovative ideas.
Bell Helicopter
On the commercial side, Snyder
doesn’t foresee a commercial derivative of the V-280, which is being assembled
in Amarillo, Texas, ahead of its first flight in 2017. Instead, Bell will push
the AW609 tiltrotor through its continued association with AgustaWestland on
the programme.
“For right now, we’re in the
commercial tiltrotor business already with Agusta on the 609,” he says. “As far
as V-280 goes, we’re focused on JMR-TD. We’re going to stay focused there,
we’re going to deliver those requirements.”
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