Denne nyheten burde kommet for 20 år siden. Maskinen har, liksom flere andre typer som har rotorer, vært utsatt for fatalt uhell under testing. Undertegnede har prøvesittet maskinen. Den er krampaktig liten og trang. Bygget for småvokste italienere. Over såkalte
"hostile waters" er ikke maskinen i stand til å ta mer enn 6 oljearbeidere ikledd overlevelsesdrakt. Den er uegnet under norske forhold. Det er heller ikke plass til mer en 6 bagger i lasterommet. Dette er tatt på et subjektivt øyemål. Tror heller ikke at modellen har offshore ops. som et primært marked. Den er i utgangspunktet ikke utstyrt med
flotation gear, men det er en opsjon som veier en del. Jeg ser gjerne at noen imøtegår dette negative inntrykket av maskinen. Jeg så forgjengeren Bell XV-15 fly på Le Bourget i 1981. I IFALPA systemet tok vi for oss konseptet. Randy Padfield, senere redaktør i Aviation International News og kollega i HS, fløy den og var begeistret. Under et bilde av Bell XV-15. (Red.)
Foto: Bell
Om to års tid skal AW609 tas i bruk av Era Group i USA. Da vil det være hele 17 år siden flytypen startet flytesting. (Foto: Leonardo)
EKSTRA
AW609
Dette tiltrotorflyet skal snart frakte oljearbeidere i dobbel hastighet
Leonardo har inngått kontrakt med lanseringskunde.
Despite Additional Delays, Momentum Building
For Commercial Tiltrotor
Tony Osborne
It seems the world will have to wait just a little bit longer until the
first commercial tilt-rotor helicopter achieves entry-into-service
status.
In February, Leonardo Helicopters Managing Director Gian Piero Cutillo
revealed that an internal review of the program had prompted the company
to adjust the time line for FAA certification back to the end of 2019,
which likely means service entry will not occur until early 2020.
The company, Cutillo said, would take “a more conservative and realistic
approach,” to the tiltrotor’s entry to service. “I believe in the
[AW]609, and I want it to stick to this deadline,” he told Aviation Week.
- Leonardo had hoped to
achieve AW609 Powered Lift sign-off by year-end
- Fourth prototype built to
near-production standard will fly this year
Fifteen years have now passed since the first flight of the Bell-Agusta
BA609, which has subsequently evolved into the Leonardo AW609 and despite
the lengthy, torturous path to service, the aircraft is making
significant enough progress that the commercial world is beginning to
recognize its potential.
It was announced at the recent Heli-Expo that one of the largest U.S.
helicopter operating companies, Era Group, would take two of the aircraft
after certification, becoming only the second customer to be declared by
Leonardo in the history of the program.
The first customer, The United Arab Emirates Joint Aviation Command,
ordered three search-and-rescue-capable models at the 2015 Dubai Airshow.
Leonardo also asserts that unnamed international operators are down for
approximately 50 AW609s, but it is unclear whether longstanding letters
of intent are included on this list.
Era Group was one of three international operators who examined the
potential of the AW609 in different missions as part of a joint
development agreement with then-AgustaWestland. Era’s studies looked at
the business potential of the aircraft for long-range medical transport
of extremely wealthy people in countries where the ground infrastructure
had not been fully developed.
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Era Group was one of three operators
selected to evaluate the AW609 commercial tiltrotor. That deal has now
become a firm order. Credit: Leonardo Helicopters
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However, Era’s
aircraft will be delivered in a nine-seat-utility configuration that
could be used for offshore oil and gas support operations, passenger
transport and search-and-rescue (SAR) missions.
“It was a
natural progression, Era has been a long-standing customer of Leonardo,
and their missions are similar to those we are focusing
the tiltrotor on,” Bill Sunick, AW609 marketing
manager tells Aviation Week.
“We are now
beginning to educate potential customers on the benefits
that AW609 can bring,” says Sunick. One target is
corporate fleet operators using a mix of business jets and helicopters.
While the AW609 will be more expensive, Sunick is
urging them to consider the through-life cost of the jets, weighing
maintenance and crew costs versus the price of using a single aircraft
such as the AW609 to carry out the same task in one platform.
He notes the AW609’s ability to fly from point-to-point without the
need for transferring from fixed-wing to helicopter for the final
journey.
Search-and-rescue
operations could also benefit. Rather than flying the injured to the
nearest hospital, the AW609 would have the range to fly
patients for specialist care, if needed. He points out
that AW609s could reduce the need of patient transfers
between aircraft and ground ambulance, transfers that can be extremely
harmful for at-risk patients.
The AW609 will
be certified under the FAA’s new Powered Lift category, which brings
together elements of Part 29 requirements for rotorcraft and
the Part 25 regulations for transport category aircraft.
Cutillo says
2018 will be an “intensive” year for the program, as it entered a “very
concrete phase.” The flight-test fleet has now flown a combined 1,400
hr., with flight operations split between Italy and the U.S.
Leonardo teams
are assembling the fourth prototype (AC4) in Philadelphia, where the
final assembly line will also be situated. AC4 will introduce
several modifications on production aircraft including a new
“Learjet-style” clamshell main entry door, which has been made 3-in.
wider to accommodate stretchers; but this modification required
adjustments to the aircraft structure. On SAR versions of the aircraft,
the upper section of the door will feature a rescue
hoist. AC4 will also feature the Rockwell Collins Pro Fusion
avionics suite, which is planned for production aircraft.
Assembly
of AC4 has taken more time than might have been expected
because engineers have been progressively modifying the aircraft with
features that will ultimately be on production models. It is due to fly
later this year. Limited assembly of the first production standard
aircraft is now also underway.
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