søndag 30. september 2018

F-35B havarert i USA - SkyNews


US F-35 stealth fighter crashes for first time in history of programme
The British government will buy dozens of the same type of jet - which has never crashed before.
07:33, UK,Sunday 30 September 2018

Image:Smoke rises at the site of the F-35 jet crash in Beaufort, South Carolina
By Lucia Binding, news reporter
A F-35B fighter jet has been completely destroyed after a crash during a US Marine Corps training exercise in South Carolina.
The F-35B's pilot ejected the jet and survived the crash, which is the first in the history of the hugely expensive weapons programme.
"It's a total loss," a US Marine Corps official said.
Images posted on social media showed a plume of black smoke rising above the crash site in Beaufort.
The Marine Corps later confirmed the incident in a statement, saying the "pilot safely ejected from the single-seat aircraft and is currently being evaluated by medical personnel".

Image:The F-35B is used for short take-offs and vertical landings
Officials added that there were no civilian injuries.
Launched in the early 1990s, the F-35 is the largest and most expensive military programme of its type across the globe.
Unit costs vary, but F-35s cost around $100m (£76.6m) each.
Britain currently has 15 F-35Bs, but has pledged to purchase 138 in total from American aviation giant Lockheed Martin.

Lockheed Martin F-35B Lightning II Accident (South Carolina)


Date: 28-SEP-2018
Time: 11:45 LT
Type:
Lockheed Martin F-35B Lightning II
Owner/operator: US Marine Corps (USMC), VMFAT-501
Registration:
C/n / msn:
Fatalities: Fatalities: 0 / Occupants: 1
Other fatalities: 0
Aircraft damage: Written off (damaged beyond repair)
Location: W of Beaufort MCAS/Merritt Field (KNBC), Beaufort, SC -    United States of America
Phase: Unknown
Nature: Military
Departure airport:
Destination airport:
Narrative:
The F-35 crashed during a training flight and the pilot ejected safely.

Boeing/SAAB vinner T-X konkurransen - Tyler Rogoway

Boeing's T-X Win Is Really Much Bigger Than Just Building A Replacement For The T-38
Boeing's big win has wide-ranging impacts that go far beyond the USAF's need for a new trainer alone.

BY TYLER ROGOWAYSEPTEMBER 28, 2018
THE WAR ZONEADVERSARYAGGRESSORBOEINGCONTRACTF-5JET TRAINERLEONARDOLIGHT FIGHTERNAVYREPLACEMENTSAABST LOUIST-38T-X
THE AERO EXPERIENCE

What exciting news it was yesterday. After years of waiting, we finally got to hear the USAF's choice for the jet that would replace the hugely successful, but half-century-old T-38 Talon trainer. But the reality is that Boeing's victorious T-X design represents so much more than just a new piece of equipment intended to replace another that has reached the end of its service life. This decision has wide-ranging impacts on many different levels, and for Boeing, in particular, it is a game changer.
FOR BOEING, ITS MQ-25 WIN IS SWEET VINDICATION AFTER YEARS OF DISAPPOINTMENT
By Tyler Rogoway
Posted in THE WAR ZONE
HERE ARE THE SPECIFIC TERMS OF THE USAF'S T-X CONTRACT THAT BOEING JUST WON
By Joseph Trevithick
Posted in THE WAR ZONE
BOEING WINS BIG AGAIN AND CLAIMS THE USAF'S HUGE T-X JET TRAINER DEAL
By Tyler Rogoway and Joseph Trevithick
Posted in THE WAR ZONE
THESE ARE THE BEST IMAGES YET OF NORTHROP GRUMMAN'S T-38 REPLACEMENT THAT COULD HAVE BEEN
By Tyler Rogoway
Posted in THE WAR ZONE
EXCLUSIVE: UNMASKING THE F-15X, BOEING'S F-15C/D EAGLE REPLACEMENT FIGHTER
By Tyler Rogoway
Posted in THE WAR ZONE
First off, a huge congratulations to Boeing that has pulled off a trifecta of big aircraft competition wins spanning rotary-wing, fixed-wing unmanned, and now fixed-wing manned aircraft capabilities in just the span of a single month. Also, their competitors, Lockheed and Leonardo, really did put up a great fight and all are super passionate about their products, both of which have already found success globally. But above all else, let's just take a moment to fathom just how big of a winner Northrop's iconic T-38 Talon has been.


USAF
The YT-38 on its first flight nearly 60 years ago.
The design first flew in April of 1959 and has not only successfully trained tens of thousands of pilots, but it also served a stint with the Thunderbirds and has kept U-2 and B-2 aircrews' and NASA astronauts' flight hours up. It has also played the role of aggressor as well, a job it still does to this very day for air wings equipped with target-hungry F-22s.


USAF
Tyndall AFB-based T-38A aggressor alongside its F-22 stablemate.
Yet it's not just what the Talon did, but it's also what came out of it that is significant. The USAF's first supersonic jet trainer gave birth to one of the most successful and important families of fighters in history, the F-5A/B Freedom Fighter and F-5E/F Tiger II.
Those jets allowed the U.S. to export American airpower all around the globe, even to less reliable allies and poorer nations who couldn't afford more complex and capable machines. In addition, for many decades the F-5 served as the backbone of the Navy, Marines, and the USAF adversary support programs, including those involved with the Navy Fighter Weapons School and the USAF Weapons School. In fact, the F-5 continues to provide aggressor capacity for the Navy and Marines till this very day and will also serve in that role for adversary support contractor TacAir, which is just spinning up its F-5 operations now.

USAF
Air Force F-5Es was the backbone of adversary support for fighter squadrons based all around the globe during the Cold War.
The F-5 still flies in a combat role for a handful of air arms around the world. Some of the jets that remain in frontline service are upgraded with modern avionics similar to those you would find on a 4th generation fighter. Even the F-5's successor, the F-20 Tigershark, was hugely promising, although it never made it to an operational state.

USAF
Randolph AFB T-38Cs in formation.
With all this in mind, it is sad that we really never got to know Northrop Grumman's aborted T-X contender, an aircraft that was designed and built by Scaled Composites and even flew on multiple occasions. With the T-38's illustrious heritage under Northrop Grumman's belt, their T-X aircraft, another clear-sheet design dubbed the Model 400, could have been today's big winner instead of Boeing's offering. But for various rumored reasons, Northrop Grumman dropped out of the race, in the end ceding the Air Force jet trainer market to a major corporate competitor—Boeing.

SCALED COMPOSITES
Northrop Grumman's T-X had direct T-38 roots and flew on multiple occasions before the company's participation in the competition abruptly ended.
So yeah, Boeing's T-X has some huge shoes to fill, and doing so will be no easy task. Yet the selection of Boeing to provide this capability means that the storied planemaker will be building tactical jets for decades to come, regardless of what happens to their F-15 and F/A-18 production lines.
Paired with winning the Navy's MQ-25 tanker drone contract, Boeing's historic St. Louis plant now has a bright future. And this means that Boeing will remain capable of bidding on future tactical aircraft programs, with the capacity and brain trust intact to remain a serious contender. Just a year or two ago such a situation was very much in doubt.

BOEING
Although the loss may be disappointing for Lockheed Martin, which could have possibly become America's only tactical jet manufacturer by the latter half of the 2020s, competition is not a bad thing, even for the companies that lose some contracts. And let's face it, Lockheed has plenty already on its plate right now.
Many indicators point to the possibility that Boeing was super aggressive fiscally speaking with their T-X bid, which is not surprising as they really needed this win. It was literally an existential necessity for the company's defense arm. The possibility of slim margins and elevated corporate risk for an aggressively bid fixed-price contract like this could put into question its profitability proposition, but winning the T-X is not about short-term profits.
If the T-38 is any indication, this plane will be flying for many decades, likely until a human isn't really needed in the cockpit for most missions. That means there will be a steady flow of support and development contracts over the life of the fleet. Being the OEM, Boeing has by far the best chance of winning those contracts and in some cases, they will come without competition. And once again, and maybe most importantly, it keeps the company in the tactical jet production game for the long term.

There is also prestige involved here too. Do you know what every USAF fighter pilot minted in the last five decades has in common?
They are all T-38 Talon pilots.
Being able to claim the mantle of providing the platform at the very heart of USAF's jet combat pilot production is a huge deal that provides unique influence. Boeing's T-X will become the next generation of USAF fighter pilots' first jet aircraft they will have ever flown. These men and women will start making their reputation and transform into fighter pilots at its controls. Some of them will even grow to become USAF decision makers. So that first impression can end up being a very powerful and potentially lucrative thing.

USAF
A T-38C Talon taxies in after a training sortie.
Outside of the Pentagon, on the international jet trainer market, Boeing's airframe is set to become the latest and greatest airframe to be had, one which the USAF was willing to literally rest its air combat future upon. Plus, foreign air arms looking to buy advanced jet trainers will know that going with the USAF's pick means they can take advantage of continued development and an expansive and robust logistical support system that will benefit deeply from economies of scale. So we aren't just talking about the up to 475 trainer jets that the USAF could buy, we are also talking about high export potential as well.
But let's be honest here, this jet isn't just a trainer, it's also a light fighter. In fact, it has the same base powerplant as the F-20—an aircraft that was notorious for its agility and raw performance. When compared to its T-38 predecessor, the thrust difference alone is staggering.

BOEING
Boeing's T-X takes off in full burner.
The T-38's two J85 turbojets provide 5,800lbs of thrust combined. Boeing's T-X, with its single GE-F404 turbofan, has nearly three times that at roughly 17,200lbs of thrust. The jet also has twin tails, slats, and big leading-edge root extensions (LERXs) that will provide exceptional low-speed handling and general agility. And none of this is surprising as these attributes likely helped when it comes to winning the T-X contract.
The USAF has always eyed the T-X as a potential next-generation aggressor platform, offering somewhere close to F-16's performance but at far lower operating and acquisition cost. The need for more adversary support has become glaring as 5th generation stealth fighters aren't challenged by small formations of fighters and flying 5th generation fighters against other 5th generation fighters for basic air-to-air training is massively wasteful and frankly not fiscally sustainable. Private contractors will fulfill a portion of this demand, but the USAF will need to maintain the aggressor units it has today and provide additional capacity in the future, but in a more efficient manner. This is precisely where the T-X will likely come into play.

BOEING
Boeing's T-X looks fast sitting still.
The small size of the T-X will make it a real challenge to spot during within-visual range fights. Based on the design and the amount of thrust it has—as much as a JAS-39 Gripen multi-role fighter—it could turn out to be a very nasty little jet to tangle with. Even the embedded training systems that will be a main staple of the T-X, in general, could help provide expanded realistic air-to-air training at far lower costs than what has been realized in the past. Also, considering it will be able to lug around jamming pods and captive training missiles, it could really fill the role of a 4th generation bad guy nicely without major modifications. But strap on a small AESA radar and an electronic warfare system or infrared search and track—podded or internal—and you don't only have an incredible aggressor aircraft but also a straight-up affordable light fighter.
The Pentagon has no requirement for a light fighter aircraft today, but in the future one based on Boeing's T-X could be exported abroad much like the F-5 was decades ago. Lockheed's T-X entrant, the T-50/T-100, has done just that, with the F-50 and FA-50 version being exported by South Korea's Korean Aerospace Industries to multiple air arms around the globe.

ROKAF
FA-50 was derived from the T-50, which Lockheed Martin's T-X entrant, the T-100, was directly derived from. There is a market for light fighters that possess many of the features of heavier designs but cost far less to purchase and operate.
Considering it is more about sensors, communications, and munitions than raw performance and weight-lifting capabilities when it comes to succeeding in most aspects of air combat these days, a fighter version of Boeing's T-X could offer a lot of capability in a small and relatively cheap package. But most of all, it would have a huge support infrastructure in place that benefits from economies of scale thanks to its trainer cousin.
The U.S. also benefits strategically from having an aircraft like Boeing's T-X in production. The F-16 has moved to reduced production in South Carolina and it's not clear just how long that line will remain open. The Eagle and Super Hornet lines could also wind down in the latter half of the next decade. So having a non-stealth, far less complex and costly light tactical jet being produced gives the Pentagon flexibility should it find that such an aircraft, or just a more basic tactical jet capacity in general, is needed sometime in the future.
Even during a time of great tension, a light fighter version of this aircraft could be produced, or even production could be diverted from trainer configurations to combat ones to help back-fill for more capable fighters. This flexibility comes at no cost as a new trainer is needed and will be in production anyway.

BOEING
There is also the U.S. Navy and their T-45 Goshawks that are already decades old to consider. The T-45 still has a lot of life ahead of it and some of the fleet is going through a service life extension program now, but the T-45 pales in comparison to the performance of Boeing's T-X and eventually, the Navy will have to figure out what it will replace the T-45 with.
As it sits now, Boeing seems poised in just about the best position imaginable to provide such an aircraft and I would venture to guess that they designed their T-X entrant at least with some consideration that a navalized version could be required in the future. That aircraft will be unique to the current iteration, but building a new variant of an existing type that is already in widescale use and production is far less expensive than starting from scratch.
Boeing already has an amazing relationship with NAVAIR and knows the carrier-based aviation environment very well, producing the Super Hornet and Growler, as well as the upcoming MQ-25, that fly off of the Navy's supercarrier decks. They are also the OEM for the T-45 itself after acquiring McDonnell Douglas—the T-45's original manufacturer—back in 1996. Now consider that Boeing will very likely be building hundreds of USAF trainers in the coming decades and you will come to the conclusion that they would be pretty hard to beat when it comes to potentially building a couple hundred carrier-capable jet trainers for the Navy.

USN
The T-45 was based on the BAe Hawk trainer that was already decades old when the first T-45 airframe was delivered in the mid 1990s. The type has a lot of service life left but eventually, it will need to be replaced.
There are also roughly four dozen F-5Ns and F-5Fs that that provide fleet adversary support for the USMC and Navy that won't last forever either. They are already on their second lives after being retired from the Swiss Air Force. The T-X would be very well suited to take up that role as well and would offer far superior performance over the F-5.
Finally, Boeing's win breaks Sweden's SAAB—Boeing's partner of the T-X design—directly into America's tactical aircraft universe. If anything, SAAB has proven to be resourceful and innovative, and brings with it a unique operational mindset when it comes to fast jets. SAAB fighters are hardy, ultra-reliable, built to operate with minimal ground support infrastructure and personnel, and relatively inexpensive to fly. This is a very useful viewpoint to bring to the table in an era when the newest American fighters hitting the skies tend to have lower availability rates than those designed in the 1970s. They also rely on heavy infrastructure and long, pristine runways—something that won't be assured in future conflicts. SAAB's aircraft are designed with austere airfield operations very much in mind.

MILAN NYKODYM/WIKICOMMONS
SAAB JAS-39 blasts off a snowy strip.
I'm not saying that the T-X was designed to meet all of Sweden's unique needs, but I think SAAB's unique viewpoint when it comes to air combat and aircraft design is something that is sorely needed here in the United States. By the indications the USAF is giving about future operational demands, many in its highest ranks would probably agree.
Beyond the terms of the deal that the USAF struck with Boeing, their T-X was the only clean-sheet design and thus the newest of the lot. Clearly, the USAF sees a lot of value in the aircraft's fresh potential and ability to evolve. In essence, the flying force is accepting additional risk in order to benefit from this potential by choosing Boeing's aircraft over two well-established and far more mature designs.

BOEING
Considering the budgetary realities of the present day, this makes a lot of sense. The USAF can afford to gamble a bit more on their next generation trainer in order to get the best future-proofing available via a totally new, purpose-built design.
But even if defense dollars were more scarce, Boeing's T-X, as we have established in detail, is more than just a new trainer. The country is better off with a design that is built specifically for the USAF's unique needs today, while also having the ability to evolve and accomplish other missions for a wide variety of users tomorrow.
We can't wait to hear more about Boeing's design, including some raw performance metrics. Stay tuned, once the appeal window closes, Boeing and the USAF should open the information floodgates and allow us to get a far better look at their brand new and incredibly promising jet.
Author's Note: A huge thanks to The Aero Experience for sharing their awesome image seen at the top of this article with us. Make sure to check out their site here. 
Contact the author: Tyler@thedrive.com

fredag 28. september 2018

Luftskip - Vil de omsider ta av? - AVweb

Partners To Fly Industrial Airships
 
Mary Grady
 
 

Hybrid Air Freighters, based in Paris, and Columbia Helicopters, in Oregon, have agreed to team up to operate a fleet of 12 airships to be built by Lockheed Martin. In a joint news release issued earlier this month, the companies said the airships will provide “high performance and innovative logistical services” for the oil and gas industries, as well as mining and large-scale construction sectors. The ships will transport both freight and personnel in remote areas. No significant ground-based infrastructure is required, and the airships can land on any type of surface, hovercraft-style.
HAF, a partner with the aircraft manufacturer Daher, agreed to buy the hybrid air freighters from Lockheed Martin for about $500 million, according to a June 2017 story in Air Cargo World. Each aircraft carries up to 21 tons in a 60-foot-long cargo bay.

Business jet - Falcon 50 havarert - AVweb

Two Killed in Falcon 50 Accident
 
Kate O'Connor
 
 

A Falcon 50 jet slid off of the runway after landing at Greenville Downtown Airport (GMU) in Greenville County, South Carolina, killing the pilot and copilot. The two passengers onboard were injured in the accident and remain hospitalized. Airport director Joe Frasher said in a media briefing that he saw the aircraft land and that the touchdown appeared normal. No emergency communications were received from the crew.
The accident occurred at about 1:40 p.m. local time on Thursday. The aircraft reportedly overran the runway, crossed a grass safety area, went over an embankment and came to rest on the airport road. One of the engines remained running until first responders were able to break into the cockpit to shut it down. A hazmat team was called to the scene to deal with fuel leaking into the watershed via a roadside drainage ditch.
Frasher said he believed the aircraft was stopping in Greenville to pick up additional passengers, but that its airport of origin and planned destination were not yet known. The aircraft is registered to Delaware-based Global Aircraft Acquisitions. The FAA is onsite and a team from the NTSB is due to arrive shortly to begin its investigation.

Fatigue - Rapporten etter SFO hendelsen 7. juli i fjor er ute - Kan skje her også

Flyet holdt på å lande på taxibane hvor det var flere fly. Sjekk forkortet rapport her: https://tinyurl.com/yazrmh76

Norsk flyger savnet - Antakelig havarert vest av Japan - NRK

Vrak fra småflyet han førte er antakelig lokaliser av det japanske luftforsvaret. Hans identitet er kjent og pårørende underrettet, i følge NRK.

Les nyheten her: https://tinyurl.com/y8vcccez

Turkish til Stavanger? - Flysmart24.no


flysmart24.no
Nettavis for billig og behagelig reise
enNederst i skjemaet
Går tøffere inn i Norge, vurderer ny direkterute
Turkish Airlines har klare vokseplaner for sin norske virksomhet. Foto: Halvor Pritzlaff Njerve
Av: Knut-Erik Mikalsen 25. september 2018
Reiseglade og betalingsvillige norske flypassasjerer er et fristende marked for utenlandske flyselskaper. Vokseivrige Turkish Airlines kaster seg nå med større tyngde inn i kampen om det norske markedet, og åpner for både økt kapasitet og muligheten for en ny rute i Norge.
I dag har selskapet to daglige avganger fra Oslo Lufthavn til selskapets hovedflyplass i Istanbul.
Nå setter selskapet fra neste år etter alt å dømme inn større fly på strekningen, i tillegg til at man har hentet frem fra skuffen tidligere planer om å starte rute fra Stavanger.
Alt dette skjer fordi selskapet driver en intens kamp om passasjerene mot hovedutfordrere som Emirates og Qatar Airways. Disse selskapene kjemper om de norske passasjerene, som ikke bare skal til Istanbul, Dubai og Doha, men videre i selskapenes rutenett i Asia, Afrika, Australia og New Zealand.
Turkish Airlines er inne i en ny og kraftig vekstperiode, har ruter til 119 land, og har lagt bak seg et historisk godt første halvår.
Nå vil selskapet øke trykket på det norske markedet ytterligere.
-Ja, vi går til angrep på det nordiske markedet. Vi er svært godt fornøyd med utviklingen i den norske delen, og ser på muligheten for å øke enda mer ved å ta i bruk større flymateriell på ruten, sier Ertugrul Aktan til flysmart24.no.
Han er markedsdirektør for Turkish Airlines’ internasjonale satsinger, og sier at Turkish ikke følger andre flyselskaper som har redusert sitt markedsarbeid i Skandinavia.
– Vi ser at våre konkurrenter legger ned sine kontorer, bl.a. i Norge, og lager ett kontor for hele Skandinavia. Det gjør ikke vi. Vi opprettholder våre kontorer som det i Oslo og satser hardt på markedsarbeidet overfor norske bedrifter. Det har gitt gode resultater, sier Aktan.
Derfor vil selskapet etter alt å dømme gire opp satsingen i Oslo fra neste år.
Den ene avgangen fra Oslo flys i sommer med en Airbus A330-200, en stor flytype (widebody) som normalt bare brukes på interkontinentale ruter. Den andre avgangen flys med et vanlig mellomdistansefly, vanligvis en Airbus A321.
Nå er det store muligheter for at selskapet velger å gå opp til å bruke storflyet på begge avgangene.
Det vil i så fall øke kapasiteten betydelig.
I luftfarten holder man tett om sine fremtidige ruteplaner fordi slike satsinger er forbundet med store investeringer.
Før oljeprisfallet i 2014 jobbet flyselskapet med planer om å åpne flere nye direkteruter til Istanbul fra Norge. Øverst i bunken lå en ny rute fra Stavanger, men planen ble torpedert med krisen i oljevirksomheten og senere også den politiske uroen i Tyrkia.
Etter det flysmart24.no erfarer har Turkish nå hentet frem igjen planen om en Stavanger-rute, men dette er det ingen i selskapet som vil uttale seg konkret om.
Selskapet hadde helt konkrete planer om denne nye direkteruten i 2013, men da oljeprisfallet kom året etter, forsvant grunnlaget for en slik rute med ett slag. Den omfattende reiseaktiviteten som kjennetegnet oljeindustrien, ble borte over natten.
Det fjernet grunnlaget for en rute fra Stavanger til Istanbul, men etter det flysmart24.no er det nå ikke usannsynlig at den ruteplanen hentes frem igjen. Selskapet har hatt stor suksess med ruter til litt mindre flyplasser både i Danmark og Sverige, det gjelder til Billund og Göteborg.
Aktan sier han ikke kan kommentere mulighetene for en slik rute fordi rutenettet ikke er hans ansvarsområde, men sier at det uansett er viktig å ha med seg forretningstrafikk når en ny rute åpnes.
– Det er helt essensielt for å kunne starte en ny flyrute at den også dekker næringslivets behov, sier han.
Forretningsreisende betaler normalt en høyere billettpris når de er på reise, og er viktig for totaløkonomien i en flyrute. Derfor holder Turkish et godt øye med utviklingen i Stavanger nå som oljeøkonomien er i ferd med å bedre seg.

Helikopter - For mye leamikk i helikoptre? - Typen skal inn i norsk sektor via Bel Air - R&W
















An AW189 on oil field work with Bristow Helicopters in
flight from Norwich Airport, U.K.

The FAA is ordering the inspection of four Leonardo AW189 helicopters in the United States to check for a cracked tail gearbox fitting.

The U.S. presence of AW189 helicopters is limited to the four at Milestone Aviation Group and AAR Airlift.An FAA Airworthiness Directive issued last Friday and effective Oct. 26 "requires inspecting the tail gearbox fitting for a crack."

A crack in the TGB fitting could "reduce the tail assembly's ability to sustain loads from the TGB and the tail rotor and result in loss of helicopter control."

Lynn Lunsford, a spokesman for the FAA in Fort Worth, Texas, said that Leonardo personnel are to conduct the inspections, but had no further comment.

The FAA directive occurs more than two years after the European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) issued a directive on the same issue.

"EASA advises that this condition, if not detected and corrected, could lead to crack propagation up to a critical length," the FAA directive said. "This condition could reduce the assembly's ability to sustain loads from the TGB and tail rotor, possibly resulting in reduced helicopter control. The EASA AD consequently requires repetitive inspections of the fitting and replacing the fitting, depending on the inspections' outcome."

The FAA said that it issued its directive "because we evaluated all information provided by EASA and determined the unsafe condition exists and is likely to exist or develop on other helicopters of these same type designs and that air safety and the public interest require adopting the AD requirements as proposed."

The FAA declined to comment when asked for an explanation behind the two-year lag between the issuance of the EASA airworthiness directive on the AW189 and the FAA airworthiness directive.

Drone - Bell slapp pressen nær sin nye tilt rotor - FlightGlobal


Bell Unveils V-247 Autonomous Tiltrotor and It’s the Size of a Huey
By Dan Parsons | September 25, 2018
Send Feedback | @SharkParsons

The Bell V-247 autonomous tiltrotor was unveiled at Modern Day Marine, Sept. 25, 2018. Photo by Dan Parsons
Bell unveiled the full-size mockup of its V-247 autonomous tiltrotor Sept. 25, and it is much larger than a scale-model suggests.
Just outside the company’s booth at the Modern Day Marine in Marine Corps Base Quantico, Virginia, passersby kept up an audible chorus of surprise as each caught a first glimpse of the unmanned aircraft system (UAS), which is about the size of a UH-1Y Huey. It was designed that way for several reasons, Todd Worden, Bell’s senior manager for advanced tiltrotor systems, told R&WI.
“It’s all about achieving range and payload and for that you need power and fuel,” he said. “It’s about the size of a [UH-1Y] Yankee for that reason. The fuselage is about the same size, but then you add the tiltrotor and it now provides a completely different, versatile capability.”
The outline of a UH-1Y is painted as a shadow beneath the full-size mockup at the expo to show the relative size and how it will fit on Navy ships. The 247 was designed inside the “box” of a DDG hangar, which means it can fit on and inside just about any ship that can accept rotorcraft, Worden said.
All of the design parameters are aimed at meeting Marine Corps requirements for MUX, which stands for Marine Air-Ground Task Force (MAGTF) Unmanned Aerial System (UAS) Experimental. The Marines are in the market for a Group 5 UAS — think MQ-9 Reaper — capable of vertical takeoff and landing.

Size comparison with wings folded of the V-22 Osprey (L-R), the V-247 and the UH-1Y.
“We are pacing ourselves against the Marine Corps’ mission requirements for MUX,” Worden said.
That pace, so far, has been relatively swift for an aircraft development program thanks to the 247’s older brother, the V-280 Valor. Having now flown 60 hours, the Valor provided much of the one-time engineering risk reduction work that ported directly into designing the 247, Worden said.
“All the work that went into the V-280, we are porting into the 247,” he said. “We accomplished a lot of firsts with that aircraft, and now we don’t have to do all those firsts on this aircraft. Every time the V-280 flies, we further reduce the engineering and development risk with this aircraft.”
A single centerline Rolls-Royce 1107C — the same engine used in the V-22 — with bifurcated inlets and a single aft upward exhaust provides 7,000 shp to the two rotor nacelles. To maximize lift surface and thereby fuel efficiency and range, the wings continue past the nacelles and terminate in winglets while the V-280’s nacelles are at the end of its wings. The outer wings swivel with the nacelle when the 247 transitions from vertical to forward flight.
Bell is advertising a long-range cruise speed of 240 kt with a 300-kt maximum, while best endurance speed is 180 kt. With two aircraft, Worden said the aircraft can sustain 24-hour on-station operations at mission-viable ranges, hence the “247” designation. Specifically, Bell is aiming for more than eight hours loiter time with a 600-pound payload at 450-nm mission radius.
It should have an internal mission payload capacity of 2,000 pounds and a slingload capacity of 9,000 pounds. That capacity is what will make the aircraft so versatile, Worden said.
“It is really a modular, open-architecture platform that can accommodate any weapon in the service’s inventory or on hand for a particular mission,” he said.
Two conformal belly pods can carry electronic warfare equipment or AIM-9X Sidewinder air-to-air missiles. The mockup has four underwing pylons with various configurations of Hellfire Missiles and Textron Fury glide bombs.
That modularity also may make the drone appropriate for other services, Worden said. Bell is closely following the Army’s next-generation UAS program, for instance.

The Bell V-247 autonomous tiltrotor was unveiled at Modern Day Marine, Sept. 25, 2018. Photo by Dan Parsons
But the unveiling was tailored to the Marine Corps because it is in the market for a high-altitude, long-endurance drone that can launch from a ship, perform reconnaissance and relay communication to deployed ground forces for about $20 million per copy.
Other missions for MUX will include airborne early warning and electronic warfare. Offensive air support has been pushed to a secondary mission profile as the service begins to solidify its requirements.
The request for information (RFI) describes a fully autonomous air vehicle that can take off from and land on helicopter-capable amphibious ships or an austere 150-foot-by-150-foot landing zone. It should cruise at speeds of 200 to 300 kt with a full payload and stay on station at least eight to 12 hours at 350 nm mission radius. Unrefueled it should have a range of 350 to 700 nm from the ship.
Fast is the name of the game for development and procurement, and the Marine Corps is prepared to move as fast as technology will allow, Lt. Gen. Steven Rudder said at a June industry day near Quantico. After an acquisition decision planned for fiscal 2020, the service wants a land-based early operational capability in within five years and a land-based initial operational capability two years later, with a sea-based IOC to follow.

Helikopter - Thailand kjøper H225M med potensielt innebygget svakhet - FlightGlobal

Polen sitter på gjerdet. Sjekk under. (Red.)

Thai air force to take four more H225M helicopters
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·         
·        20 September, 2018
·        SOURCE: FlightGlobal.com
·        BY: Greg Waldron
·        Singapore
Bangkok has ordered four additional Airbus Helicopters H225M heavy-twin rotorcraft for use by the Royal Thai Air Force.
The follow-on order will see the service operating 12 examples by 2021, says the airframer.
“The H225Ms have served the Royal Thai Air Force well since the delivery of its first batch in 2015, and we are truly honoured by this renewed order, underscoring their continued trust and confidence in our helicopters and the committed support to their fleet,” says Philippe Monteux, head of the Southeast Asia and Pacific region for Airbus Helicopters.


Airbus Helicopters
So far, the air force has six in-service H225Ms from its previous order, with two more to arrive before the end of 2018.
Optimised for combat search and rescue missions with emergency flotation gear, fast roping equipment, a cargo sling, a searchlight, and electro-optical systems, the Caracals are also used for troop transport operations.

Poland suspends latest helicopter acquisition
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·         
·        14 June, 2018
·        SOURCE: FlightGlobal.com
·        BY: Bartosz Glowacki
·        Warsaw
Poland's increasingly farcical programme to procure new helicopters for its armed forces has lurched to a new low after bidders for an eight-unit combat search and rescue tender were told the programme was being shelved.
Warsaw has been attempting to acquire new rotorcraft since at least 2012. Its initial tender called for 70 helicopters split between all three services, but on selecting the Airbus Helicopters H225M Caracal in April 2015, this figure was reduced to 50.
However, a change of government later that year led to the cancellation of the agreement in October 2016, with Poland instead attempting to buy two separate lots of helicopters: eight for the CSAR mission and a further eight for its navy to perform anti-submarine warfare/SAR tasks.
However, on 11 June, the country's armaments inspectorate informed the three bidders – a consortium of Airbus Helicopters and Heli Invest, PZL Mielec/Sikorsky, and Leonardo Helicopters' local operation, PZL Świdnik – that the invitation to submit final offers was being withdrawn.
Airbus Helicopters and PZL PZL Świdnik had also proposed solutions for the naval requirement.
But two days later, defence minister Mariusz Mariusz Błaszczak denied in a radio interview that the acquisition had been cancelled.
It will still proceed, he insists, but will be re-prioritised against other purchases for the armed forces.
"My task is to provide modern equipment for the Polish Army and there is a legal and financial basis for that," he says.
But Błaszczak did not clarify how and when any new helicopters would be bought.
Earlier this month, the defence ministry released details of its modernisation priorities for the period to 2026, but multirole helicopters were not included in the list.
In May, deputy defence minister Wojciech Skurkiewicz revealed in the Polish parliament that "the current priority of the [defence ministry] is acquiring four new ASW/SAR helicopters" to replace its four Kaman SH-2G(PL) Super Seasprites.
A lack of manufacturer support will force the helicopters, built in 1990, to be withdrawn from service, he says.
Warsaw still intends to acquire new attack helicopters after 2022 to replace the 29 Mil Mi-24s operated by the Polish Land Forces.
Its current fleet of transport helicopters – Mil Mi-8/17s and PZL Świdnik W-3s – will be overhauled and "stay in service for the next 10 years", says Skurkiewicz.

Helikopter - USAF ser mot Europa og Leonardo - FlightGlobal


Boeing wins UH-1N replacement contract from USAF
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·         
·        25 September, 2018
·        SOURCE: FlightGlobal.com
·        BY: Garrett Reim
·        Los Angeles

Boeing has been awarded the first portion of a $2.38 billion firm fixed-price contract to replace the US Air Force’s Bell UH-1N fleet with its MH-139 helicopter, derived from Leonardo Helicopters' commercial platform.
The $375 million initial award is for four helicopters and the integration of non-developmental items, the USAF announced on 24 September. The total programme cost accounts for the acquisition and sustainment of up to 84 MH-139s, training devices and associated support equipment. The service expects the first operational helicopter to be delivered in fiscal year 2021.
The replacement programme aims to supplant the current fleet of USAF’s UH-1N helicopters, which support the service’s nuclear intercontinental ballistic missile bases in Wyoming, Montana and North Dakota. The replacement aircraft will additionally be used for training, test and operational support airlift missions.

Boeing
The MH-139 is a military version of the commercial AW139, jointly bid by Boeing and Leonardo: the helicopters will be assembled at the latter's plant in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, with Boeing integrating military-specific components at its facility south of the city.
Boeing outbid Sikorsky’s HH-60U Black Hawk and Sierra Nevada's Force Hawk, an upgraded UH-60L Black Hawk.
The USAF had expected to award the contract in the third quarter of fiscal year 2018, but a pre-award protest over control of particular intellectual property rights filed with the Government Accountability Office by Sikorsky delayed the final decision - the US fiscal year ends on 30 September. Sikorsky lost its appeal to the GAO in May.
The USAF helicopter contract announcement comes several weeks after the US Navy awarded Boeing an $805 million contract to develop four MQ-25A Stingray carrier-based unmanned refuelling aircraft. And, the airframer is in contention for a USAF trainer aircraft contract worth $16 billion which is also expected to be announced this week.