Sikorsky installing engine exhaust fix onto production
aircraft
Sikorsky has retrofitted some of the six CH-53K King
Stallion test aircraft with a fix for engine exhaust re-ingestion that has
delayed development of the heavy-lift helicopter ahead of cutting the tweak into
production.
Sikorsky is preparing to cut the modification into its active
production line in Stratford, Connecticut. U.S. Navy Photo
In December,
the company announced a fix for the problem of the 53K's three General Electric
T-408 engines sucking in their own hot exhaust, which can degrade engine
performance and potentially damage the powerplants. Among other issues, the
phenomenon has delayed acceptance by the U.S. Marine Corps.
Running the
fix on the some of the test aircraft, now in initial operational test and
evaluation (IOT&E), has validated it, and Sikorsky is preparing to cut the
modification into its active production line in Stratford, Connecticut, said
Nathalie Previte, vice president of strategy and business development. There are
currently two production aircraft on the line in Stratford, Previte
said.
"The solution has provided the level of confidence to move forward
on our test program," Previte said at the 2020 HAI Heli-Expo. "In edition,
modifications will be cut into our IOT&E aircraft, so they will be
introduced on our production line."
Sikorsky, Navy and Marine Corps
engineers began tackling the problem in April, and during more than 30 test
events whittled a list of 135 possible design solutions to one that was
retrofitted onto test aircraft for validation. The test fleet has racked up more
than 1,600 flight hours, Previte said.
"Because of our early investment
we have made with an all-digital design, that investment enables Sikorsky
engineers and their team to resolve the exhaust gas re-ingestion situation,"
Previte said.
Sikorsky is on contract for the first 14 King Stallions for
the Marine Corps. Deliveries should begin in 2021. Previte said the fix has not
affected the planned dates for initial operational capability by
2023.
"We are on track to meet the milestone date for the U.S. Marine
Corps in terms of IOC and deployment," Previte said.
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