US
Navy begins search for next jet trainer to replace T-45 Goshawk
The US Navy (USN) has begun its search for a new jet trainer to replace its
Boeing T-45 Goshawk fleet.
As part of its new Undergraduate Jet Training System programme, the service
wants a nondevelopmental, land-based jet trainer capable of field carrier
landing practice and nuclear aircraft carrier touch-and-go landings by 2028 or
sooner, according to a request for information posted online on 14 May.
The service wants a two-pilot aircraft with ejection seats. The jet should be
able to be flown from either cockpit.
The USN is interested in knowing what aircraft can integrate advanced
technologies, such as Precision Landing Mode, which is used to help land the
Boeing F/A-18E/F Super Hornet on aircraft carriers. It also wants the trainer
to have an automatic ground collision avoidance system.
The service wants an assessment of how certain aircraft would handle the forces
of high sink rate landings, the hallmark of training for landing on the short
deck of an aircraft carrier.
Each example of the next-generation trainer is expected to fly 400h per year.
The USN wants to conduct field carrier landing practices at an annual rate of
1,200 per aircraft. It also wants each trainer to perform carrier touch-and-go
landings 45 times per year.
Candidate aircraft should have a flight life of at least 14,400h, and be able
to sustain 43,200 landings.
The service does not plan to conduct arrested landings or catapult launches
from aircraft carriers using the jet trainer. That approach differs from its
current T-45 fleet, which conducts carrier landings and launches.
The aircraft should have an operational ceiling of 41,000ft, and be capable of
speeds greater than 600kt (1,110km/h).
Likely competitors in the USN's next generation trainer programme include the
Boeing-Saab T-7A, which won the US Air Force's T-X competition; Lockheed
Martin's T-50A, based on the FA-50 light-attack/trainer developed with Korea
Aerospace Industries; and Leonardo's T-100, based on the company's M-346.
The T-45 is a variant of the 1970s-era British Aerospace Hawk, developed
jointly for the USN by McDonnell Douglas and the UK company. Boeing acquired
the programme in 1997 when it merged with McDonnell Douglas.
Cirium fleets data shows that the navy currently operates a 194-strong Goshawk
inventory, with its aircraft aged between 10 and 31 years.
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