S-92A unaffected by tail
cracks found in RCAF’s CH-148 Cyclone fleet: Sikorsky
By Garrett Reim10 December 2021
Sikorsky says its civilian S-92A helicopter is unaffected by cracks
found in a majority of the Royal Canadian Air Force’s (RCAF’s) CH-148 Cyclone
fleet.
The CH-148 is a military derivative of the S-92, a twin-engined medium-lift helicopter that is used widely in the oil and gas industry.
Source: Royal Canadian Air
Force
The CH-148 is a relatively new helicopter but has had software issues
and now cracks in the tail section of its airframe
The RCAF found cracks in the tail section of one of its Cyclones on 26
November during a routine maintenance inspection. Additional inspections found
cracks in 19 out of 23 aircraft in the fleet. The service has removed affected
CH-148s from flight service until the problem is fixed.
Sikorsky says the problem only impacts the CH-148, which has a “unique
airframe configuration to support maritime equipment hardware”.
“Preliminary analysis and over 1.9 million fleet flight hours of S-92A
history suggest this issue is unique to the [Canadian Maritime Helicopter
Project] airframe configuration,” the company says. “The 300+ aircraft in the
S-92A fleet have not experienced similar cracking in these components.”
The airframe cracks were discovered in the “forward portion of the tail
cone” but are not in the “primary structural load components of the airframe
and therefore do not pose an immediate safety hazard”, says Sikorsky.
Repairs are underway for several aircraft, the air force says. As of 8
December, repairs for one aircraft had been finished.
“The location of the cracks on the tail structure are unique for each aircraft, although they are on the aircraft’s frame and no cracking was found on the tail hinge or its components,” says the RCAF. It takes about two to three days to fix each aircraft, though the service says it won’t predict when the entire fleet will be returned to service.
Source: Sikorsky
The Sikorsky S-92, used widely by the offshore oil and gas industry, is
the basis for the CH-148 Cyclone
Two CH-148s in the RCAF fleet did not have cracks. The remaining two
aircraft are in longer-term maintenance and will be inspected at a later date,
it says.
The RCAF says that the CH-148 fleet is not “grounded”, rather the
majority of helicopters are not flying because they are “unserviceable”. “The
term grounding relates to an order by an airworthiness authority to not fly
aircraft deemed unsafe or not airworthy,” it says.
In total, Canada is buying 28 examples of the Cyclone, with 24
helicopters delivered thus far. The first CH-148 was delivered in 2015 and the
remaining helicopters are expected to be delivered by 2022.
The CH-148 is used mostly for anti-submarine and anti-surface warfare,
as well as maritime search and rescue, and overland utility missions.
In recent years, the RCAF has grounded the CH-148 twice. In 2017, the
CH-148 fleet was grounded after Sikorsky discovered a software issue with the
helicopters’ flight control computers. In 2020, the fleet was grounded after a
CH-148 fatally crashed into the Ionian Sea in good weather, the result of a
“rare anomaly” with the helicopter’s autopilot software, the service says.
Ingen kommentarer:
Legg inn en kommentar
Merk: Bare medlemmer av denne bloggen kan legge inn en kommentar.