U.S. Navy Begins Training On New TH-73A Thrasher Helicopter
Student naval aviators at NAS Whiting Field began training on the new
helicopter that will replace the aging TH-57 Sea Ranger.
The U.S. Navy announced that the first
class of twelve student naval aviators began training earlier this month on the
new TH-73A Thrasher at Naval Air Station (NAS) Whiting Field in Milton,
Florida, home of the Naval Undergraduate Flight Training of Navy, Marines and
Coast Guard. The helicopter, which was first delivered in August 2021, will replace the 40-year-old TH-57 Sea
Ranger that will soon be phased out as the TH-73 comes onboard.
“Training students in the TH-73A has been
years in the making, and I’m excited on behalf of everyone who has helped get
us to this point,” said Cmdr. Annie Otten, commanding officer, Helicopter
Training Squadron (HT) 8. “I’m especially excited that the HT-8 “Eightballers”
are the ones helping transition the students and instructors to the new
aircraft. We are all on this journey together, and I can’t wait to get the
students up in the aircraft.”
The TH-73A helicopters, a component of the Advanced Helicopter Training System (AHTS) program, are part of an
initial contract for 32 helicopters, out of a total requirement of 130
aircraft, awarded in 2020. The new Advanced Helicopter Training System (AHTS)
of the U.S. Navy includes not only TH-73A helicopters, but also new simulators
and aircrew training services, a modernized curriculum and a new contractor
logistics support contract for the maintenance and flight line support
requirements of the new helicopter.
The TH-73A, based on the Instrument Flight
Rules (IFR) certified variant of the popular commercial AW119Kx, has been fully certified by
the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) prior to delivery, thus bringing a
ready-made solution that will transition the TH-57 platforms out of service by
2025, with the first helicopters expected to be retired during fiscal year
2022. The first 32 TH-73 are expected to be delivered through 2024.
Cmdr. Otten commented that the TH-73A will
make student training more reflective of fleet helicopters. The current syllabus sees students in
primary aviation training initially flying the T-6B Texan II aircraft, which
has a glass display cockpit. If selected for helicopters, students move to the
TH-57, which has older digital or analogue gauges instead of multi-function displays.
After graduation, students will then move out to fleet aircraft, which again
use glass display cockpits. The TH-73A has glass screens that are
representative of, and mirror more closely, what pilots will see in the fleet.
“The first thing we are going to see with the students
is that the glass cockpit they have trained to and the scan they developed in
the T-6 are going to flow to this aircraft (TH-73A), and we will see them
picking things up sooner than in the TH-57,” Cmdr. Otten said.
Additionally, Training Air Wing Five and
Chief, Naval Aviation Training personnel have been working over the past
several years to develop a well-designed and well-thought-out training program which could be as safe and effective
as possible in preparation for the new helicopter. The new training program was
validated by the first cadre of instructor pilots as they converted to the
TH-73A.
“First we had to learn to fly the aircraft so we could
teach the IPs,” said Maj. Luke Zumbusch, U.S. Marine Corps, one of the of
instructor pilots to convert to the TH-73A. “Our job was to validate and verify
that we could teach the maneuvers safely. For example, a normal approach, steep
approach, formations for the IPs who eventually teach students in the TH-73A.
Validating that the syllabus flow is good, the pace and type of training and
the media in which the training was presented was the instructors’ under
training (IUT) job. Their job was to validate those maneuvers and profiles.”
From start to finish, the aviation students
spend approximately 38 weeks in the advanced training regimen at Whiting before
they graduate and move to larger operational helicopters in the fleet, such as
the H-60, H-53 and AH-1 helicopters. The length of the training is roughly the same of
the TH-57, however the Navy says it will produce stronger pilots as they take
advantage of the new technology and power that the aircraft brings. Before
students begin flying the new helicopter, they will complete a rigorous course
of groundwork in virtual reality and flying simulators to get them ready for
the more powerful helicopter.
“We took this time to do an entire cultural
change (in transitioning to the TH-73A),” commented Capt. Jack Waldron, U.S.
Marine Corps TH-57 & TH-73A pipeline officer. “There is the concept of
having iPads with access to course content and aviation-specific apps for
flight planning, briefing or in-flight navigation. We’re not just changing the
method of delivery, we’re changing the actual media they’re using. Virtual
reality environment also provides a mixed reality environment. Students will
ask questions. It’s a philosophy change.”
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