Norge kikker seg om etter nye helikoptre for bruk til havs og til Hæren og spesialstyrkene. Jeg advarer sterkt mot at et helt nytt og lite prøvet konsept innføres hos oss. Vyene til Sikorsky er det ikke noe i veien med....(Red.)
Sikorsky, Leonardo Study X2 For Italian High-Speed
Mission
Guy Norris March
08, 2023
Credit:
Lockheed Martin
ATLANTA—Sikorsky is working with
Leonardo Helicopters to evaluate its X2 coaxial rigid-rotor compound helicopter
technology for application to an emerging Italian Army requirement for a
high-speed rotorcraft to augment the service’s conventional helicopter fleet.
Based on Sikorsky’s technology
developed for the Future Vertical Lift program, X2 rotorcraft have
counter-rotating, co-axial rotors, preventing retreating blade stall and,
together with a pusher propeller, enabling them to fly faster than a
conventional helicopter.
Despite losing the U.S. Army’s
Future Long Range Assault Aircraft program (FLRAA), a decision it is
protesting, Sikorsky is proposing the coaxial compound Raider X for the Future
Attack Reconnaissance Aircraft (FARA) program and is using the technology for
the International Twin concept under study for the Italian role.
“It’s larger scale than the Raider X
offering, and it is dual engine,” says Paul Lemmo, president of Sikorsky. “It’s
primarily right now for the international utility market. We are working
collaboratively with Leonardo on a study for the Italian government to see how
X2 fits into their next-generation fast helicopter program and meets the
requirements that they have.”
Lemmo spoke at Helicopter
Association International’s Heli-Expo here this week.
Italy has yet to define an official
requirement for a fast rotorcraft and is still considering all possible
configurations including tiltrotor designs. Overarching requirements besides
higher speed and range include increased aircraft survivability as well as
reduced maintenance and logistics.
Sikorsky says X2 technology also is
under evaluation as a possible contender for NATO’s Next-Generation Rotorcraft
Capability (NGRC), which aims to replace medium-size, rotary-wing aircraft in
NATO inventories such as the Black Hawk, Leonardo’s AW101, the Mil Mi-8/17 and
Airbus Puma family of aircraft. NATO procurement officials hope to secure two
or three design configurations for a future medium rotorcraft by the end of
2025 as part of the NGRC effort.
“There’s a lot of studies going on.
We certainly think that the X2 fits very well with a number of the requirements
that they have, and we will continue to work that as time goes on. So there’s a
lot going on around X2, even though we did not have a positive decision on the
FLRAA program,” Lemmo adds.
Sikorsky also continues to fly the
X-97 Raider—a demonstrator forerunner to the company’s Raider X proposal for
the FARA program. “It’s really a testbed for all of our X2 activities but
particularly for the FARA program, because it’s about 80% of the scale of the
FARA aircraft,” Lemmo says. “Every time we fly this, whether it be for a
customer demonstration or for an engineering test—of which we’re still doing
many—it continues to build our confidence in the digital model that we have for
Raider X and informs our design.”
Meanwhile, the company’s FARA
competitive prototype offering is 95% complete and awaiting installation of the
General Electric T901 Improved Turbine Engine Program powerplant. Initial
deliveries of the long-delayed engine are believed to be scheduled to both
Sikorsky and FARA competitor Bell sometime in May.
Ingen kommentarer:
Legg inn en kommentar
Merk: Bare medlemmer av denne bloggen kan legge inn en kommentar.