Denne saken viser at gamle, gode Black Hawk stadig kommer i nye varianter og med oppgraderinger. Det er verdt å merke seg når Norge snart må bestemme seg for nye maskiner til Hæren og Speialstyrkene. (Red.)
Aviano crew marks end of Pave Hawk helicopter era
with farewell mission
By
Brian Erickson
Stars and Stripes • December
20, 2024
A
U.S. Air Force HH-60G Pave Hawk helicopter operated by the 56th Rescue Squadron
flies over Aviano Air Base, Italy, Feb. 12, 2020. Airmen from Aviano bid
farewell to the Pave Hawk on Dec. 18, 2024, as it flew its final active-duty
mission before the base's transition to the HH-60W Jolly Green II. (Thomas S.
Keisler IV/U.S. Air Force)
AVIANO AIR BASE,
Italy — U.S. airmen here took their final active-duty flight this week in a
rescue helicopter that the Air Force is phasing out after decades of use in
saving the lives of American personnel the world over.
The HH-60G Pave
Hawk was bid farewell Wednesday by members of the 56th Rescue Squadron and 56th
Rescue Generation Squadron, as they get set to join the rest of the service
in switching
to the HH-60W Jolly Green II and its advanced capabilities.
Retirement of the
Pave Hawk has been in the works since 2010. The helicopter is made by Sikorsky,
which also produces the Army’s Black Hawk.
Over the years,
the Pave Hawk has flown missions ranging from combat rescue to humanitarian aid
delivery and disaster response, a U.S. Air Forces in Europe — Air Forces Africa
statement said.
It served as the
Air Force’s primary combat search and rescue helicopter, pulling off both
daytime and nighttime recoveries of service members in hostile environments.
“Today marks the
end of an iconic chapter in our Air Force history,” Col. Beau Diers, the 31st
Fighter Wing’s deputy commander, said in the statement.
Aviano received
its first HH-60W helicopters on December 13 and is scheduled to receive its
full order by October 2025.
An
HH-60G Pave Hawk helicopter from the 56th Rescue Squadron lands in Aviano,
Italy, Dec. 17, 2019. Aviano Air Base had its last active-duty mission in a
Pave Hawk on Dec. 18, 2024, continuing the service's phaseout of the
helicopter. (Rebeccah Woodrow/U.S. Air Force)
The Pave Hawk’s
replacement has better avionics, threat detection and countermeasures as well
as greater fuel capacity, the Air Force statement said.
The Jolly
Green II can carry two pilots, two gunners, two paramedics and two litters,
while the fuselage can be mounted on either side with .50-caliber and 7.62 mm
machine guns, according to the Air Force.
The upgrades reflect
a focus on protecting crews and evacuees in hostile environments, Air Force Air
Education and Training Command said in a statement earlier this month.
The name Jolly
Green II pays homage to the Vietnam War-era Sikorsky HH-3E Jolly Green and
HH-53 Super Jolly Green, whose crews are regarded as the pioneers of aerial
combat search and rescue, the Air Force said in 2020.
Because of its
size and olive green color, the HH-3E was nicknamed after advertising icon the
Jolly Green Giant.
Phaseout of the
Pave Hawk began in 2022. The Jolly
Green II’s first operational use came in September of that
year, when it flew a patient from Valdosta, Ga., to Tampa, Fla., the Air Force
said.
In December 2022,
the HH-60W debuted in the field with a casualty evacuation operation in the
Horn of Africa, according to a Defense
Department report.
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