Dette kan være en aktuell type når Forsvaret kjøper nytt helikopter til Hæren og Spesialstyrkene. (Red.)
Japan becomes Boeing’s newest customer of
latest Chinook helo variant
By Jen Judson
Thursday,
Feb 13, 2025
An MH-47G Chinook helicopter from the 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment approaches a beach during training near Hurlburt Field, Florida, in February 2020. (DOD)
Japan has ordered 17 of
the latest
variant of the Boeing-manufactured CH-47 Chinook cargo helicopter,
the company said Thursday.
The CH-47 Block II Chinook
is an extended-range version of the aircraft that is used by the U.S. Army and
U.S. Special Operations Command. Japan is the fourth customer for the new
variant.
Germany
purchased 60 of the helicopters in a $4
billion deal in 2022, and the U.K.
finalized its deal for 14 Chinooks in early 2024.
The CH-47s will be
co-produced by Boeing and Kawasaki Heavy Industries. The Japanese company
similarly provided elements for the CH-47 JA helicopters.
The helicopters purchased
for the Japan Self-Defense Forces will replace some of its CH-47 JA aircraft,
which were purchased in the 1980s and delivered by the early 2000s. The
helicopters have been used, for example, to respond to the Fukushima nuclear
power plant disaster in 2011, with special lead plates attached to the floor to
protect the crew from radiation exposure. The aircraft collected ocean water
and dropped it over hot spots.
“This award strengthens
our decades-long relationship with [Kawasaki Heavy Industries] and provides
critical capability improvements that will keep the Japan Self-Defense Forces
operating heavy-lift aircraft for decades to come,” Heather McBryan, vice
president and program manager for Boeing cargo programs, said in a statement.
“The Block II configuration and digital flight controls will modernize and
significantly improve Japan’s helicopter transport capabilities by improving
aircraft stability, safety, and efficiency.”
The U.S. Army decided in
2019 that it would not procure the CH-47F Block II for the active fleet so it could begin
making heavier investments in its Future Long Range Assault Aircraft, or FLRAA,
and the Future Attack Reconnaissance Aircraft, or FARA, that it wanted to field
in the early 2030s. The service decided it would build 69 of the latest Chinook
variant for special operations in the form of the MH-47 “G” model and stop
there.
But the Block II had a
comeback after several years of uncertainty when the Army decided to return
funding to build the variant for the active force following pressure from
Congress. And as the result of the service’s decision to cancel its FARA
program in 2024, $465.2
million in fiscal 2025 funding became available to
enable a Block II production start for the regular Army.
The version incorporates a
new fuel system, electrical system and stronger airframe to increase lift
capability. The Block II version of the Chinook featured new rotor blades, but the
Army abandoned the effort in 2022 due to excessive
rotor blade vibrations that, according to the Pentagon’s chief weapons tester,
posed a flight risk.


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