Bell 212 er den sivile varianten. En fantastisk maskin vil jeg påstå. Driftssikker og pålitelig. Her på jobb ved klargjøring for utslep av Statfjord "C" i Vats, Rogaland 1984.
Asia-Pacific
‘SEEEYUH’
Huey: Air Force prepares to phase out UH-1N helicopters at Tokyo hub
By
Seth Robson
Stars and
Stripes May 23, 2025
Tech. Sgt. Christopher Taylor, a 459th Airlift Squadron special mission
aviator, waves as a UH-1N Huey takes off for a formation flight at Yokota Air
Base, Japan, on May 9, 2025. (Alexzandra Gracey/U.S. Air Force)
YOKOTA AIR BASE, Japan — The distinctive
“whomp, whomp” of UH-1N Huey helicopters is set to fade from the skies over
western Tokyo as the Air Force prepares to retire the aircraft after more than
six decades of service.
A banner displayed during Yokota’s recent
Japanese-American Friendship Festival marked the moment: “SEEEYUH! 1980-2025.
USAF Yokota AB UH-1N Huey.”
The sign, featuring images of the
helicopters and the 459th Airlift Squadron’s centaur logo, signaled the end of
the Huey era to approximately 117,000 festivalgoers at the annual flightline
event.
The squadron, based at Yokota, operates
a small fleet of UH-1Ns and C-12J Huron aircraft. The Hueys support a range of
missions, including flying VIPs across U.S. military installations around
Tokyo, airlifting patients to the hospital at Yokosuka Naval Base south of
Yokohama, and providing search and rescue or operational support.
“After 61 years of service, the UH-1N
Huey fleet is set to retire,” a spokesman for Yokota’s 374th Airlift Wing,
Master Sgt. Nathan Allen, said in an email Thursday.
Airmen from the 459th Airlift Squadron show off the capabilities of the
UH-1N Huey during the Japanese-American Friendship Festival at Yokota Air Base,
Japan, on May 17, 2025. (Jarrett Smith/U.S. Air Force)
Allen and Pacific Air Forces officials
did not respond to additional questions emailed Thursday and Friday about the
timing of the Hueys’ departure or their replacements.
Photos posted on Yokota’s official
website show two UH-1Ns flying in formation over Japan on May 9. One image
shows a Huey flying past the Tokyo Skytree, a 2,080-foot broadcasting tower
with observation decks.
The first Hueys at Yokota — UH-1P models
— arrived in 1971 and were later replaced by the twin-engine UH-1N variant,
according to the wing’s website.
The UH-1 series, developed by Bell
Helicopter in the 1950s and widely used during the Vietnam War, became a symbol
of U.S. military aviation. Known for its unique rotor sound and battlefield
versatility, the Huey was used by the Army for medical evacuations, troop
transports and combat air support.
The Huey has flown more combat hours
than any other aircraft in history, according to a 2011 release from the Joint
Multinational Readiness Center in Germany, issued when the Army retired its
remaining Hueys in the country.
The Air Force plans to replace its
UH-1Ns with Boeing’s MH-139A Grey Wolf. That helicopter, based on the
commercial AW139, offers improved performance — cruising 50% faster, flying 50%
farther and lifting 5,000 more pounds than the Huey, while offering a 30%
larger cabin, according to the service’s website.
However, the Air Force last year reduced
its planned purchase of the Grey Wolf from 74 to 42 aircraft, according to
budget documents cited in a March 2024 report by defense publisher Janes.




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