Artikkelen handler også om oppgradering av typer som kan være aktuelle for Norge, Black Hawk og Chinook. (Red.)
Upgrades ahead across the special operations helicopter fleet
By Todd South
Thursday,
May 8, 2025
An MH-6 “little bird” helicopter flies over Tampa Bay, Florida, during a capabilities demonstration in 2024. (Petty Officer 3rd Class Stephan Patzer/Navy)
TAMPA, Fla. – Special operators are upgrading
nearly every aspect of their helicopter fleet as they await the Army’s newest
addition to the rotary wing section.
From
the MH-6 light attack assault “Little Bird,” to
the MH-60 medium attack assault “Blackhawk,” to the MH-47 heavy assault
“Chinook,” officials who develop the aircraft showcased ongoing upgrades
Thursday at the Global SOF Foundation Special Operations Forces Week.
Developers continue to tweak the Little
Bird, the small but powerful aircraft unique to SOCOM.
“It is your streetfighter,” said Paul
Kylander, product manger of the aircraft for Program Executive Office-Rotary
Wing. “When operators want to get to your front door, this is the aircraft they
use.”
The “R” model project is finding ways
to lighten the aircraft for greater speed and range by resetting the entire
fleet’s fuselage with lighter materials.
The project is also upgrading the
cockpit for better avionics management and an advanced airborne tactical
mission suite, Kylander said.
Those upgrades are part of ongoing
efforts that will continue until 2034 for the aircraft. Then, plans call for a
Block 4 upgrade or a possible divestment between 2035 to 2042.
They’re also lightening main and
auxiliary fuel tanks and both the attack and assault planks for the aircraft.
The MH-60 is seeing some of its own
upgrades.
Software updates, navigation tools for
degraded visual environments, improved sensors, sensor data fusion and next
generation tactical communications are currently being installed on the MH-60
fleet, said Lt. Col. Cameron Keogh.
There’s ongoing work to improve the
engine life of the YT706 engine, and future efforts include building an open
architecture common cockpit.
On the weapons side, the Blackhawk is
adding the joint air-to-ground missile, a conformal lightweight armament wing,
M-230 recoil dampers, the GAU-19 Gun Pod and a helmet display tracking system.
Those additions provide more options
to Blackhawk crews.
“Having a quiver full of tools to do
your job is pretty handy,” Keogh said.
The Blackhawk will also see an
improved crew chief seat, AN/PQ-187 Silent Knight Radar nose door reconfiguration
and upturned exhaust suppressor II, engine inlet barrier filter for dusty
environments and the GE T901 Improved Turbine Engine.
On the heavy side, the MH47G Chinook
is seeing increased demand for payloads, range and speed, said Lt. Col. Thomas
Brewington, product manager for the Chinook at the PEO.
The oldest frame in the Chinook fleet
will retire soon after 59 years of service, Brewington said.
But the aging platform is seeing its
own set of advancements with a replacement of the existing flight control
pallets, which augment manned flight by using a system called the Active
Parallel Actuator Subsystem.
The system “augments manned flight by
providing tactile cueing to prevent the pilot from exceeding an aircraft
performance limit resulting in increased safety and operational usage while
reducing pilot workload during the most critical stages of flight,” Brewington
said.
An October 2024 test of the system
allowed a “hands off” landing on a predesignated point by a Chinook crew at the
Redstone Arsenal in Huntsville, Alabama, Brewington said.
The system is a “stepping stone” to
autonomous pilot assist, he said.


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