Safety upgrades could delay new presidential helicopter.The helicopter chosen to carry the nation's chief executive meets civil aviation safety requirements, but it will require modifications to satisfy more stringent military specifications, asserted officials at the Navy program office managing the effort. Competition for the presidential helicopter replacement was heated. The Lockheed Martin/Agusta Westland US101, now called VH-71A, beat out a version of the Sikorsky S-92. Lockheed Martin's team includes Agusta Westland (aircraft design), Bell Helicopter Bell Helicopter Textron is an American helicopter and tiltrotor manufacturer headquartered in Fort Worth, Texas. A division of Textron, Bell manufactures military helicopter and tiltrotor products in the United States (primarily in and around Fort Worth as well as in Amarillo, (aircraft assembly) and General Electric (engines). The US101 had been certified to civil standards before the current requirements--including overall crashworthiness Crashworthiness is the ability of a structure to protect its occupants during an impact. This is commonly tested when investigating the safety of vehicles. Depending on the nature of the impact and the vehicle involved, different criteria are used to determine the , resistance to bird strikes and turbine burst protection--were introduced. According to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. the Naval Air Systems Command The Naval Air Systems Command, or NAVAIR, is the part of the United States Navy which provides materiel support for naval aircraft and airborne weapon systems, such as guided missiles. NAVAIR was established in 1966 as the successor to the Navy's Bureau of Naval Weapons (BuWeps). (NAVAIR NAVAIR Naval Air Systems Command ), certification requirements for new Navy and Marine aircraft are generally tougher than even the most modern civil safety standards Safety standards are standards designed to ensure the safety of products, activities or processes, etc. They may be advisory or compulsory and are normally laid down by an advisory or regulatory body that may be either voluntary or statutory. . NAVAIR is a self-certifying agency and officials say they are now formulating criteria that should test the US101 to the agency's current standards. Even though the US101 was chosen to meet an accelerated delivery schedule, testing to these criteria can take months to years, mentioned helicopter industry sources. Citing security concerns, NAVAIR has adopted a policy of not publicly discussing vulnerabilities of the aircraft. However, how much "beefing-up" the US101 structure needs will determine the ultimate cost and risk of a program on a tight schedule. NAVAIR accelerated the expected delivery of the initial four presidential helicopters from fiscal year 2013 to 2009, and full operational capability with 23 helicopters is slated for 2014. To meet this rushed schedule, Lockheed Martin For the former company, see . Lockheed Martin (NYSE: LMT) is a leading multinational aerospace manufacturer and advanced technology company formed in 1995 by the merger of Lockheed Corporation with Martin Marietta. and the Navy expect that the first variant of the VH-71A largely will be an off-the-shelf EH101 with upgraded engines and protective equipment, such as missile warning detectors and infrared countermeasures This article is about missile counter measures. For IRCMonitor, see Wikipedia:IRCMonitor. Infrared countermeasures (IRCM) are devices designed to protect aircraft from infrared homing ("heat seeking") missiles by confusing the missiles' infrared . Future improvements will include more efficient main rotor n. 1. (Aviation) The assembly of large rotating airfoils (blades) on a helicopter that produce the lift to support the helicopter in the air. Noun 1. blades, a revised tail rotor Noun 1. tail rotor - rotor consisting of a rotating airfoil on the tail of a single-rotor helicopter; keeps the helicopter from spinning in the direction opposite to the rotation of the main rotor anti-torque rotor , more powerful engines, an up-rated transmission and a second cabin display. NAVAIR also expects the upgraded airframe to achieve a 10,000-hour service life, matching today's VH-60N presidential helicopter. Once in service with Marine Squadron HMX-1, the new helicopter must give the president safe and timely transportation with "office-in-the-sky" capability. "That's a flying communications center, not just a taxi cab," explained NAVAIR program manager Doug Isleib. "The VIPs on board must have connectivity and command capability anywhere we take them." Yet despite the emphasis on safety and high-tech systems, NAVAIR based 60 percent of the US101's technical score on helicopter cabin volume, according to the Congressional Research Service The Congressional Research Service (CRS) is a branch of the Library of Congress that provides objective, nonpartisan research, analysis, and information to assist Congress in its legislative, oversight, and representative functions. U.S. . The manufacturer's brochures show the US101 cabin to be 1 foot, 5 inches wider and 3 feet longer than the basic S-92. Sikorsky lengthened the S-92. The wider EH101 was designed to with-stand 15 g's (gravity forces) vertical impacts without major cabin deformation, according to Agusta Westland. However, current standards specify higher crash loads with vertical, longitudinal, and lateral components. Stephen Moss, president of Agusta Westland, insists the basic EHI Ehi (ē`hī), the same as Ahiram. 01 designed in the early 1980s meets all current safety criteria. Pat Deward, Lockheed Martin's US 101 program manager, says the aircraft is close to modern requirements, and adds, "We'll do exactly what NAVAIR wants us to do." Deward said the US101 will be an all-aluminum airframe. The basic EH101 structure is currently constructed with approximately 15 percent composite materials, but Lock-heed Martin now plans to substitute aluminum to address crashworthiness and other requirements. One former helicopter industry executive speculates that the redesign will require heavier frames throughout the US101 structure, and a new round of ground testing before the first presidential helicopter flies. Based on the helicopter industry's track record, that process could take three years or more. The urgency attached to the program made the schedule a key concern for NAVAIR. Lockheed Martin and Agusta Westland delivered the sophisticated EH101 anti-submarine warfare helicopter to the British Royal Navy five years late and 1.16 billion British pounds over budget, according to a U.K. national audit office report. Ironically the Sikorsky S-92 that failed to win the contract already features pioneering safety innovations now required of all new rotorcraft ro·tor·craft n. An aircraft, especially a helicopter, that is kept partially or completely airborne by airfoils rotating around a vertical axis. . In 2002, it became the first helicopter civil certified under new federal airworthiness air·wor·thy adj. air·wor·thi·er, air·wor·thi·est Being in fit condition to fly: an airworthy helicopter; airworthy avionics. regulations. By comparison, the EH101 was certified in 1994, when fewer regulations were in effect. The National Aeronautics Association The National Aeronautic Association (NAA) is a non-profit organization dedicated to the advancement of the art, sport and science of aviation in the United States. The National Aeronautic Association is the oldest national aviation organization in the United States. recognized the S-92 for its safety, performance, and efficiency with its 2002 Collier Trophy. "It was the innovations among the safety aspects that made it stand out among the other candidates," NAA NAA Nomina Anatomica Avium. vice chairman Skip Ringo recalled. Lockheed maintains that changes to the EH 101 will not delay the new Marine One. Stephen Ramsey, executive vice president for helicopter systems at Lockheed Martin, is quick to point out that the US101 now gives the U.S. government a mature air vehicle, already proven in service with the Royal Navy, Royal Air Force, Italian Navy, Canadian Forces and Portuguese Air Force The Portuguese Air Force (PoAF) (Portuguese: Força Aérea Portuguesa, FAP) is the air force of Portugal. Its origins dates back to 1912 when the military aviation began to be used in Portugal, later leading to the creation of the Army's and Navy's aviation . But some safety issues remain unresolved. A UK Merlin crash in March 2004 grounded the British and Canadian fleets and focused attention on cracks in the tail rotor hub. Lockheed Martin says it is working with the U.K. Ministry of Defense fixing the tail rotor problem. As of April 2005, Canadian maintenance officers could not explain the accelerated wear in other flight-critical components. Again, to meet the aggressive schedule, Lockheed Martin officials said Agusta Westland will build four US101 pilot production aircraft in Yeovil, in the United Kingdom. Rotor blades, transmissions and other critical parts will be made in Italy and Britain. Bell helicopter will assemble the fifth and subsequent aircraft in Amarillo, Texas. Presidential communications and protection systems will be integrated at the Lockheed Martin facilities in Owego, N.Y. NAVAIR will not comment on the security risks inherent in manufacturing US10l components offshore, but says only the plan is in compliance with Federal Acquisition Regulations The Federal Acquisition Regulation (usually referred to as the FAR or F.A.R.), are a series of regulations issued by the Federal government of the United States that concern the requirements of contractors for selling to the government, the terms under which the and the Procurement Integrity Act. Navy officials say plans are underway to build a government-owned, contractor-operated presidential helicopter facility at Patuxent River, Md., so the aircraft need never be returned to an overseas factory for overhaul or modification. The mixed fleet of VH-3D and VH-60N helicopters that currently supports the presidential mission includes 30-year old aircraft that were designed in the 1960s. Lockheed Martin was awarded a $1.7 billion contract for the VH-71A's system development and demonstration phase. Engine tests on a contractor vehicle began in December 2004. Additional evaluations will begin at Owego with the first test aircraft, which arrived in June. Flight tests will transition to Patuxent River in 2006. The program, worth nearly $6 billion, covers 23 VH-71 operational aircraft and three test aircraft at an expected cost of approximately $82 million per aircraft (Increment One) and approximately $110 million per aircraft in the final configuration. The VH-71A carries components provided by more than 200 suppliers in 41 states. |
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