US Naval Air Systems Command (NAVAIR), April 05, 2023 - NAVAL AIR SYSTEMS COMMAND PATUXENT RIVER, MD - The CH-53K King Stallion completed five full days and nights of envelope expansion testing at sea in the Atlantic last month. The aircraft continued testing in a modern naval environment following initial successful sea trials in June, 2020.
A diverse team of 105 personnel from Air Test and Evaluation Squadron Two One (HX-21), H-53 Heavy Lift Helicopters Program Office (PMA-261), Marine Heavy Helicopter Squadron 461 (HMH-461), Marine Operational Test and Evaluation Squadron One (VMX-1), and Sikorsky pilots, engineers, technicians and maintainers successfully accomplished this second set of sea trials for the CH-53K. Sea trial testing took place aboard the USS Arlington, a San Antonio-class amphibious transport dock (LPD24), operated by the U.S. Navy.
Col. Kate Fleeger, PMA-261 program manager said “The latest sea trials were another great success for the CH-53K program. Data analysis has shown a greater CH-53K LPD launch and recovery envelope than that of the CH-53E.”
Sea trials are a series of tests to evaluate the performance of the aircraft at sea. Tests performed during the event included: launch and recovery; rotor start and shutdown; blade fold; and shipboard compatibility testing – all in increasing wind speed and varying wind directions relative to the aircraft.
Sarah Naiva, Assistant Program Manager for Test and Evaluation for the CH-53 said “We made the stars align for us with months of exhaustive planning and tireless collaboration. The joint team overcame numerous challenges, such as tumultuous seas, and their hard work and dedication will provide the fleet with greater flexibility to launch and recover the CH-53K in more severe weather conditions and mission scenarios where an LPD has limited steering.”
According Naiva there are many variables potentially impacting a high-profile, high-risk event such as sea trials.
Ship compatibility testing includes towing the aircraft around the deck and in the hangar, performing maintenance while aboard the ship, ensuring the aircraft fits in all the locations it needs to around the ship deck and hangar and evaluating chain/tie-down procedures.
Ultimately, the results of these tests will enable the CH-53K to provide critical ship-to-shore heavy lift capability for future Marine Expeditionary Unit deployments,” said Naiva.
The Marine Corps continues to execute its transition from the CH-53E to the CH-53K and is on schedule to declare Full Operational Capability in FY2029.
A diverse team of 105 personnel from Air Test and Evaluation Squadron Two One (HX-21), H-53 Heavy Lift Helicopters Program Office (PMA-261), Marine Heavy Helicopter Squadron 461 (HMH-461), Marine Operational Test and Evaluation Squadron One (VMX-1), and Sikorsky pilots, engineers, technicians and maintainers successfully accomplished this second set of sea trials for the CH-53K. Sea trial testing took place aboard the USS Arlington, a San Antonio-class amphibious transport dock (LPD24), operated by the U.S. Navy.
Col. Kate Fleeger, PMA-261 program manager said “The latest sea trials were another great success for the CH-53K program. Data analysis has shown a greater CH-53K LPD launch and recovery envelope than that of the CH-53E.”
Sea trials are a series of tests to evaluate the performance of the aircraft at sea. Tests performed during the event included: launch and recovery; rotor start and shutdown; blade fold; and shipboard compatibility testing – all in increasing wind speed and varying wind directions relative to the aircraft.
Sarah Naiva, Assistant Program Manager for Test and Evaluation for the CH-53 said “We made the stars align for us with months of exhaustive planning and tireless collaboration. The joint team overcame numerous challenges, such as tumultuous seas, and their hard work and dedication will provide the fleet with greater flexibility to launch and recover the CH-53K in more severe weather conditions and mission scenarios where an LPD has limited steering.”
According Naiva there are many variables potentially impacting a high-profile, high-risk event such as sea trials.
Ship compatibility testing includes towing the aircraft around the deck and in the hangar, performing maintenance while aboard the ship, ensuring the aircraft fits in all the locations it needs to around the ship deck and hangar and evaluating chain/tie-down procedures.
Ultimately, the results of these tests will enable the CH-53K to provide critical ship-to-shore heavy lift capability for future Marine Expeditionary Unit deployments,” said Naiva.
The Marine Corps continues to execute its transition from the CH-53E to the CH-53K and is on schedule to declare Full Operational Capability in FY2029.
CH-53K aboard the USS Arlington
CH-53K King Stallion 168780 ( Sikorsky Helicopters )
See also |
CH-53K King Stallion in US Marine Corps
USS Arlington ( LPD-24, San Antonio class )
HX-21 Air Test and Evaluation Squadron TWO ONE US Navy
VMX-1 Marine Operational Test and Evaluation Squadron One US Marine Corps
HMH-461 Marine Heavy Helicopter Squadron 461 US Marine Corps
CH-53K King Stallion First Time at Sea