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NEWS | UH-72B Lakota in US Airbus Helicopters Inc

Airbus Offers Lakota Drone to the Marines


The 5-bladed H145M helicopter, which is entering service in the US Army as the UH-72B Lakota, is being developed in an unmanned variant for the US Marine Corps





Airbus Offers Lakota Drone to the Marines
Airbus Offers Lakota Drone to the Marines
Airbus Helicopters, June 23, 2024 - The United States Marine Corps (USMC) is convinced, awarding Airbus US Space & Defense Inc a contract to develop an unmanned variant of the UH-72 Lakota.

Carl Forsling, Senior Manager, Business Development and Strategy explains the value and challenges of integrating the versatility of Airbus’ range into a UAS.

“the amount of cargo they must transport over vast areas simply demands the unmanned system delivery. Over time, a manned system can only fly so many hours per day, and yet there are these unmanned long-duration missions over extended distances. It’s well suited for it. The other aspect is that the increased threat requires unmanned because it means a person won’t be lost.”

It’s been 10 years since an EC145 was flown as an optionally piloted vehicle (OPV). In the subsequent decade, unmanned assets and their interoperability with traditional vertical lift solutions have become even more of an industry priority. Fittingly, it is a version of the H145, the UH-72 Lakota that is currently in the process of being adapted to fly unmanned missions for the USMC.

A potential mission might be resupplying marine units of 60 to 70 people distributed throughout what is known as the first island chain. The capability of ferrying cargo to these forward bases that are going to be operating independently stretches the limits of traditional systems. An unmanned platform is better suited to keep up with demand and isn’t risk worthy.

As Forsling explains, “with the right architecture, the interchangeability that this unmanned system can offer… It can carry a 2,000 -pound missile reload, but also 2,000 pounds that could be air launched effects. It could be an electronic warfare system. It could be anything - and the flexibility that this approach has, based on a very proven Airbus platform, by adding the computer architecture and the unmanned systems, allows it to do a plethora of missions that it wasn’t able to do before.”

Airbus Offers Lakota Drone to the Marines




Of course, an adapted Lakota is not simply a clean sheet design and the unmanned version can also benefit from lessons learned from throughout the entirety of Airbus’ range and demonstrators. Forsling, for one, can already see the benefits: “we’re able to utilise a lot of the resources and benefit from some of the technologies that have been used on previous platforms and, where appropriate, leverage some of that to help us accelerate this project into the field.”

The next phases of the project will involve system integration, ground tests and flight tests over the next couple of years.

Beyond development, Airbus’ approach augurs well for a smooth integration into operations. “Airbus has already fielded unmanned naval rotorcraft in Europe, and obviously we’re able to benefit from that,” explains Forsling. “The UH-72 itself has extensive support networks, so both from a technical standpoint in development, and then as you phase into prototyping and production, you’ve got established products that can be integrated much more smoothly than clean sheet designs.”





  See also


UH-72B Lakota in US Airbus Helicopters Inc
US US Marine Corps
helicopter Helicopters UAV & Drones
EC145 Unmanned Flight Demonstration video
Airbus Unifies Its Tactical Drone Offerings






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