Boeing Gearing Up for MH-139 Test Models, Production
5/20/2019
The first MH-139 for the Air Force—
which replaces the UH-1N Huey in the roles of nuclear missile field support,
VIP transport, and some other missions—
is in production at Agusta-Westland facilities north of St. Louis, Mo.,
and if there are no hiccups,
it will fly by the end of the year,
Boeing officials reported.
The Agusta-Westland facility, part of Boeing’s major subcontractor, Leonardo,
will assemble the fuselage, put on the rotors,
and essentially build a civilian version of the aircraft,
Rick Lemaster, company director of vertical lift marketing,
told reporters in a briefing at Boeing’s Philadelphia, Pa., helicopter factory on May 16.
It is then handed over to Boeing, which militarizes it for the Air Force’s unique missions.
Boeing will convert the vanilla aircraft into an MH-139 by changing the baggage door compartment to “allow some special equipment to be installed”
that the Air Force declines to identify.
Defensive aids, such as flare dispensers and missile warning systems will be added,
as will the machine gun mount and a “crashworthy, self-sealing fuel tank,” Lemaster explained.
Additionally, ballistic protection will be added to the floor and cockpit.
Once complete, the aircraft will receive USAF certification and fly off to their duty station.
Lemaster said the Air Force will likely “turn on production in the next year or two,
and once that happens the company anticipates to deliver about 10 aircraft per year into the early 2030s.
The numbers may vary, as USAF’s contract allows for more or less aircraft each year.
The MH-139 is a $2.38 billion firm, fixed-price contract program,
of which $375 million gets the ball rolling with engineering and manufacturing development.
Although the Air Force quoted a figure of $1.7 billion in savings
when it announced Boeing had won the UH-1N replacement contest last fall,
Boeing’s number is more conservative, Lemaster said.
“We said we could save $1 billion, in terms of overall life cycle costs, or compared to competitors.
That was our calculation, between support cost and acquisition.”
The big discriminator between Boeing and its chief rival, the Lockheed Martin/Sikorsky Blackhawk,
was the fact that the Air Force didn’t need a larger, combat-capable aircraft, he said.
“This aircraft is relatively easy to maintain compared to competitors,” Lemaster said.
The MH-139 is “not as big and heavy as a Blackhawk,”
which he called “a great capability, great in combat, but that’s not what the Air Force requirement was.”
Boeing’s approach was to offer an aircraft that is “right-sized for the mission,” Lemaster asserted.
The first two aircraft are to be delivered in late 2020.
They will then enter a test program, and if all goes well,
operational testing will be in 2022, followed by full-rate production in 2023.
The Air Force will buy at least 84 MH-139s.
Armed versions with an M240 machine gun externally mounted on the starboard side will be fielded by three Air Force Global Strike Command bases,
each with 11 aircraft to rapidly respond to threats at missile fields and provide other support for the ICBM mission.
Some 30 aircraft will be based at JB Andrews, Md., for VIP transport.
Four aircraft each will support VIP and aeromedical evacuation missions at Yokota AB, Japan,
and the Air Force survival, evasion, resistance, and escape school at Fairchild AFB, Wash.
The MH-139 “schoolhouse” at Kirtland AFB, N.M., will get the remainder, minus the two initial aircraft,
which will stay at Eglin AFB, Fla.,
for ongoing test of modifications and software.
Lemaster said the AW-139, on which the MH-139 is based,
is in service with 250 customers in 70 nations,
and the fleet has accumulated more than two million flight hours,
“So it’s a very mature product,” allowing Boeing to quote fixed-price support costs.
The Air Force plans to fly the aircraft 480 hours per year, each.
The highest-time version of the aircraft has just reached 12,000 flight hours,
so it will be a long time before the Air Force will need to think about the MH-139’s replacement, Lemaster said.
“There is no airframe life limit, so there’s no requirement to take it back to a depot and do modifications,” he noted.
Having succeeded in running over an hour with no transmission oil—a “run dry” test,
Lemaster said, “It’s just a very survivable aircraft.”
Additionally, the helicopter has been certified for one pilot under instrument flight rules,
meaning the service could optionally relax its two-pilot requirement down the road, he said.
For ease of maintainability, the engine and transmission are above the cabin,
and built-in foot stands allow preflight inspections without putting a hardstand next to the aircraft, he said.
There’s “one contiguous open space” in the cabin, offering flexibility of use.
Although the engines don’t have infrared suppressors,
the exhaust heat is fairly low, without intense hotspots that would make a good infrared target.
Lemaster said he thinks the first batch of aircraft will be a run of eight,
but “there’s a lot of flexibility in the way the contract is structured,
so they can add or subtract the quantity.
We’ve given them firm pricing for all of those iterations, and they’ll buy what they want.”
Boeing provided travel and accommodations for reporters making the factory tour.