andUSAF issues RFI for UH-1N modernization
33 minutes ago
The US Air Force has issued a request for information (RfI) to modernize its ageing fleet of Bell UH-1N helicopters-potentially to keep the aircraft in service for another 30 years.
"In terms of mission capable (MC) rates, the UH-1 remains one of the most reliable platforms within the US Air Force inventory," the request reads.
"To provide the UH-1 with an additional 30 years of service and retain its MC rates, the rotary branch is attempting to resolve sustainability and capability shortfalls."
The notice was posted 17 April. The USAF wants responses within 14 days of the posting.
The USAF wants to increase the UH-1N's endurance, range, speed, all-weather capability, survivability and equip it with modernised communication and navigation system capabilities.
"The government is seeking interested sources to fulfil [fiscal year]14-18 requirements," the RFI reads.
The Hueys were supposed to have been replaced by the USAF's common vertical lift support platform (CVLSP), which had attracted interest from Sikorsky, AgustaWestland, Bell Helicopter and Boeing.
But the CVLSP funding was eliminated in the US Department of Defense's fiscal year 2013 budget proposal.
The USAF is also planning on taking some of the US Marine Corps' surplus UH-1Ns.
The Marines are replacing the UH-1Ns with some newly-built UH-1Y "Venom" helicopters.
But the USAF has yet to determine what it will do with the UH-1Ns.
http://www.flightglobal.com/news/articl ... nt-357446/
of last year...
12:30 2 Jun 2011 Source:
When three nuclear protestors broke into the E-9 Minuteman launch site in rural North Dakota on 20 June 2006, alarm bells rang all over the US Air Force.
Terrorists may have tried harder to gain access to the missile silo.
But these trespassers were dressed as clowns, and merely spray-painted slogans around the site.
Finished with their work, they waited patiently inside the launch site with hands raised until a helicopter-borne USAF security force arrived to arrest them.
Within the air force, however, the incident underscored the need to replace an ageing, under-powered fleet of 62 Bell UH-1Ns charged with responding to such alarms across vast distances.
The USAF's unguarded, remote missile sites dotting the Great Plains have always been vulnerable to potentially catastrophic security breaches,
and the trio of harmless clowns only seemed to mock that risk.