Frank in Vancouver said:
Sikorsky and Bombardier Aerospace have an industrial teaming agreement to offer the H-92 as a replacement for Canada's Maritime Helicopter. 28 helicopters are required and a selection is planned for the summer of 2004.
By the way, does someone know if this helo will be able to lift the arty?? I read somewhere that the Griffon was not able to.. I don't know about the Sea-King.. What will it be able to transport? LAV, arty, MBT?????
This is the press release from Sikorsky
http://www.sikorsky.com/details/0,3036,CLI1_DIV69_ETI1844,00.html
They make no mention of Bombardier, that info could be from the late 90s when we were still trying to get new helos and had the avionics and mission kit as a separate contract from the airframe.
The Cyclone will have a crew of 4, 2 pilots, 1 TACCO, and 1 AESOp. As for slinging arty, there's not a whole lot of arty in the North Atlantic so I don't think it'll ever be a concern of ours. Everyone seems to be concerned with the multi mission capabilities, how come no one asks these questions about the Cormorant? It's sole role is SAR, ours is fleet defense and ASW with a few utility roles for the Navy. We don't work with crunchies, we don't even come into contact with crunchies. We don't learn Tac flying since it's not our primary role, and I doubt I'll ever see a piece of arty in my MH days.
Now as for Hercs not being able to transport LAVs + ammo/crew/kit, etc, they can't transport MBTs or M109s, they're tac airlift, not strategic. On the question of slinging MBTs, there isn't a helo in the world that can sling an MBT, there's barely aircraft that can haul them (yes there are a few before someone jumps on that one).
Another point on the Cyclone, it is my impression from the guys at work that it will not have a ramp. I can't say for sure but the talk leads me to believe that it won't have a ramp. Sub hunting is not a major concern these days (it's still our primary role though), but the helo does extend the range of the ships eyes and ears, it allows the ship to identify possible hostiles without putting the ship and crew in danger. Helos are a lot cheaper than frigates. So until we can get beyond line of sight with radar, a helo will continue to be part of the fleet defense package.
One final point for this post, having the same airframe for different roles isn't necessarily a good thing. If one has a problem, now your entire helo fleet is grounded, at least with different airframes your world won't stop just cause a SAR bird had a problem. I've seen it with the Harvard in Moose Jaw, some American Texan II has a problem and the entire T-6 fleet is grounded, ours included.
Cheers