Here come the big military contracts again
The task is so unusual that the
depot workers will start with just one aircraft this week and build a body of
experience before starting on the other two, said Dan Anthony, who is in charge
of scheduling H-53 work at the depot They'll do it at what appears to be a
bargain price compared with the $105 million estimated cost for each Osprey, or
the $30 million the last new Super Stallions cost in 1999.
Remember that big 'ol pink
thing from 'Riptide'? Guess they'll have to re-route the
fan club tour indefinitely...
-Ed.
CHERRY
POINT MARINE CORPS AIR STATION -- Earlier this month, a pair of hulking
transport planes touched down and disgorged the newest additions to the Marine
Corps helicopter fleet: three MH-53E Sea Dragons that had been sitting in an
aircraft "boneyard" in the Arizona desert for about a
decade.The civilian maintenance workers at
Cherry Point's Naval Air Depot will clean, strip and transform the worn-out
helicopters into the Marine version of the aircraft, the Super Stallion, a
process that could take 20 months. This is the first time that retired choppers
such as these have been resuscitated, and the challenges are unique: Not only
have the helicopters been outside about 10 years, but the Super Stallion has
evolved with continuous major
upgrades.Restoring the helicopters, which have
been out of production since 1999, is an extraordinary step; but the Marines
have little choice: They're running out of big
choppers.The wars in Afghanistan and Iraq are
taking a bite out of their deteriorating helicopter fleet, not just in aircraft
lost -- six Super Stallions have been destroyed in crashes since 2001 -- but
also in hours that the helicopters are flying.
"They're coasting on legacy fleets," said Richard
Aboulafia, an analyst with the Teal Group, an aerospace and defense consulting
company in Fairfax, Va. "They planned to coast indefinitely ... and it would
have worked just fine if it hadn't been for Afghanistan and Iraq."
The Super Stallion is the Corps' only heavy lift
helicopter, and its workhorse. It moves large amounts of cargo and troops long
distances and performs rescue missions. It can carry up to 55 Marines and can
use slings to transport heavy equipment such as Humvees or even small armored
vehicles.
The Marines' fleet of 150 is working
hard.
The two wars have pushed helicopters into a bigger
military role than at any time since the Vietnam era. In Iraq, choppers are
vital not only for the usual reasons -- because they can quickly move troops,
supplies and equipment between points without runways -- but also because
roadside bombs have become the insurgents' deadliest weapon. In Afghanistan,
roads are few, and broad swaths of rugged territory are impassable by ground
vehicles.
A replacement helicopter, designated the CH-53X, is in
the works; but it is not far along. The Marines hope to sign a contract this
fall to begin development, said John Milliman, a helicopter acquisition programs
spokesman at Patuxent River Marine Air Station in Maryland.
It will probably be at least 2015 before the
replacement choppers are deployed, he said. But the service life of a Super
Stallion is 6,120 hours in operation, and current estimates are that the Corps
will have to start parking about 15 copters a year in 2010.
That leaves five years in which the Marines' fleet of
heavy lift helicopters will dwindle before replacements start coming into
service.
How will they fill the gap?
"Ask me when we get there," Milliman said. "We will
cover it somehow. I know we've got great minds working on it."
Asked whether the helicopter supply would have lasted
through that gap without the wars, he said: "That is a reasonable
supposition."
Last week, the three dark-gray Sea Dragons sat on a
concrete apron outside the Cherry Point depot's hangars, their rotor blades,
exterior fuel tanks and various hatches detached. Their rear loading ramps
gaped, and larger parts such as tail fins were tucked inside.
The Navy paint, which will eventually be replaced by
the pale gray Marine color scheme, was faded and splotched. Inside, they had the
musty smell of vintage cars.
The first will be wheeled into the hangar late this
month.
"When we're done, the Marines will never know that
this was a Navy bird, or that it had been sitting in storage," said Lt. Col.
A.P. Camele, director of operations at the depot.
The Marine Corps has requested money to rebuild two
more Stallions from the boneyard, said Capt. Jerome Bryant, a Marine spokesman
at the Pentagon.
Aboulafia, the analyst, said the wars are not the only
cause of the chopper shortage. He also blames the long-troubled V-22 Osprey
tilt-rotor development program, the costs of which have soared.
That aircraft -- which can take off like a helicopter,
then rotate its engines to go forward like an airplane -- has been in
development since 1983. Its setbacks include two crashes in 2000 that killed 23
Marines and a scandal over falsified maintenance records. The program has
repeatedly seemed close to being canceled, but now appears on track for full
production.
The Osprey is designated a "medium-lift" aircraft,
meaning it carries fewer troops and less cargo than the Super Stallion. It is
planned as the replacement for the smaller CH-46 chopper.
The Marines have spent $13.4 billion on the Osprey,
said Ward Carroll, a spokesman for the program. They have spent or obligated
$111.8 million for the replacement for the Super Stallion, Milliman
said.
"The Marines have put all their lift eggs in one
basket, the V-22," Aboulafia said.
Corps officials thought buying other aircraft would
not only divert money from the Osprey -- long seen by the Marines as their most
important aircraft program -- but could reduce the need for the vulnerable
Osprey in the eyes of budget makers in Washington, he said.
Milliman said the Osprey and the Super Stallion have
little overlap in their missions. The Osprey's problems have made it a
convenient target for critics, he said.
At least part of the solution to the Super Stallion
shortage, Milliman said, could involve the Cherry Point depot and the 14 other
rebuildable helicopters sitting in the Arizona boneyard, formally called the
Aerospace Maintenance and Regeneration Center. The boneyard is a combination
junkyard and storage lot for military and Coast Guard aircraft that can be
brought back into U.S. service or sold to allies.
There are 4,300 aircraft there dating to 1957, and
most are suitable only for parts, said Terry Vanden-Heuvel, a spokeswoman
there.
Before they're stored, fuel is drained and armaments
and classified systems removed. Openings are sealed with tape and paper, then
spray-coated with plastic. The low rainfall and humidity and the alkaline soil
hold corrosion to a minimum.
The civilian depot workers -- officials there call
them artisans -- perform major maintenance on helicopters for the Navy, Air
Force and Marine Corps as well as the Marines' vertical takeoff Harrier jets and
the presidential helicopter fleet. They are adept at maintaining aircraft that
have been out of production for decades: They fashion new parts or devise
techniques to replace components originally expected to outlive the aircraft. In
the giant, spotless hangar where depot workers maintain Stallions, more than a
dozen sit in various states of disassembly.
Military aircraft aren't finished once they're
constructed: They evolve as technology changes. Because the three Sea Dragons
have been out of service for about a decade, more than 80 major system upgrades
must be performed -- engine improvements, navigation equipment, and systems
designed to protect the choppers from enemy missiles. When complete, the
helicopters won't be considered new, but should last as long as others in the
fleet with the same hours. One has about half its service life left, the others
about one-third.
The task is so unusual that the depot workers will
start with just one aircraft this week and build a body of experience before
starting on the other two, said Dan Anthony, who is in charge of scheduling H-53
work at the depot
They'll do it at what appears to be a bargain price
compared with the $105 million estimated cost for each Osprey, or the $30
million the last new Super Stallions cost in 1999.
Camele, the operations director, said the depot
expects to put all three Stallions back in service in top condition for $15
million.
Posted: Mon - August 22, 2005 at 11:31 PM