New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

Sikorsky deals with sand problem

Helicopter maker working with General Electric to fix a kink with engines ingesting dust on a helicopter for Marines, Israel

- By Alexander Soule Alex.Soule@scni.com; 203-842-2545; @casoulman

Could particles of sand in the Israel desert seize up hiring for a $25 billion cog in Connecticu­t’s economic engine?

Sikorsky is not saying, but the Israeli Air Force reportedly is demanding an engine fix for a new helicopter so its pilots can fly with confidence in desert “brownout” conditions.

The Pentagon is reportedly taking notice as it continues flight testing in advance of buying 10 times as many for $25 billion.

The Sikorsky CH-53K

King Stallion is the largest helicopter ever flown by the U.S. military. Its cargo bay is large enough for an M1 Abrams battle tank and able to fly higher and faster than its predecesso­r CH-53E Super Stallion to avoid enemy ground fire.

Already putting seven King Stallion helicopter­s through flight tests, the Marines want 200 in all over a decade to replace its existing Super Stallion fleet that began entering service 40 years ago.

Israel wants 20 King Stallions itself — but according to a Monday report, has complained to Sikorsky after observing deteriorat­ion in engine components from extended exposure to dust and sand kicked up by rotors and wind.

Engine maker GE Aviation touts the King Stallion’s T408 engine compressor­s and turbines as “sand tolerant” and corrosion resistant, in a promotiona­l brochure. The Pentagon has subjected the aircraft to sandstorm conditions as part of extensive flight testing at the Yuma Proving Ground in Arizona, with one U.S. Army account likening the sand’s granularit­y there to moon dust.

In a statement forwarded by a spokespers­on, Sikorsky indicated a majority of “technical issues” have been resolved

without providing details and that it is confident it has “solutions to address the few outstandin­g issues” remaining. Six King Stallions are on the assembly line in Stamford, with another 30 in varying stages of production.

Sikorsky did not indicate whether any prolonged engine issue could delay hiring in Stratford. The manufactur­er lists more than 60 open positions at present and employs about 13,000 people in total, including roughly 8,170 in Connecticu­t.

“We understand the sand ingestion issue and, as the aircraft integrator, have assigned a dedicated team of our most experience­d engineers to work alongside [the Naval Air Systems Command] and GE to resolve this issue,” the Sikorsky statedelay­s

ment reads.

A GE Aviation spokespers­on indicated on Tuesday that work has proceeded on about 100 engines to date, including those now being tested aboard helicopter­s.

A subsidiary of Lockheed Martin, Sikorsky is the state’s third largest corporate employer after Electric Boat and Raytheon Technologi­es. As the case with Electric Boat — which last week received a Navy contract for a new attack submarine — Sikorsky has provided economic stability during the COVID-19 crisis through new hiring, even as Pratt & Whitney has cut jobs due to the pandemic’s impact on commercial aviation.

Lockheed Martin need look no further than Pratt & Whitney to know how engine

can impact aircraft production schedules. Pratt & Whitney has had to troublesho­ot issues with the F135 jet engine it makes for the F-35 joint striker, pushing back production of some planes at a Lockheed Martin factory in Fort Worth, Texas.

The Israeli Air Force measured engine performanc­e falling below levels considered acceptable after just over 20 minutes exposure to dust kicked up by rotors, according to a Monday report in Breaking Defense. Multiple sources the publicatio­n did not cite by name described the dust problem as “very serious” and that IAF is demanding a fix before it will accept delivery of more aircraft. Israel raised no issues with the King Stallion in a formal statement last month

confirming its selection of the helicopter for its military.

In early March, the Government Accountabi­lity Office issued a rebuke of Sikorsky’s own production schedule for the King Stallion, including the manufactur­er’s extended testing timeline. The GAO document recommende­d Sikorsky limit production to six helicopter­s annually — the schedule calls for seven this year and 11 next — which the Department of Defense rejected. Sikorsky goes into full production mode late next year, peaking at about two dozen helicopter­s rolling off the Stratford assembly line annually between 2025 and 2029.

“Overlap between testing and buying larger numbers of helicopter­s means problems revealed during testing would have to be fixed on more helicopter­s already built,” GAO stated in the March report. “Such retrofits are costly.”

The Pentagon is keeping tabs on Israel’s issues with the King Stallion through its Operationa­l Test and Evaluation office, whose approval Sikorsky requires for fullrate production. The Navy has already asked Sikorsky to correct several early King Stallion flaws, to include what it described as “low reliabilit­y” of the gearbox driving the main rotor; and an exhaust system design that it observed resulted in super-heated gases being sucked back into engines and striking the skin of the aircraft.

The CH-53K packs three T408 engines assembled in Lynn, Mass. by GE Aviation, along with another spare for each helicopter. The engine’s turbines are made MTU Aero Engines in Munich, Germany, which reported an average cost of $6.5 million for the first run of engines produced for the seven earliest models now undergoing Navy test flights.

After decades of reliance on its Black Hawk helicopter, the King Stallion is at the top of the immediate priority list for Paul Lemmo, who in January replaced the retired Dan Schultz as president of Sikorsky after previously leading Lockheed Martin’s developmen­t of the Littoral Combat Ship.

Two more major Pentagon programs are slated to hit full production on Lemmo’s watch: a new fleet of Marine One helicopter­s for the White House and rescue choppers for the U.S. Air Force. And Sikorsky is readying for a “fly off ” competitio­n in two years with Bell Helicopter for a new generation of vertical-lift aircraft that could furnish decades of work.

 ?? Victoria Falcon / Naval Air Station Patuxent River ?? A Sikorsky CH-53K King Stallion helicopter kicks up dust in July testing at the U.S. Army’s Yuma Proving Ground in Arizona. The Israeli Air Force has flagged the helicopter’s engines, made by GE Aviation, for their ability to withstand sand and dust without degradatio­n.
Victoria Falcon / Naval Air Station Patuxent River A Sikorsky CH-53K King Stallion helicopter kicks up dust in July testing at the U.S. Army’s Yuma Proving Ground in Arizona. The Israeli Air Force has flagged the helicopter’s engines, made by GE Aviation, for their ability to withstand sand and dust without degradatio­n.

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