Sunday, May 20, 2018

The U.S. Marines Have Received Their First CH-53K King Stallion Helicopter



The Warzone/The Drive: The Marines Have Finally Received Their First Monster CH-53K King Stallion Helicopter

Now the service is looking for ways to trim back the massively expensive helicopter's costs as it works to get its first unit operational in 2019.

The U.S. Marine Corps has taken delivery of its first CH-53K King Stallion heavy lift helicopter. After years of setbacks and delays, and amid new concerns about schedule slips, the service is still hoping to eventually buy as many as 200 of the choppers to replace its fleet of aging and increasingly unreliable CH-53E Super Stallions.

On May 16, 2018, the initial Marine CH-53K touched down at Marine Corps Air Station New River in North Carolina. Sikorsky, now part of Lockheed Martin, built the helicopter, which is now set to begin a so-called "Supportability Test Plan" to help determine the logistical requirements to maintain and sustain the aircraft. The Marines expect to reach initial operational capability with the type by the end of 2019.

Read more ....

WNU Editor: At a cost of $122 million per unit ($80 million per unit when production begins to build 200 of them) .... they are not cheap. But something has to replace the increasingly unreliable CH-53E Super Stallions.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Right. ..if 15%-20% of its weight was pure 99.99 gold. That's its unit price. It's crazy. And you cannot easily resell it. And its value plummets over time. What are we doing? !

Anonymous said...

CH/MH-47s cost a third of a 53K. What do you get for the additional 80 Million? A couple of tons lift capability. You could by an additional Chinook and save 40 Mil in the process. As for special considerations on the ship, 47s work of ships and can fit in the hanger deck. Been there, done that. Hats off to the Navy for convincing Congress to give them the money. They do have the F35 procurement experience helping them there.