Kill Army Helo Upgrades & Build Super Chopper: Bell V-280 Exec

Kill Army Helo Upgrades & Build Super Chopper: Bell V-280 Exec
Kill Army Helo Upgrades & Build Super Chopper: Bell V-280 Exec

AMARILLO, TEX.: Bell Helicopter is so confident in their new V-280 tilt-rotor prototype that they want the Pentagon to accelerate the Future Vertical Lift program – which they think the V-280 will win – by “five to eight years.” [Click here for our head-to-head comparison of the V-280 and its rival, the Sikorsky-Boeing SB>1] That…

Why America Really Needs ITEP Engines

Why America Really Needs ITEP Engines
Why America Really Needs ITEP Engines

With the Association of the US Army’s annual conference starting Monday, there is no better time for an analysis of the top modernization program for Army aviation. And we’ve got one of the top experts on helicopters providing the commentary, Mike Hirschberg of the American Helicopter Society International. Should the Army plow ahead with an engine upgrade…

‘Optionally Piloted’ Aircraft Studied For Future Vertical Lift

‘Optionally Piloted’ Aircraft Studied For Future Vertical Lift
‘Optionally Piloted’ Aircraft Studied For Future Vertical Lift

WASHINGTON: The military wants to replace a host of current helicopters with aircraft that not only fly much faster, but can fly without a human pilot. The Army-led Future Vertical Lift program will study whether FVL should be an “Optionally Piloted Vehicle,” capable of accommodating a pair of highly-trained human pilots for complex combat missions or of…

Army Aviators, Rotorcraft Industry Are Flying Blind: A Strategic DVE

NATIONAL HARBOR, MD: Degraded Visual Environment, or DVE, is jargon for the problem helicopter pilots face when their rotors kick up blinding clouds of dust or other debris. DVE also describes the problem the entire rotorcraft industry is facing as it tries to anticipate what new aircraft the Army can actually afford in this blindingly…

They Just Got Osama, So Put Your Money Where The Rotors Are

Those Navy SEALs who killed Osama bin Laden arrived at his hideout in Pakistan by helicopter. While few Americans have seen video of those helos in flight, that is just the most dramatic example of how much the military relies on such machines these days. No military equipment has been more pivotal for U.S. forces…