An Analysis of U.S. Army Helicopter Programs
Title | An Analysis of U.S. Army Helicopter Programs PDF eBook |
Author | Frances M. Lussier |
Publisher | DIANE Publishing |
Pages | 99 |
Release | 1996 |
Genre | Military helicopters |
ISBN | 078812756X |
Examines four alternatives for modernizing the Army's helicopters and compares the costs and benefits of each alternative with the Army's plan for its helicopter fleet. Alternatives include: retain a smaller Comanche program, buy improved Kiowa warriors, and extend the life of the Hueys; continue to buy helicopters currently in production; buy improved Kiowa Warriors and new utility helicopters; and retain and modernize helicopters in the Army's inventory. Appendix includes the Aviation Force Structure. 50 charts and tables.
An Analysis of U.S. Army Helicopter Programs
Title | An Analysis of U.S. Army Helicopter Programs PDF eBook |
Author | |
Publisher | |
Pages | 93 |
Release | 1995 |
Genre | |
ISBN |
The Army's helicopters play an important role in the conduct of ground combat operations on the modern battlefield. Although the Army has invested heavily in its helicopter fleet during the past 15 years, it still retains many Vietnam-era helicopters in its inventory. The Army's plans for modernizing its helicopters focus on its attack and scout aircraft, with no major programs for replacing or overhauling its aging utility helicopters. Furthermore, because the Army's new reconnaissance and attack helicopter, the Comanche, will not begin to enter the fleet for at least 10 years, the Army will have to retain many older combat helicopters for at least another 20 years.
A CBO Study: An Analysis of U.S. Army Helicopter Programs
Title | A CBO Study: An Analysis of U.S. Army Helicopter Programs PDF eBook |
Author | |
Publisher | |
Pages | 91 |
Release | 1995 |
Genre | |
ISBN |
The aviation branch has become an important asset of the U.S. Army. Its attack, scout, and utility helicopters played major roles in the Vietnam War and in operations in the Persian Gulf. The Army plans to rely on its aviation assets increasingly in the future to provide timely tactical intelligence and transport capabilities as well as flexible firepower. The Army's helicopter fleet is aging, however. Although the Army invested heavily in the 1980s to purchase new combat and utility helicopters, more than half of all of the helicopters currently in the Army's inventory are Vietnam-era aircraft. Many of those helicopters have exceeded their useful service life, and the Army would like to retire them. But even though the Army is reducing the size of its helicopter fleet as it reduces its overall force structure, it does not have enough modern aircraft to fill all of its requirements. The Army plans to buy a substantial number of new helicopters starting in 2004, but those helicopters are limited to combat aircraft; they do not include any new utility helicopters. Furthermore, the Army does not intend to buy any new helicopters at all between 1996 and 2004. Consequently, it will have to retain many Vietnam-era combat helicopters well into the next century and hundreds of Vietnam-era utility helicopters for the foreseeable future.
Army Budget
Title | Army Budget PDF eBook |
Author | United States. General Accounting Office |
Publisher | |
Pages | 24 |
Release | 1990 |
Genre | Military helicopters |
ISBN |
Consolidation and what it Could Mean to Military Helicopter Flight Training
Title | Consolidation and what it Could Mean to Military Helicopter Flight Training PDF eBook |
Author | Victor H. Avila |
Publisher | |
Pages | 76 |
Release | 2013 |
Genre | Feasibility studies |
ISBN |
"This study investigates the feasibility of consolidating the three Department of Defense (DoD) helicopter flight training programs that are currently in place in two different facilities: Naval Air Station Whiting Field near Pensacola, Florida, and Fort Rucker, Alabama. While the Air Force and the Army currently share a facility, they conduct separate training in this same location. The core skills developed in all three of these helicopter training programs are similar (Contacts, Instruments, Formation, and Tactics). Future defense spending cuts may demand training consolidation among the different services. This study investigates whether consolidation is possible for U.S. military helicopter flight training. Both the helicopter portion and the fixed wing portion of the Services' flight syllabi were analyzed, as it was deemed critical to deciding if consolidation is possible. Currently the Air Force and Navy use the fixed wing portion of the flight training program as a precursor to the helicopter training. Fixed wing training is currently not being provided to Army helicopter pilot candidates. Since the 1970s, a number of studies have been conducted on consolidating all of the flight training pipelines. There have been a number of consolidations between the Air Force and the Navy, but these have been limited to fixed-wing primary and advanced multi-engine training. This study concludes that helicopter flight training consolidation will need further study by the GAO and will be a long-term endeavor. Near-term recommendations include a personnel exchange program for both students and instructors."--Abstract.
Status of Advanced Attack Helicopter Program
Title | Status of Advanced Attack Helicopter Program PDF eBook |
Author | United States. General Accounting Office |
Publisher | |
Pages | 24 |
Release | 1977 |
Genre | Attack helicopters |
ISBN |
Aircrew-aircraft Integration: A Summary of US Army Research Programs and Plans
Title | Aircrew-aircraft Integration: A Summary of US Army Research Programs and Plans PDF eBook |
Author | |
Publisher | |
Pages | 28 |
Release | 1984 |
Genre | |
ISBN |
A review of selected programs which illustrates the research efforts of the U.S. Army Aeromechanics Laboratory in the area of aircrew-aircraft integration is presented. Plans for research programs to support the development of future military rotorcraft are also described. The crew of a combat helicopter must, in general, perform two major functions during the conduct of a particular mission: flight-path control and mission management. Accordingly, the research programs described are being conducted in the same two major categories: (1) flightpath control, which encompasses the areas of handling qualities, stability and control, and displays for the pilot's control of the rotorcraft's flightpath and (2) mission management, which includes human factors and cockpit integration research topics related to performance of navigation, communication, and aircraft systems management tasks.