Back to news

February 16, 2021 | International, Aerospace

Sikorsky to upgrade HH-60W helo to improve on 2012 baseline capabilities

by Gareth Jennings

The US Air Force (USAF) is to contract Sikorsky to upgrade its HH-60W Jolly Green II combat search and rescue (CSAR) helicopter to improve on the 2012 requirements baseline.

The service disclosed on 11 February that the manufacturer is to bring the capabilities of the Combat Rescue Helicopter (CRH) up to today's specifications, ahead of the commencement of full rate production in fiscal year 2022.

“The current system specification reflects a 2012 requirements baseline which was defined and frozen prior to the 2014 CRH contract awarded for the engineering and manufacturing development (EMD) phase,” the USAF said in its sole-source justification document posted on the beta.sam.gov US government procurement website. “During the last five years of EMD execution, the original CRH requirements baseline has evolved as a result of changes in threat conditions and evolving mission requirements. The response to this operational need is the driver for the continuance of new capability development and integration into the CRH baseline.”

In response to this requirement, the USAF is to award Sikorsky a USD980.7 million contract over a five-year ordering period, with the work itself to run for seven years.

News of the planned award came some 16 months after the USAF issued a request for information (RFI) on 1 October 2019 to assess the ability of companies and industry at large to perform development, integration, verification, production, and installation of a broad spectrum of capability upgrades for the CSAR helicopter, which at that time had only recently been cleared to enter into low-rate initial production (LRIP).

https://www.janes.com/defence-news/news-detail/sikorsky-to-upgrade-hh-60w-helo-to-improve-on-2012-baseline-capabilities

On the same subject

  • Germany to form A400M Multinational Air Transport Unit with Hungary

    September 21, 2020 | International, Aerospace

    Germany to form A400M Multinational Air Transport Unit with Hungary

    Gareth Jennings Germany is establishing a new multinational unit to operate the Airbus A400M transport aircraft, with Hungary committed as its first partner. The Bundeswehr announced on 17 September that the Multinational Air Transport Unit (MNAU) was being established at Wunstorf Air Base in northern Germany, home to the Luftwaffe's A400M force. This new international unit will relocate to Lechfeld Air Base in the far south of the country with 10 of the Luftwaffe's 53 contracted A400Ms, as well as additional A400Ms that might be provided by partner nations. Lieutenant General Ingo Gerhartz, inspector of the German Air Force, was quoted as saying, “The establishment of the implementation team of the Multinational Air Transport Unit is another milestone in multinational, military air transport. With the integration of the first technical officer of the Hungarian Air Force [HuAF], the cooperation with our Hungarian partners begins.” As noted by the Bundeswehr, the genesis of the MNAU dates back to 2017, when the Federal Ministry of Defence enabled the Luftwaffe to set up a new air transport association with multinational participation. With the Luftwaffe planning to field 40 A400Ms, this new multinational unit would operate all or some of the remaining 13 contracted to Germany. https://www.janes.com/defence-news/news-detail/germany-to-form-a400m-multinational-air-transport-unit-with-hungary

  • Cyberdéfense : Thales investit dans son site de Cholet

    February 3, 2021 | International, C4ISR, Security

    Cyberdéfense : Thales investit dans son site de Cholet

    Thales investit dans ses infrastructures à Cholet, où un tout nouveau centre de recherche et développement (R&D) doit être construit à côté de son plus ancien site de production en France, né en 1936. Ce site va se spécialiser dans les systèmes d'information sécurisés et les activités de cyberdéfense. « Sur ce site, nous voulons pouvoir lancer un cycle complet : développer un projet en R&D, le qualifier, produire et maintenir celui-ci, ainsi qu'assurer les missions de formation du personnel », explique Jean-Pascal Laporte, chef d'établissement de Cholet et directeur industriel pour les activités de communication de Thales. Entre 400 à 500 nouveaux salariés vont être recrutés sur le site de Cholet à partir de cette année. Les profils type ingénieur ou doctorant sont les plus recherchés à la fois dans les domaines de l'électronique, du développement logiciel, ainsi que des experts en cybersécurité et en communication par satellite. L'entreprise, qui compte aujourd'hui 23% de femmes dans ses effectifs, affiche également comme objectif prioritaire d'élever sensiblement ce pourcentage. Le Parisien du 1er février 2021

  • CISA Announces Malware Next-Gen Analysis | CISA

    April 10, 2024 | International, Land, Security

    CISA Announces Malware Next-Gen Analysis | CISA

All news