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FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
Glad to see that a right announcement hoping that it will be followed by concrete results

China firmly opposes and strongly condemns DPRK nuclear test
Xinhua
China's Foreign Ministry issued a statement on Sunday, expressing firm opposition to and strong condemnation of a nuclear test undertaken by the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK).

The DPRK Sunday successfully detonated an H-bomb, a hydrogen bomb that can be carried by an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM), DPRK's Central Television announced. This was the sixth nuclear test the DPRK has undertaken


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Friday at 5:42 PM
Jun 21, 2017

and
NAVAIR Awards Sikorsky $304M For First 2 CH-53K Heavy-Lift Helos
source is USNI News
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now NavalToday story:
Lockheed Martin starting low rate production of CH-53K King Stallion helicopters
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The US Naval Air Systems Command has awarded Lockheed Martin a Low Rate Initial Production (LRIP) Lot 1 contract to build two production CH-53K King Stallion helicopters.

Under the $303,974,406 million contract, Sikorsky will deliver two production aircraft to the U.S. Marine Corps in 2020 along with spares and logistical support. Aircraft assembly will take place in Stratford, Connecticut.

Production of the most powerful helicopter in the U.S. military follows the April 4, 2017, Milestone C decision by the Defense Acquisition Board (DAB) approving LRIP production.

The King Stallion is being acquired to replace the CH-53E Super Stallion.

“Gaining the U.S. Marine Corps approval to enter into production and the award of the first contract are milestones made possible by the tremendous achievements of the joint Sikorsky, Naval Air Systems Command (NAVAIR) and U.S. Marine Corps team,” said Dr. Mike Torok, vice president, CH-53K programs. “This is what we have been striving for – to deliver this amazing capability to the U.S. Marine Corps.”

“We have just successfully launched the production of the most powerful helicopter our nation has ever designed. This incredible capability will revolutionize the way our nation conducts business in the battlespace by ensuring a substantial increase in logistical through put into that battlespace. I could not be prouder of our government-contractor team for making this happen,” said Col Hank Vanderborght, U.S. Marine Corps program manager for the Naval Air Systems Command’s Heavy Lift Helicopters program, PMA-261.

According to Lockheed Martin, the CH-53K can carry a 12.200 kg/27,000 lb external load over 204 km /110 nautical miles in high/hot conditions (33°C/91.5°F at an altitude of 914m/3,000 feet), which is more than triple the external load carrying capacity of the CH-53E aircraft it is replacing.

The helicopter cabin gives increased payload capacity to internally load 463L cargo pallets, High Mobility Multipurpose Wheeled Vehicles (HMMWV) or a European Fenneck armored personnel carrier while still leaving the troop seats installed. The CH-53K’s external hook system provides the capability to lift three independent external loads simultaneously.

The King Stallion also brings full authority fly-by-wire flight controls while mission management reduce pilot workload enabling the crew to focus on mission execution. Features include advanced stability augmentation, flight control modes that include attitude command-velocity hold, automated approach to a stabilized hover, position hold and precision tasks in degraded visual environments, and tactile cueing.

The CH-53K’s internal health monitoring systems with fault detection/fault isolation, coupled with a digital aviation logistics maintenance system that interfaces with the Fleet Common Operating Environment for fleet management, provides improved combat readiness for the Marine Corps.

The U.S. Department of Defense’s Program of Record remains at 200 CH-53K aircraft. The U.S. Marine Corps intends to stand up eight active duty squadrons, one training squadron, and one reserve squadron to support operational requirements.
 

FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
Theodore Roosevelt Strike Group Completes COMPTUEX

The Theodore Roosevelt Carrier Strike Group (TRCSG) completed composite training unit exercise (COMPTUEX), the final work-up phase and certification event prior to deployment scheduled later this year.

COMPTUEX evaluated the strike group's deployment readiness by testing command and control functions, crew safety evolutions, search and rescue operations, damage control testing and operational capabilities of a carrier strike group, ultimately certifying the TRCSG for deployment.
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Monday at 9:34 AM
Friday at 5:42 PM
now NavalToday story:
Lockheed Martin starting low rate production of CH-53K King Stallion helicopters
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and here's FlightGlobal
US Marine Corps awards CH-53K production contract
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Lockheed Martin is cleared to begin assembling the first two production versions of the Sikorsky CH-53K King Stallion under a $304 million contract awarded by the US Navy last week.

Sikorsky will deliver two of the heavy-lift rotorcraft with a maximum gross takeoff weight of 39,900kg (88,000lb) to the USMC in 2020 under the low-rate initial production Lot 1 contract. The Pentagon approved the King Stallion’s production and deployment phase in April.

The USMC plans to replace an aging fleet of CH-53E Super Stallions with 200 King Stallions, with four early production aircraft set for delivery this year. The US Navy has estimated the the aircraft's average unit price at about $87 million, if all 200 CH-53Ks are ordered.

The CH-53K remains similar in shape to the CH-53E, but represents a full transformation of the heavylift helicopter. The new version features three GE Aviation T408 engines, a new transmission, new rotor blades, a composite fuselage and new avionics.

Meanwhile, Sikorsky is eyeing the German Air Force’s “Schwerer Transporthubschrauber” (STH) heavy-lift helicopter programme, which would replace Germany’s fleet of 81 CH-53GA/GS helicopters originally delivered in the 1970s. The request for proposals is scheduled for release in mid-2018, with a contract award in 2019. Deliveries would begin in 2023 when Germany begins to retire the CH-53GA/GS fleet.

Sikorsky’s King Stallion, still in development with the USMC, is primed for a head-to-head competition with Boeing’s CH-47 Chinook.
 

FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
Replace USS Bonhomme Richard

USS Wasp to Become First Ship to Deploy with an Embarked F-35B Squadron

You’ve probably heard that F-35B Lightening II Joint Strike Fighter aircraft will someday be coming to an amphibious ship near you, but did you know that some ships have already made the improvements to accept F-35’s? In August USS Essex (LHD 2) welcomed the F-35B on board during sea trials and flight deck certifications off the coast of Southern California.
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it's pretty interesting Lockheed Martin progresses concept studies for PAC-3-MSE derivatives
Lockheed Martin is advancing a series of internally funded concept studies to leverage the hit-to-kill technologies evolved for its Patriot Advanced Capability (PAC-3) Missile Segment Enhancement (MSE) interceptor.

The idea is to establish a family of hit-to-kill interceptors in various classes for air-, ship-, and, land-launched applications, ranging from the developmental 0.76 m Miniature Hit-to-Kill (MHTK) interceptor up to the 5.8 m PAC-3 MSE.

“We are evaluating a whole range of new systems that are smaller than PAC-3 MSE, but incorporate PAC-3 MSE fundamental technologies, that would give us a hit-to-kill capability, in a number of different classes, that could fly in a number of different regimes and against a number of different targets,” Tim Cahill, Lockheed Martin vice-president for Integrated Air and Missile Defense, told Jane’s .

Cahill said the driver for the initiative is a growing requirement for a comprehensive layered air- and missile-defence capability to address a wide range of extant and evolving threats. “The adversaries are getting smarter, stronger, and more capable – and they are going to find the gaps. So this necessitates full layered defence, with full 360° surveillance systems covering all altitudes and all azimuths, and that requires us thinking about different size interceptors and being able to put them on whatever platform make sense,” he said.

Cahill said that while the traditional approach to interceptor development generally focuses on the application – e.g. Patriot, PAC-3, and PAC-3 MSE were developed as land-launched applications – those same systems could have applicability and capability, either in the air or at sea. Included in the concept studies is a potential ship-launched, and possibly air-launched, application for the PAC-3 MSE interceptor; and the development of a new interceptor in the 1.8 m-class for all three domains.

...
... but the rest is behind paywall at Jane's:
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Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
Replace USS Bonhomme Richard
Yes, the Wasp, the Essex, and the America have all exercised with the F-35B aboard.

The best visuals of what a strong LHA/LHD will look like with numerous F-35s aboard came from the recent exercises with the USS America, LHA-6.

Seeing this does my old heart and mind good! LOL!

You can see 12 F-35Bs on the America in these two photos:

30951057130_a6356448d0_k.jpg

30497430134_4c317e4ced_k.jpg

Here's another:

31283235366_32fa3f2729_k.jpg

Gotta love it.

A Wasp or America class with 12 F-35Bs is going to be a very strong vessel...particularly f they get a decent AEW aircraft for it to use.

This means the US can field an additional 3-4 carriers at any time it needs to. And in the sea control role, these vessels can carry up to 20 of these aircraft.

Any carrier with 20 F-35Bs is going to be a carrier tough to reckon with.
 
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