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New turbine engine to restore helicopter lift capability

By David Vergun | May 5, 2016

Estimated reading time 6 minutes, 9 seconds.

Attendees of the Army Aviation Association of America-sponsored 2016 Army Aviation Mission Solution Summit in Atlanta, April 29, 2016, view a UH-60M Black Hawk helicopter in the aircraft exposition area. The helicopter could get an ITEP replacement engine in the future. David Vergun Photo
Some U.S. Army helicopters can no longer lift their intended complement of passengers due to heavier equipment and degraded power generation, but officials said an improved turbine engine program (ITEP) will help restore lift capability. 
“Degraded lift capability is especially problematic in areas where high-altitude, high-temperature flights are required, including nearly half of Afghanistan,” said MGen William K. Gayler.
Gayler, commander, U.S. Army Aviation Center of Excellence and Fort Rucker, Alabama, spoke at the Army Aviation Association of America-sponsored 2016 Army Aviation Mission Solution Summit in Atlanta, on April 29 and 30.
Using the UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter as an example, Gayler said an average of about 78 pounds per year have been added annually — for all the right reasons. That includes increased protective gear, ammunition, new technologies and so on. 
Over the years, those increases have totaled about a ton-and-a-quarter. All of that weight affects speed, lift, range, maneuverability and the amount of stuff that can be carried, he said.
Years ago, four Black Hawks could move a platoon, he pointed out. Now, it takes eight or nine and by 2020 — assuming the linear weight increases continue at the current rate — it will take 15 to 20, he said.
That decrease in capability severely limits options for ground commanders, he said. Besides that, it increases risk, and fuel consumption goes way up as well. “We’ve got to fix that,” Gayler said.
“We’re giving up options for our warfighters by not being able to give them the power they need,” said Steffanie Easter, principal deputy assistant secretary of the Army for acquisition, logistics and technology.
ITEP key to restoring power
The ITEP is a completely new engine that will likely one day replace those currently in the AH-64 Apache and Black Hawk helicopters, Gayler said. It will return a lot of that lost capability.
“ITEP is critical,” he said. “We must get it right to buy back maneuverability.”
Easter said ITEP is the solution for improved mobility, range and payload capacity of the current fleet. 
“ITEP will replace the 1970s-era T700 family of engines for the Black Hawk and Apache fleet,” said Easter. 
It’s going to provide over 3,000 shaft horsepower, which is a great increase over the current 1,900 to 2,000 horsepower. The ITEP design will also decrease the amount of maintenance required.
Brig Gen Erik Peterson, commander, U.S. Special Operations Aviation Command, said his soldiers are excited about ITEP as well, but their emphasis in on the maneuverability aspect of what it promises, and somewhat less on range and payload. 
“That may mean special operations will get its own variant, but cost would be an important deciding factor,” he said, meaning they might go with what the Army gets.
Brig Gen Bob Marion, program executive officer, Aviation, said ITEP is a big deal for the Army and it will be resident in about 85 percent of its platforms.
“It also has potential for future vertical lift (FVL), if not the motor then pieces of the technology,” he said. 
FVL’s engineering and manufacturing development doesn’t begin until fiscal year 2024 with the first aircraft test in FY26.
ITEP timeline

Marion said fielding ITEP is still years away. “We’re going after milestone A this quarter,” he said. After which “we’ll be looking to award two contracts and down-select two vendors.”
According to a slide Marion showed, the timeline for ITEP is as follows:
– Materiel development decision by 2nd quarter FY17;
– preliminary design review by 2nd quarter of FY18;
– milestone B by 4th quarter of FY18;
– concept design review by 1st quarter of FY20;
– first engine test by 1st quarter of FY22; and
– engine qualification and milestone C by 3rd quarter FY24.
ITEP not enough
Gayler said that while ITEP will meet near-term demands for increasing power, longer-term solutions are needed.
“The CH-47 Chinook helicopter was brought into the fleet in 1964,” he said. Its scheduled departure from the Army is 2064. “That’s 100 years on that airframe. It’s similar with the Apache and Black Hawk. These are gaps. It’s what keeps me up at night.
“I don’t want my grandchildren flying the same aircraft my father flew.”

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