Journeyman said:Well, speaking merely as someone who's spent a lifetime in uniform, and not as some cubicle-dwelling bureaucrat or "consultant" whose lifestyle is presumably enhanced by having acquisition programmes drag on and on and on....I see the Chinook program as a brilliant success story.
Its a bit humorous.... all this from you because I had the temerity to question the decision to acquire one capability some were not sold upon.
But hey, what do I know? Apparently I'm a F-35 cheerleading, cubicle dwelling, evil consultant trying to screw the forces.
RoyalDrew said:How quickly people forget that just a few years ago we were screaming for the need for heavy-lift helicopters. You seem to forget that we were up crap creek without a paddle a couple of years ago because of our inability to re-supp our forces by ground in Afghanistan. For a country so heavily reliant on vehicles that slurp up tonnes of guys for mobility would it not be wise to buy a chopper that can carry enough resources to sustain us?
Helicopters aren't just about us being able to move GIBs, if that were the case we would just buy more Griffons. CH147's are far more capable in the sustainment battle then any other chopper out there. They can carry more and they have a triple hook system. The triple-hook system stabilizes large external loads, such as 155mm howitzers, allowing them to be carried at speeds up to 140 knots (260 km/hr) – or twice as fast as single-suspension loads. Multiple external loads (fuel blivets for example) can be delivered to three separate destinations in a single sortie.
Again, I'm not "forgetting anything." What I stated reflected the thoughts of some within DND in 2007 and 2008. They occurred with a full view what was going on in Afghanistan. It wasn't like they were oblivious to requirements on the ground, but they were also looking at other considerations that might be important.
As someone pointed out above, its really academic at this point and its a good capability.
Cdn Blackshirt said:Could EH-101's carry our M777 155mm Howitzer's into position at altitude? Honest question. Not trying to bust your chops. I didn't think they could which was one of the reasons why the Chinook was selected as it did a job that was absolutely required.
Matthew.
According to what I've heard the Merlin can carry the M777 at normal altitudes for an operationally useful distance, but certainly not with the range that the chinook can. That's a significant limitation of going to medium lift.