Saturday, November 29, 2008
New 12 billion Presidential Helicopter
The new Presidential Helicopter for Barrack Obama will be a VH-71 that will be made by Lockheed Martin Corporation.


The new helicopter is replacing the current presidential helicopter H-3 (Sea King) which was in service for 46 years. These were made by United Technologies Automotive.

Pentagon officials agreed to proceed with the program with Lockheed helicopter VH-71 with a cost budget of 12 billion US dollars to make the Presidential Helicopter and 23 more for the Airforce and the US Navy.

The upgrades:

1. Each of which will have 200 square feet of cabin space, nearly double the Sea King´s 116.

2. Aside from the legroom, the copter will incorporate major upgrades to the old defense and communications systems. Equally important is that the aircraft is flight-proven-the $110-million bird is derived from a European-built AgustaWestland EH101, currently doing military service for Canada and the U.K. Here, an inside look at the revamped Marine One, set to gradually go into service between 2009 and 2014.

Fuselage: Made of high-strength reinforced aluminum alloy, it can withstand crash impacts in excess of 15 Gs.

Engine: The VH-71 can shift from three 3,000-horsepower turboshaft engines to two, whereas the twin-engine Sea King must land if one engine fails.

Rotor: Five flared rotor blades increase the craft´s efficiency by up to 30 percent over conventional designs when flying at 150-knot cruising speed.

Defense System: The VH-71s, like the EH101s they are modeled on, will probably feature radar-warning receiv-ers, laser detectors and flare dispensers to deflect anti-aircraft missiles.

Cabin: Measuring eight feet wide and 25 feet long, the cabin will include a lavatory and a galley kitchen. The fold-down stair spares the president from ducking during photogenic entrances and exits.

Communications: More room for communications hardware means the president will have secure and continuous access to all White House and Pentagon computer systems and data streams.

The current helicopter in service for 46 years. First used by President Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1957.
 
posted by Onedec at 1:45 AM | Permalink |


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