The
Boeing Sikorsky RAH-66 Comanche armed
reconnaissance helicopter was the centerpiece of
the U.S. Army's aviation modernization plan.
This reflects the Army's overall transition to
an Objective Force that will utilize advanced
weapon systems and smaller forces that are
responsive, deployable, agile, versatile,
lethal, survivable and sustainable.
The Comanche is a twin-turbine, two-seat
(tandem) armed reconnaissance helicopter with
projected missions of armed reconnaissance,
light attack and air combat.
The Comanche program validated a number of
aircraft systems and components and built and
flew two flight-test prototype aircraft in its
Demonstration/Validation/Prototype phase from
contract award in 1991 through 2000. The program
launched a $3.1 billion Engineering and
Manufacturing Development phase in mid-2000.
During EMD, the program will continue flight
tests and validation of the Comanche's fully
integrated navigation, communication and
passive-sensor targeting system, known as the
Mission Equipment Package. The Pentagon wanted
650 RAH-66s for U.S. Army service, only two
prototypes are build (94-0327 and 95-0001) for
test-flights.
The Comanche is the world's most advanced
rotorcraft, featuring an all-composite,
low-observable airframe that evades detection by
radar, infrared and acoustic sensors. Its
dynamic system includes a five-bladed bearing
less main rotor, split-torque main transmission
and an enclosed tail rotor system. Flight
controls are fly-by-wire and triply redundant.
All aircraft systems are integrated in the
Mission Equipment Package that contains a
digital avionics suite with advanced
programmable communications; an integrated
helmet-mounted heads-up display; a night-vision
pilotage system and an electro-optical target
acquisition and detection system that utilize
advanced, passive, long-range, high-resolution
sensors to generate real-time broad-band
information to battlefield commanders about
enemy dispositions; self-healing digital mission
electronics; and triply redundant on-board
system diagnostics. The aircraft can utilize
high-speed and aerobatic maneuverability to
avoid detection and engagement, and carries both
missile armament in retractable bays and a
retractable Gatling gun slaved to the helmet
display. The Comanche is designed for easy field
maintenance and repair and eliminates
intermediate maintenance requirements.
The end of the
RAH-66 Comanche helicopter program
In a dramatic
about-face, the US Army canceled its Comanche
helicopter program Monday February 23rd, 2004
after sinking $6.9 billion and 21 years of
effort into producing a new-generation chopper.
At a Pentagon
news conference, senior Army leaders said they
would propose to Congress that $14.6 billion
earmarked to develop and build 121 Comanches
between now and 2011 be used instead to buy 796
additional Black Hawk and other helicopters and
to upgrade and modernize 1,400 helicopters
already in the fleet. An Army study determined
a need for 368 new armed scout helicopters.
"It's a big
decision, but we know it's the right decision,"
said Gen. Peter Schoomaker, the Army chief of
staff. He said the Army also will invest more
heavily in a variety of unmanned aircraft, such
as the existing Hunter and the new Raven.
The RAH-66
Comanche helicopter project was launched in 1983
and was eventually to have cost more than $39
billion. The Army said it needed a stealthier,
more capable armed reconnaissance helicopter not
only to collect and distribute battlefield
intelligence but to destroy enemy forces.
The program met
with many setbacks and was restructured six
times, most recently in 2002. The latest
timetable had specified beginning initial
low-rate production in 2007, with the first
Comanches to have been declared ready for combat
in 2009 with full-rate production to have begun
in 2010.
The per-unit cost
of the scrapped helicopter has more than
quadrupled, from $12.1 million per aircraft when
the Army planned to buy 5,023 of them, to $58.9
million when the purchase was cut back to 650.
From the first
days of the Bush administration there has been
talk of canceling a number of major aviation
projects, including the Marine Corps' V-22
Osprey hybrid helicopter-airplane and the Air
Force's F/A-22 Raptor fighter jet, but so far
the Comanche has been the only casualty.
Five Comanche
helicopters are in production. Sikorsky
officials said they did not know what would
become of them.
The Sikorsky
plant in Bridgeport, Connecticut, where the
Comanche is being built, opened in 2003 and
employs about 400 workers.