Army conducts first operational test of UH-60V
Black Hawk helicopter digital cockpit
by Sgt. 1st Class Richard A. Sosa, Rotary Division
Research, Development, Test and Evaluation NCO, Aviation Test
Directorate, U.S. Army Operational Test Command
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82nd Combat Aviation Brigade
along with Redstone Test Center aircrews conduct before engine
start procedures prior to launch for an air assault mission in
support of the UH-60V digital Black Hawk limited user test.
(Photo Credit: Mr. Tad Browning, Lead Audiovisual Production
Specialist, Test Documentation Team, U.S. Army Operational Test
Command Public Affairs) |
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82nd Combat Aviation Brigade Black Hawk Pilot Chief Warrant
Officer 3 Justin Winstead and Redstone Test Center Experimental
Test Pilot Capt. Nathan Klein go through flight pre-checks
before going out on a night vision goggle air movement sling
load mission using the UH-60V digital Black Hawk helicopter
during the Hawk limited user test. (Photo Credit: Mr. Tad
Browning, Lead Audiovisual Production Specialist, Test
Documentation Team, U.S. Army Operational Test Command Public
Affairs) |
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REDSTONE ARESENAL,
Ala.
—
Experimental test pilots from Redstone Test
Center (RTC) here teamed with operational
pilots, crewmembers, and ground troops from the
82nd Combat Aviation Brigade (CAB), Fort Bragg,
N.C., to put two prototype UH-60V Black Hawk
helicopters through their paces during a recent
limited user test (LUT).
The UH-60V digital
Black Hawk will refit the U.S. Army's remaining
UH-60L helicopter fleet's analog cockpits to a
modern digital cockpit, similar to the UH-60M
helicopter.
The program has the
potential to reduce obsolescence and increase
commonality and interoperability by installing a
digital integrated glass cockpit. The digital
cockpit will include an upgraded navigation
suite and replace analog gauges with electronic
instrument displays, similar to what would be
seen in an advanced premium sports car.
Throughout the LUT, an
Aviation test team from the U.S. Army
Operational Test Command (USAOTC) applied
post-mission surveys and after action reviews,
corroborated with onboard video and audio
instrumentation, to collect data directly from
the aircrews.
"This approach
permitted evaluators to see and hear how the
pilots interacted with the digital platform
during missions," said Mr. Derek Muller, UH-60V
LUT Test Officer with USAOTC.
"The data collected
during the test will support an independent
evaluation by the U.S. Army Evaluation Center,"
continued Muller. "The evaluation will also
inform a low-rate initial production decision
later this year, allowing the Utility Helicopter
Program Office to move forward with limited
production."
During the LUT,
aircrews flew the UH-60V under realistic
conditions, conducting air movement, air
assault, and external load missions under day,
night, night-vision goggle, and simulated
instrument meteorological modes of flight.
"These conditions
enabled evaluators to determine the UH-60V's
overall effectiveness in enhancing the aircrew's
ability to complete their mission in a
combat-like environment," said Mr. Brian Apgar,
Rotary Wing Deputy Division Chief of USAOTC's
Aviation Test Directorate (AVTD).
USAOTC coordinated the
use of realistic threat simulations during the
test to stimulate the UH-60V's aircraft
survivability equipment and trigger pilot
actions using the updated cockpit capabilities.
"The threat simulation
not only enriched the combat-like environment,
enhancing the quality of the test," said Muller.
"The representative threat also provided quality
training for the aircrews."
LUT Operations
Officer, Chief Warrant Officer 4 Toby Blackmon
of USAOTC, began each day briefing aircrews on
the assigned mission, based on a current
real-world scenario.
Following the mission
brief, the aircrews continued with mission
preparation, completing team and crew briefs and
conducting preflight inspections of the
aircraft.
During each mission,
Blackmon served as the aircrew's higher
headquarters, directing operations using FM
radios, blue force tracker 2 (BFT-2), and the
aircrews on-board joint variable message format
(JVMF) messaging, which allowed him to talk
directly to the crews during missions through
radio and the digital text messaging system.
"Using BFT-2 allowed
me to stimulate the aircrews with mission
changes through JVMF messaging, add simulated
threats, plus receive situation reports from the
aircrews in real-time," Blackmon said.
Ground crews from the
82nd CAB prepared and hooked up sling loads
during several missions, allowing pilots to see
how the UH-60V's cockpit displays provided
situational awareness while carrying an external
load.
USAOTC Test NCOIC Sgt.
1st Class Jason Keefer spent a week training the
ground crews on sling load operations, rigging
procedures, and conducting sling load elevator
drills before performing actual sling load
missions.
"Using time during the
operational test to train Soldiers on sling load
operations is something I enjoyed most," Keefer
said.
"The sling load
missions increase unit readiness by training
82nd ground troops on sling load operations,"
said Col. Jason Blevins, USAOTC's AVTD director.
Test pilots easily
noticed the differences between the older UH-60L
and the UH-60V.
"I don't even know how
you compare the Victor to the Lima," said Chief
Warrant Officer 2 David Bragg of the 82nd CAB.
"The UH-60V digital cockpit improved situational
awareness."
The program management
office out of Redstone Arsenal, Ala., upholds
that the UH-60V can provide real-time feedback
using more modern and usable data for the
pilots.
"My multifunction
display was my navigator," Maj. Michael Pinter,
an RTC experimental test pilot, said after
completing an air assault mission during the
test.
USAOTC is currently
planning the initial operational test and
evaluation for the UH-60V during late 2019.
Future operational
testing will ensure Soldiers continue to have a
voice in the acquisition process, guaranteeing a
quality product prior to fielding.
~~
About the U.S. Army
Operational Test Command:
As the Army's only
independent operational tester, USAOTC tests
Army, joint, and multi-service warfighting
systems in realistic operational environments,
using typical Soldiers to determine whether the
systems are effective, suitable, and survivable.
USAOTC is required by public law to test major
systems before they are fielded to its ultimate
customer
—
the American Soldier.
The Aviation Test
Directorate at West Fort Hood, Texas, plans and
conducts operational tests and reports on manned
and unmanned aviation-related equipment to
include attack, reconnaissance, cargo and lift
helicopters, fixed wing aircraft, tactical
trainers, ground support equipment, and aviation
countermeasure systems.
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Redstone Test Center Experimental
Test Pilot Chief Warrant Officer 4 and 82nd Combat Aviation
Brigade Chief Warrant Officer 2 David Bragg conduct post mission
surveys as the Army Evaluations Command UH-60V digital Black
Hawk Lead Evaluator Dr. Tara Edwards collects critical user data
during the limited user test. (Photo Credit: Mr. Tad Browning,
Lead Audiovisual Production Specialist, Test Documentation Team,
U.S. Army Operational Test Command Public Affairs)
.jpg)
Ground Troops from the 82nd Combat Aviation Brigade conduct
sling load operations in support of an air movement mission
during the UH-60V digital Black Hawk limited user test. (Photo
Credit: Mr. Tad Browning, Lead Audiovisual Production
Specialist, Test Documentation Team, U.S. Army Operational Test
Command Public Affairs)
.jpg)
82nd Combat Aviation Brigade Black Hawk Pilot Chief Warrant
Officer 2 David Bragg and Redstone Test Center Experimental Test
Pilot Chief Warrant Officer 4 Jared Thompson go through flight
pre-checks prior to conducting a night vision goggle air
movement sling load mission using the UH-60V digital Black Hawk
helicopter during the limited user test. (Photo Credit: Mr. Tad
Browning, Lead Audiovisual Production Specialist, Test
Documentation Team, U.S. Army Operational Test Command Public
Affairs) |
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Source: www.army.mil,
September 10, 2018
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