Last August, the CH-53K King Stallion completed two weeks of sea trials, completing 364 landings and takeoffs, day and night, from all nine deck spots and in various wind conditions to demonstrate its versatility and ability to operate from a ship on deployment.
The CH-53K sea trials integrated test team consisted of nearly 100 people including Sikorsky, Naval Air Systems Command (NAVAIR) and the Marine Corps’ operational test squadron.
“Overall, the aircraft performed great at every stage, in all flight control modes we tested,” Sikorsky Test Pilot Sean Maloney said. “The CH-53K was very stable day and night, at all spots on the deck and at different wind and speed directions. Consistently across the board, the aircraft did very well.“
The CH-53K design integrated the latest technologies to meet U.S. Marine Corps requirements while still maintaining the size and footprint to remain compatible with today’s ships and air transport capabilities. The aircraft is fully marinized for shipboard operations, including automatic blade fold and design robustness to meet new and extreme requirements for salt-fog and corrosion.
Ship compatibility testing on the Wasp included towing the aircraft around the deck and in the hangar, performing maintenance while aboard the ship, ensuring the aircraft fits in all the locations it needs to around the ship deck and hangar, and evaluating chain/tie-down procedures.
To validate that capability, the team also completed multiple blade-fold and spread operations. The main rotor and tail pylon of the King Stallion are designed to automatically fold and unfold to fit in the deck parking spots and hangar locations of Navy ships.
“The CH-53K demonstrated exceptional performance throughout its initial sea trials continuing the team’s progress toward initial operational test and evaluation in 2021 and deployment in 2023-2024,” said Bill Falk, program director. “ The aircraft is right at home aboard a large deck amphibious ship and is one step closer to deployment.”
The ability of the CH-53K to work from the sea-base, given it is built from the ground up to operate at sea, comes at a time when the USMC is working its integratability with the U.S. Navy for the amphibious fleet to be able to contribute significantly to sea control and sea denial.
The CH-53K is part of the arsenal which will allow the Marines to play that role more effectively.
For a look at how the Marines are reshaping their way ahead in the way ahead with regard to naval integration, see the discussions in our latest book, Training for the High-End Fight.