|
MH-53E Sea Dragon |
|
Entered service |
1980s |
|
Crew |
? |
|
Dimensions and weight |
|
Length |
30.19 m |
|
Main rotor diameter |
24.08
m |
|
Height |
5.32
m |
|
Weight (empty) |
16.48 t |
|
Weight (maximum take off) |
33.3 t |
|
Engines and performance |
|
Engines |
3 x General Electric T64-GE-416 turboshafts |
|
Engine power |
3 x 4 380 hp |
|
Maximum speed |
315 km/h |
|
Cruising speed |
278 km/h |
|
Service ceiling |
? |
|
Ferry range |
2 074 km |
|
Combat radius |
? |
|
Armament |
|
Machine guns |
provision for window-mounted 7.62-mm or 12.7-mm
guns |
|
Though the
original
Sikorsky S-65 production models, have only two engines, the
S-80/H-53E has three engines each of 4 380 hp and is the
most powerful helicopter ever built outside Russia.
Of the early
versions, the CH-53A and more powerful CH-53D were transports for
the US Marines Corps. All CH-53As were delivered with provisions for
towed mine-sweeping equipment, but the US Navy decided that a
dedicated mine-countermeasures version would need more power and
additional modifications. Accordingly, 15 CH-53As were transferred
to the US Navy as RH-53A minesweeping machines with 3 925 hp T64-GE-413 turboshafts, and equipment for towing the EDO
Mk 105 hydrofoil anti-mine sled.
The RH-53As
were used to explore the possibilities of these new mine-sweeping
techniques, which had previously been tried only with machines of
inadequate power, pending the arrival of 30 RH-53D Sea Dragon
purpose-built machines. Equipped with drop tanks and, later inflight-refuelling
probes, the RH-53Ds were soon re-engined with 4 380 hp
T64-GE-415 turboshafts. The aircraft were delivered to the US Navy
from the summer of 1973 and about 19 remained in US Navy service in
early 2003, but were being replaced by MH-53Es. Six RH-53Ds were
delivered to the Imperial Iranian Navy.
The CH-53E
was developed to meet a 1973 demand for an upgraded heavy-lift
transport for the US Navy and US Marine Corps. From it was developed
the MH-53E Sea Dragon. This definitive MCM (mine countermeasures)
version has enormously enlarged side sponsons for an extra 3785
liters of fuel, for extended sweeping missions with
the engines at sustained high power. The first prototype MH-53E made
its initial flight on 23 December 1981 and around 44 remained in
service in 2003.
The MH-53J
has been sold to the Japan Maritime Self Defense Force.
|
Video of the MH-53 Sea Dragon
minesweeping helicopter |
|
|