Posted on 07/15/2002 6:58:54 AM PDT by TADSLOS
The restructured RAH-66 Comanche program is far from ready to be presented to the Defense Acquisition Board for approval as many details remain unresolved, a recent review determined.
According to the Comanche Overarching Integrated Product Team, which is chaired by Glenn Lamartin, director of strategic and tactical systems within the Office of the Secretary of Defense, the Army must complete nearly a dozen tasks before it can take Comanche to the DAB. The service recently restructured the program for the sixth time, much to the consternation of OSD and many in Congress.
The Army is trying to keep a low profile regarding Comanche's troubles until the DAB assesses the program. According to sources, service leadership has decided only to discuss Comanche's operational capabilities and benefits in public. The details and status of the restructure, particularly cost, schedule and the results of the June Army Systems Acquisition Review Council evaluation are to be avoided. Many have questioned whether the ASARC should have blessed the new program baseline given that key data -- notably an independent assessment by the Cost and Economic Analysis Center -- were missing.
At a July 11 aviation conference, top Army brass appeared to follow this public relations formula, promoting what Comanche would bring to the fight and how it would enhance the capabilities of the Objective Force. During a press conference following the symposium, however, Maj. Gen. John Curran, chief of the Aviation Center and Schoolhouse, and Maj. Gen. Joseph Bergantz, program executive officer for aviation, declined to answer questions on program details and multiple reviews of the restructure ordered by the Army and OSD.
According to the OIPT, which met June 28, the Army's Comanche plan has many gaps. The service so far has not provided an adequate vision for the Objective Force nor explained how Comanche supports that vision in terms of schedule, requirements and acquisition objectives, sources said. Specifically, a tie to networked fires and Objective Force maneuver requirements must be demonstrated.
The Army also must identify, with help from the Joint Staff, "time-phased" alternatives to certain requirements that would reduce risk and, if possible, accelerate fielding to warfighting units. The OIPT concluded that alternative program blueprints must be crafted and the service should consider: deferring some activities from Block I to Block II; adding subsequent blocks to the program and spreading out program tasks amongst them; adjusting the time and scope of low-rate initial production to moderate risk; and reducing concurrency between the research and development and production phases, which would also lower risk, through changes to developmental and test activity.
Additionally, the OIPT wants to see "a comprehensive and executable plan" for: controlling the helicopter's weight; developing and integrating the engine, including potential upgrades; completing the RAH-66's complex software; and setting maintenance and support processes.
Results from multiple studies of the Comanche program must be presented before the effort goes before the DAB, as well. The OIPT wants to see the conclusions of an OSD study of Comanche and alternatives mandated by the Defense Planning Guidance and the findings of the most recent "graybeard panel" commissioned by the Army. The OSD Cost Analysis Improvement Group has yet to complete its review of the new baseline and the Joint Requirements Oversight Council must validate the aircraft's key performance parameters. These latter items are not expected until late August or early September, according to sources.
Without all of this material, the OIPT will not recommend that Comanche proceed to the DAB, sources said. The OIPT will meet again when everything is completed to determine whether Comanche is ready for the DOD-level review. Army Acquisition Executive Claude Bolton had pressed for a DAB session in June. However, sources say the DAB will not occur before September, at the earliest.
Bingo.
Side-note- what have you heard about the Longbow program? Eric Umansky (lefty journalist) had some blurb in Mother Jones re: AH64 missing some performance requirements,(climb rate, hover height) but being fielded anyway.
Thoughts?
Pure B.S. The AH-64D's are all outfitted with the newer and better performing GE 701C engines. Hover height is more of an equation of ambient conditions (PA/DA/wind speed and direction with relation to the aircraft heading) and gross weight of the aircraft. Bottom line: the AH-64D has all the power it needs to maintain a steady hover Out of Ground Effect (OGE), carrying a standard weapons load, for all but the most severe conditions.
Not for long though, unless you plan on getting out or retiring within the next few years...;~)
What a job they do !
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