The first AH-1Z SuperCobra test aircraft ended
2002 on a high note having completed the envelope expansion portion
of the test program and achieving more than 400 flight test hours.
With envelope expansion finished, AH-1Z testers have completed the
first major portion of flight testing on the Marine Corps’
newest attack helicopter.
“In envelope expansion, we essentially determine how high
and how fast the aircraft can go,” explained Vic DiSanto,
systems engineer with the H-1 Integrated Test Team here. “We
start at a hover and go from there.”
In between, DiSanto explained, test pilots and engineers check
the aircraft’s performance against engineering estimates at
various airspeeds, altitudes and G loadings – from zero
altitude, zero airspeed at one G (a hover) to the maximum airspeed,
altitude and G loading (both negative and positive) the aircraft
can safely withstand. Once validated by these tests, the data will
be used as the basis for the platform’s NATOPS manual –
the operating manual developed for each aircraft.
During this first phase of flight testing, AH-1Z test pilots and
engineers took the test aircraft to 220 kts, maneuvered to
–0.3 to +3.5 G’s and reached a 16,000-foot altitude
since its first flight in December, 2000.
"Having accomplished 400 hours of envelope
expansion test flying during the first 24 months of engineering and
manufacturing development on this airframe exemplifies the
dependability, reliability and maintainability in the design of the
AH-1Z,” stated Lt.Col. Nic Hall, government flight test
director for the H-1 ITT. “Especially so considering the
average AH-1W fleet utilization rate is 300 hours per year."
With these milestones accomplished, the aircraft turns next to
external stores jettison testing, where the aircraft tests
it’s capability to safely and effectively rid itself of
anything attached to its six “hard points” in the event
of an emergency or malfunction.
By the holiday break, Zulu One had already flown 7.5 hours
testing Hellfire missile rack jettisons. The test articles being
dropped were inert and ballasted to represent fully armed and
capable missiles.
Additionally, the three AH-1Z test aircraft recently supported
cockpit mapping for the Thales Top Owl helmet-mounted display. [ANN
Thanks John C. Milliman, PMA-276 Public Affairs Officer]