T1615 Lluy MinwaraMay08

Transcription

T1615 Lluy MinwaraMay08
AMCM Outlook
CAPT Paul Lluy
COMHSCWINGLANT
1
Helicopter Sea Combat Wing Atlantic Fleet
RADM Goodwin
NavalAviation’s
Aviation’sLargest
LargestWING
WING
Naval
••
••
••
••
14Squadrons
Squadrons
14
WeaponSchools
Schools
22Weapon
AIMDs
22AIMDs
5500personnel
personnel
5500
2
CHSCWL Locations
Pax Rvr, MD
VC UAV Det
Norfolk, VA
1 HM Squadron
1 HC Squadron
4 HSC Squadrons
1 VC Squadron
1 AIMD/1 ASD
Jacksonville, FL
Iraq
5 HS CVW Squadrons
1 HSC Det
2 VC-6 Dets
Kuwait
1 MH60S Det
Corpus Christi, TX
1 HM Squadron
1 AIMD
Bahrain
1 MH-53E Det
1 MH60S Det
Transformation:
Transformation:
Naples
1 HSC Det
All
Allsquadrons
squadronstotobe
beconsolidated
consolidatedininNorfolk
NorfolkNLT
NLTFY
FY13
13
HS
Squadrons
convert
to
HSC
ICW
Norfolk
transition
HS Squadrons convert to HSC ICW Norfolk transition
3
AMCM Brief Topics
• Community Snapshot
– Capability Requirements
– Readiness
– Training
• Way Ahead
– MH-53E future requirements
– OAMCM Transition
– Roadmap
4
What makes up an HM squadron?
5
Requirement: 28 total aircraft inventory
•
20 AMCM aircraft to cover multiple OPLAN and NORTHCOM
HLD AMCM requirements
–
Includes 4 VOD a/c to cover EUCOM or other COCOM heavy lift
logistic requirements and NORTHCOM HA/DR relief requirements.
–
HM AMCM to cover requirement with HC-4 Decom in Sept 07
•
4 Aircraft on the line for FRS throughput
•
2 RDTE a/c in P-City (supports alternative platform Organic
AMCM systems DT/OT)
•
2 aircraft for pipeline (10% of inventory)
Bottom
BottomLine:
Line:
20
20MH-53E
MH-53Eprovide
provideworld-wide
world-wideAMCM
AMCMresponse
response
capability
capability
No
Nocomparable
comparableNATO/coalition
NATO/coalitioncapability
capabilityexists
exists
6
HM Mission Requirements
• Provide a 72-hour rapid-response Airborne Mine Countermeasures
(AMCM) capability worldwide to support COCOM requirements.
• Provide secondary capability for Vertical Onboard Delivery (VOD)
and Heavy Lift.
• Operate from ship or fully expeditionary shore self-support capable
7
HM Geography
HM-14,
14 MH-53E
(4 FRD)
Cherry Point
HM-15 FDNF
(SDLM)
1-2 MH-53E
4 MH-53E
Davis Monthan
2 MH-53E
RDT&E NSWC
HM-15**
2 MH-53E
* HC-4 (5 MH-53E)
decommissions in
Oct 07
6 MH-53E
HM
HMInventory
InventorySummary*
Summary*
T/M/S
OPER
FRD
Pipe
AMARC
RDTE
TOTAL
MH-53E
20
4
2
2
2
28
** HM-15 scheduled
for FY09 move to
Norfolk per BRAC 05
8
AMCM Capabilities
• Rapid mine sweeping
– Actuate influence mines (MK-105)
– Sever moored mines from their tether
(MK-103 Mechanical Sweep)
• Mine hunting
– Uses sonar or laser energy to locate,
classify, and identify mines
• Requires follow-on intervention for
disposal
9
Capability: Mine Hunting
AN/AQS-24
AN/AQS-24A
Manta
MK 36
UNCLAS
10
Capability: Influence Mine Sweeping
MK-105
11
AMCM Contingency Systems
AQS-20 Configuration
Three of five OAMCM systems MH-53E compatible:
• AQS-20 and AMNS contingency systems approved for MH-53E
• Both systems have passed OPTEVFOR OA test program on MH-53E
• Full OT not funded in favor of MH-60S platform
• OASIS currently undergoing CT testing on MH-53E
12
HM Readiness Snapshot
Outlook
Overall
Material
Manpower
Training
Today
FY 08
Key Issues:
Material
Manning
• Airframe Sustainment
• Manpower reduction
• T64-419 Engines
• Aircrew shortfalls
Training
• MIW Ranges
• MK-105 Inventory
• C7F Presence
13
Airframe Sustainment
• BES 08 Funds $20M MH-53E Sustainment line:
Current Force:
• Addresses emergent fleet-wide sub component
obsolescence requirements to bridge OPLAN support
requirements through the 2015 timeframe if required.
• 2 HM Squadrons
• HM-14 in Norfolk, VA
• HM-15 in Corpus Christi, TX
• 28 MH-53E Requirement
• Extends MH-53E Airframe service life limit to 10,000 hours
• Extends current MH-53E airframe inventory to FY15
• Provides sustained AMCM capability during transition to
future MCM systems.
10 in HM-14
10 in HM-15
4 in Fleet Readiness Sqdn
4 RDTE / Pipeline
MH-53E AIRFRAMES with FLEX
40
Pipeline
Pipeline/ /FRS
FRS/ /RDTE
RDTEAircraft
Aircraft
35
# Platforms
•
•
•
•
• PR07 funded Fatigue Life Extension (FLEX):
30
25
Squadron
SquadronAircraft
Aircraft
20
15
10
5
0
2007
2009
2011
2013
2015
Year
2017
2019
2021
2023
14
Training
•
Increase TYPEWING focus on unit level AMCM MIW
training and readiness (H-60 ACTC Model)
¾ Develop quarterly AMCM HARP training evolutions in Norfolk
and Corpus Christi ICW AMCM weapons and tactics school
¾ Develop feedback post exercise relationship with MCMRONs
•
Road Ahead:
¾ Establish MIW training ranges located in Fleet concentration
centers
¾ Only standing range located in Panama City
¾ Costly TAD bill for TYCOM
Re-Focus Attention on training like we fight
15
C7F Exercises
•
AMCM has not operated in C7F AOR since 2001
•
Incorporation of U.S. AMCM capability in C7F AOR
coalition exercises enhances MIW synergy
•
Current coordination effort to deploy MH-53E to AOR
ongoing
16
MH-53E: What has changed since 2005?
• OAMCM
MH-53E
demand evolving beyond AMCM:
Sea Base AR/LSB
• Sea Base CONOPS:
- Heavy Lift•OAMC
ICD approved by JROC
• OIF/GWOT Heavy lift requirements
- ISO 3rd Army in Iraq
• Increased demand for HA/DR assets
TSUNAMI HA/DR OPS
GWOT / OIF
17
MH-53E Look-back
•
Tsunami Relief
JAN-MAR 05
HADR (PACOM)
•
JTF KATRINA
AUG-SEP 05
HADR (NORTHCOM)
•
JTF RITA
SEP 05
HADR (NORTHCOM
•
RIMPAC 06
JUN–AUG 06
MIW (PACOM)
•
PANAMAX 06
AUG–SEP 06
MIW (SOUTHCOM)
•
JTF LEBANON
AUG – Nov 06
NEO (EUCOM)
•
POTUS
MAR 07
Uruguay/Mexico SOUTHCOM
•
3P (C7F AOR)
MAY-NOV 07
HADR/GWOT (PACOM)
HM-15 deliver essential supplies during Katrina
MH-53E during RIMPAC Sled Ops
18
FDNF – CENTCOM AOR
•
Pakistan Relief
OCT-NOV 05
HADR
•
FAWOMOEX 05-2
OCT 06
MIW
•
NAUTICAL UNION
JUL 06
MIW
•
SAIPAN MK-105
SEP – NOV 06
MIW
•
RFF 3rd Army IRAQ
JAN06-JAN 07
GWOT support
HM-15 conducting HADR in Pakistan
MK-105 SAIPAN C5F Ops
19
Take Away
•
H-53E increasingly high demand - low density platform for
COCOMs
–
GWOT demand exceeds USMC/USA heavy lift capacity
•
Evolving non MIW mission requirements will continue for MH-53E
given GWOT/HADR demand
•
HC-4 Decommissioning removes Navy’s remaining non AMCM
heavy lift response option
–
Limited AMCM assets will now be pressed for non MIW missions
•
Potential impact on core MIW readiness and primary AMCM
response posture
•
Required: Unified Navy understanding of and response to future
RFF for non MIW deployments of the MH-53E
20
OAMCM Transition Roadmap
01
03
BLUF:
BLUF: NAE
NAEcurrently
currentlydeveloping
developingEnd
Endto
toEnd
EndMH-60
MH-60
AMCM
AMCM TYPEWING
TYPEWINGtraining
trainingprogram
program
IOCs - FYDP
08
10
12
MH-60 AMCM Kits
AQS-20A (MH-60S)
ALMDS (MH-60S)
OASIS
RAMICS (MH(MH-60S)
RAMICS (MH-60S)
AN/AQS-20A
AMNS (MH-60S)
RAMICS
ALMDS
AMNS
OASIS (MH-60S)
LCS MIW Mission Package
RMS
MRUUV
LCS
IOC
1st OAMCM End to End
deployment capacity
21
OAMCM Training POA&M
•
New capability for the HSC MH-60S community
•
NAE developing OAMCM training & fielding plan
–
•
CHSCWL is Lead TYPEWING for OAMCM Fleet introduction
Availability of limited OAMCM training systems
critical to orderly stand up of fleet OAMCM capability:
–
Train initial fleet squadron (HSC-26) in preparation for initial LCS
deployment in FY 09 w/ AQS-20 & ALMDS LRIP systems
–
Train remaining five Expeditionary Fleet squadrons to support
continuous LCS deployments beginning in FY10
–
Establish MH-60S East/West FRS training pipeline by FY11
–
Achieve FOC for OAMCM by 2014 once adequate systems and
trained aircrews available to meet warfighting requirements
22
MH-60S Program Description
AMCM
Block 2A & 2B
Combat Support (HC)
Block 1
Combat Support: IOC FY02
• Replaces the Aging H-46D,
HH-60H, HH-1N, and H-3 with a
Newly Manufactured H-60
Airframe
• Supports Helo CONOPS Through
Reduction of Type/Model/Series
from 7 to 3
• New Production of 271 A/C
• 5000 + LBS Internal/External
Cargo
• Fully Integrated Glass Cockpit and
Mission Sensor Suite
• Cockpit Common with MH-60R
BLOCK 2A:
• Carriage, Stream, Tow and Recovery
System (CSTRS)
• Common Console
• Auxiliary Fuel Tank
• AN/AQS-20A Sonar Mine Detection
Set1
•
•
•
•
•
•
BLOCK 2B: IOC FY08
AN/AES-1 Airborne Laser Mine
Detection System (ALMDS)1
Airborne Mine Neutralization System
(AMNS)1
AN/ALQ-220 Organic Airborne &
Surface Influence Sweep (OASIS)1
AN/AWS-2 Rapid Airborne Mine
Clearance System (RAMICS)1
Kitted HIRSS
Armed Helo
Block 3A & 3B
BLOCK 3A:
• Forward Looking Infra Red (FLIR)
• Crew Served Guns
• Additional Aux Tank
• Mission Computer
• External Weapons Mount System
• Integrated Self Defense (ISD) System
• Precision Guided Munition Air to Ground
• Fuel Probe Provisions
• TAMMAC Lite
• Floor Armor
BL
(PB05/OSD06)
23
Pacing Capability: Influence Mine Sweeping
MK-105
AN/SPU-1/W
Magnetic Orange Pipe
MK-104
24
Wing AMCM Transition Plan
Today
(<2007)
Near-Term
(FYDP FY08-12)
Mid-Term
(2013-2020)
Far-Term
(>2020)
Platform
Centered
Progression
Progressionof
ofMCM
MCM
capabilities
capabilities
built
upon
built uponsuccessful
successful
fielding
of
new
fielding of newsystems
systems
&&new
technology
new technology
Dedicated AMCM Forces
AMCM
Capabilities
Evolution
Organic AMCM Systems
MH-60S
OMCM
Spiral
Developments
LCS MIW Mission Packages
UUV, UAV, USV
MH-53E
Decision
CAPABILITY CONTINUITY
Dedicated AMCM?
Capability
Centered
25
AMCM Road Ahead
•
•
NAE plan maintains AMCM force structure.
¾
Maintains required HM Readiness Levels to support OPLANS
¾
Funds MH-53E FLEX, Sustainment and Manpower requirements
Introduction of Fleet OAMCM capability begins in 2008
¾ MH-53E transition tied to success of fielding MH-60S OAMCM
•
¾
Timely delivery of fleet OAMCM training systems key to LCS IOC
¾
Steep initial training curve for HSC aircrews prior to LCS deployment
CNAF to examine future force structure for dedicated
AMCM beyond 2013-2015 ISO MIW OPLANs
¾
When do we achieve adequate MH-60S OAMCM capability and capacity?
¾
Pacing Capability: Influence Mine Sweeping
26
QUESTIONS?
27
Mine Hunting/Sweeping
MH-53E
MH-53E
28
MH-60S Program Impacts
•
Inventory objective at 267 Aircraft
•
•
•
Updated CNAF Helo CONOPS analysis ongoing
OAMCM removed as a PRIMAR for CVW squadrons
•
OAMCM systems to be organic to the LCS only
•
MH-60S sourced to LCS from Expeditionary HSC squadrons
•
Reduces fleet-wide OAMCM “man-train-and-equip” requirement from
16 to 6 MH-60S squadrons fleet-wide
Reduces procurement ramp for MH-60S OAMCM configuration kits
•
BES 08 fields 29 kits in the FYDP
•
Ramp matches requirement for LCS delivery schedules
•
Total end state requirement is 57aircraft configuration kits
29
MH-60S Aircraft - OAMCM
Future MCM Force:
• Block 2A aircraft (51 thru 119) AQS-20A and ALMDS capable only
•BES 08 funds Retrofit for AMNS and OASIS Capability
• 6 Expeditionary Sqdns
• Block 2B aircraft (120 thru 267) fully MIW Mission capable
• 3 East Coast
• 2 West Coast
• 1 Guam
• Helicopter must be configured with AMCM Kit to be Mission Ready
• 18 MH-60S
Apportioned for LCS
MIW support
Cumulative Aircraft
MH-60S Fielded (Block 2A & 2B)
Common MH-60S AMCM B Kits
• Common Console & Power System
• Carriage, Stream, Tow, & Recovery System
• Tow Boom Package Assy
• 57 Kits Required per MH-60S Annex B ORD
Cumulative Delivery of AMCM Kits over FYDP
MH-60S AMCM Kits
Cumulative Delivery
FY06
FY07
FY08
FY09
9
11
11
21
FY10 FY11 FY12 FY13
36
40
45
45
200
180
160
140
120
100
80
60
40
20
0
FRS
Ready to Train
BLOCK 2B
- Retrofit
BLOCK 2B
BLOCK 2A
FY06 FY07
FY08 FY09 FY10 FY11
Block 2A
Block 2B
FY12 FY13
Block 2B - RAMICS
BLOCK 2A Upgrade – Fleet Support + AMCM AQS-20A Tow / ALMDS capable
BLOCK 2B Upgrade – Block 2A + AMNS / RAMICS / OASIS Upgrades
30
UNCLAS
Major AMCM Elements
Common
Cockpit
Common
Console
Auxiliary
CSTRS Fuel Tank
Tow
Modifications
UNCLAS
31
Armed Helicopter Capabilities
•
•
Typical Missions:
–
Combat Search and Rescue
–
Maritime Interdiction Operations
–
Surveillance
–
Anti-Terror Force Protection
–
Sensor Netting
–
Special Forces
–
Overland/Oversea Strike Capabilities
How??
–
Hellfire Missiles
–
.50cal Machine Guns
–
7.62mm mini-guns
–
Discreet Avionics
–
Incoming Missile Sensors
–
FLIR (Forward Looking Infrared)
–
Self-Defense gear
32
Risks: OAMCM History
•
Sensor and Aircraft Schedule Slips since 2002
•
Resulted in unexecutable Program of Record Schedule
•
Medium Risk Aircraft Integration & Test Schedule Developed Which
Acknowledged Cumulative Impact of Slips
FY 05
OASIS
FY06
FY 05
FY07
OT
RAMICS
OT
ALMDS
OT
AQS-20A
OT
FY 06
NRE
AMNS
NRE
RAMICS
NRE
August 2002 Schedule as Part of MH-60S MSIII NPDM
FY07
FY08
CT
FY09
DTRR
CT
DT
GT
11/12
DT OT
DTRR
CT
DT
CT
FY10
OT
CT
GT
ALMDS
AQS-20A
FY09
OT
FY06
AMNS
OASIS
FY08
DTRR
DT
DTRR
DT
OT
OT
Current Schedule
OT
LCS Support Date
33
UNCLAS
HM Sea Manning
•
•
•
PR05 reduced MH53E force structure by 4 aircraft
Aircraft were removed from HC-4 (PAA of 9 to PAA of 5)
OPNAV removed end strength from HM squadrons in error
•
•
•
124 billets per squadron
Supposed to be corrected in POM 06 with disestablishment of HC-4
HC-4 RFF delayed HC-4 decom and proposed manpower fix
•
OPNAV N88/N1 provided band aid relief in FY06/FY07 to ensure
HM squadron viability
•
Band aid relief ends in FY08 exposing 248 billet shortfall in HM
Sea requirements (124 per squadron)
•
•
•
Impact HM-15 ability to maintain FDNF det in C5F AOR
Exacerbates HM-14 manpower shortage to meet OPLAN response
posture
Solution: OPNAV to use HC-4 manpower to fix HM
shortage in BES 08
UNCLAS
34
MH-53E Sustainment
1.
2.
3.
4.
MH-53E Fatigue Life Extension Program
Integrated Threat Warning System
Night Vision Device (NVD) Capability
Integrated Mechanical Diagnostic/Health and Usage Monitoring
System (IMD/HUMS)
5. Leverage off USMC HLR Program for MH-53E Follow-on Aircraft
6. Leverage off USMC T-64 Engine Reliability Improvement Program
7. Replace Kapton wiring
8. Continue to Fund MH-53E Simulator
9. Leverage off USMC Common Defensive Weapon System (GAU-21)
10. #2 Engine Exhaust Redesign
Fully Funded
= Partially Funded
= Unfunded
= POM-08 Issue
=Pom 08
35
MH-53E FLEX
•
MH-53Es begin reaching their
structural service life limit in FY07
•
Fatigue Life Extension (FLEX) –
extends fatigue life limit of a/c
from 6900 to 10,000 hours
•
Costs $500,000 per a/c ($4M for 16
AMCM aircraft)
•
Limited FLEX (16 a/c) maintains
inventory through FY 15.
•
Allows Navy flexibility in
assessing long term requirement
for MH-53E or HLR
36
MH-53E
Program Milestones
• 1987 MH-53E enters service as Navy’s AMCM platform
• PR07 MH-53E Fatigue Life Extension (FLEX) extends service
life from 2009 to 2014
• POM 08 Navy VOD (HLR) strategy (AR/LSB ICD):
– IOC 2015
– FOC 2020
– Inventory Objective: 20 - 32 (notional) AOA to inform
40
MH-53E Requirement
AR/LSB VOD (HLR)?
35
Number of Airframes
30
25
MH-53E Total Active Inventory
20
15
10
5
0
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
Year
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
RO
37
Origin - HM ROC/POE
•
MIW 9.11 (U) Provide Civil Engineer Support Equipment (CESE) to
conduct/support AMCM operations from remote shore sites. Hotel
services required.
•
1.d. (U) Be capable of operating from shore bases when provided with
load out support, communications augmentation, “HOTEL” support
services, support equipment, ADP support, fuel, water, electrical power,
transportation, supply support, maintenance facilities for aircraft and
MCM equipment, site security, MK-105 launch facility and MH-53E launch
facilities.
•
3.a. (U) Operate assigned Civil Engineering Support Equipment (CESE)
and small boats in support of AMCM operations.
•
3.d. (U) Provide the capability to conduct MK-105 system/small boat
launch/recovery at a shore site separate from the base unit.
38
Austere Site AMCM Operations
39
Expeditionary Footprint
•
Equipment:
•
Personnel (AMCM Maintenance Dept.):
–
MK-103 kits - 20
–
MK-104 devices - 20
–
MK-105 mod 4 sets - 4
–
AMCM maintenance (AE, AM, AT) – 43
–
AN/SPU-11W (MOP) - 10
–
RHIB crew (primarily BM) – 19
–
Rigid Hull Inflatable Boats - 6
–
CESE maintenance (AE, AT, CM) – 9
–
AN/AQS-24A side scan sonar sets - 8
–
Hotel services – 8
–
A/MK-2G rattle bars - 8
–
QA – 5
–
Vehicles - 11
–
MMF maintenance - 4
–
CUCV - 3
–
AIMD (Q-24 support) - 2
–
15 ton stake truck - 2
–
15 ton Tractor - 1
–
36 passenger bus - 1
–
30 ton crane
–
26 K forklift - 3
–
12 K forklift - 2
–
Welder - 1
–
Large generators – 14
–
60-ton low boy forklift - 1
–
Water trailer (400 gallons) - 2
–
Mobile Maintenance Facilities - 6
40
Bare Firewalls (T64-GE-419)
• Currently 10 bare engine fire walls
¾ Closure of Sigonella AIMD capacity reduced capacity
¾ Fleet-wide demand (OIF) exceeds Norfolk AIMD repair capacity
• Throughput increase at AIMD Norfolk required
¾ From two engines/month to four engines/month
• CNAF approved Contract Field Team (CFT) for
AIMD Norfolk to bridge gap on 18 Oct 06
• Estimated Oct 07 Get Well Date
41