WASHINGTON — The U.S. Army has stopped taking
deliveries of AH-64E Apache attack
helicopters from
Boeing because the service is not confident in the durability of what it deems
a “critical safety” item, Defense News has learned.
“We stopped accepting deliveries of new AH-64 Echoes
because of a strap pack nut that we believe to be really suspect,” Brig. Gen.
Thomas Todd, program executive officer for Army aviation, confirmed to Defense
News on April 19.
As part of Army safety inspections of the fleet, the
service determined it was “not happy” with the performance of the nuts in
severe, coastal environments and saw corrosion due to climate and stress,
according to Todd.
The nut in question holds very large bolts that
subsequently hold the rotor blades on the helicopter and is therefore
determined to be a critical safety item, Todd explained.
While Boeing had already begun a strap pack nut
redesign effort six months prior, the Army decided to not take delivery of
AH-64 Echo models in February, Todd said, and received guidance from the Army
secretary reinforcing the decision. In March, the Army told Boeing it would
stop taking receipt of helicopters permanently until the company began fielding
a new and improved, acceptable strap pack nut.
It took Boeing and the Army some time to get at
exactly what was the root cause of the corrosion and aggressive wear and tear
on the nut. But a cause has been identified and the Army has approved a
redesign, and Boeing will provide new nuts after testing of the new design
beginning in the summer, Todd said.
The company has been working at a “very thorough but
expeditious pace over the last six months,” he said. “We are in testing as we
speak.”
The Army has estimates that Boeing will be able to
field two Apache battalions per month, starting sometime this summer, with the
new parts, Todd said. “And we expect them to keep that pace until complete
through the entire fleet as well as [Foreign Military Sales] customers that
purchase through the U.S. Army,” he added.
Countries that have bought or ordered AH-64Es are
India, Indonesia, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, South Korea and Taiwan.
In fact, Todd said, the Army would push Boeing to do
better than two battalions in a month, “so there is every chance that we could
accelerate.”
Boeing, in a statement provided to Defense News, said:
“Our highest priority is the safety of the warfighter and the reliability of
our products. We’re continuing to partner with the Army to address issues,
deploying Boeing experts to assist the Army in the field with inspections, and
return to the delivery schedule.”
The first units to receive new parts will be those
that fly regularly in severe, coastal environments. Todd estimates that is
roughly six units in the Army.
There are 653 AH-64s currently fielded. “We are stable
there because ultimately we stopped inductions as well because we did not want
to hurt the fleet,” Todd said.
Boeing builds an average of six AH-64Es per month in
its Mesa, Arizona, facility.
When the Army first fielded the Echo model, it was
forced to ground the entire fleet within a month of declaring operational
capability following an incident at Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Washington, in
December 2013, related to a transmission issue. The service and Boeing resolved
the issue in roughly a month.
There have been eight AH-64E mishaps since the Army
began fielding the variant in 2013, with five of those considered major
accidents involving millions of dollars in damage and/or causing fatalities or
major injuries. A crash in 2016 at Fort Campbell, Kentucky, resulted in the
loss of both crew members. And earlier this month, also at Fort Campbell, an Apache crashed,
killing both soldiers.
While the Apache safety record is not unblemished, the
Army’s overall current safety record is steadily improving.
We believe, quite frankly, that some of these things
that we do, to include stopping production, is the exact type of management
that is expected of us and helps us achieve those safety rates,” Todd said.
“Airworthiness and safety of our fleet is paramount.
We put nothing higher than that. That is why we put inspections in place. It is
largely an enterprise effort across all the engineering organizations inside
Army aviation and we certainly think this puts us on a path to recovery,” he
added. “We expect Boeing as well as anybody that provides a product to the U.S.
Army to put a good-faith effort forward in addressing efforts like this any
time, and again we look forward to returning a great capability of the Echo
model to the fleet soon.”
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