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US Army seeks information on contracted helicopter pilot training, potential UH-72A replacement

By Zach Rosenberg |

A US Army Airbus UH-72A Lakota. Aside from the US Army, the UH-72 and its civilian equivalent, the H145, are rarely employed in a training role. (US Army)

The US Army has released a request for information (RFI) seeking to learn how contractors might provide initial flight training for helicopter pilots, including potentially replacing the Airbus UH-72A Lakota as the service's primary flight training helicopter.

The RFI, issued on 8 October, requests information on both government-owned, contractor-operated and contractor-owned, contractor-operated helicopters.

β€œThe UH-72 is [a] very capable aircraft. It might be too capable to teach a basic aviator,” Major General Clair Gill told reporters on 17 October at the Association of the United States Army (AUSA) conference in Washington, DC.

β€œWe look at what we've trained on in years past – and we have been through a couple generations of aircraft; they've been simpler aircraft, and if that's what trains a better aviator, then I'm interested in that,” Maj Gen Gill added, referring to the Bell UH-1 and TH-67, as well as the Schweizer TH-55, all of which were single engine; TH-55 and -67 were derived from popular civilian training models.

β€œThe second thing that I want is an affordable model [of helicopter],” added Maj Gen Gill. β€œI'm agnostic about the platform, but [the UH-72] is an expensive aircraft to operate.”

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