Boeing recently delivered the seventh CH-47F
Chinook to the Australian Army, three weeks ahead of schedule.
The CH-47F Chinook will support the
modernization of Australia’s cargo helicopter fleet and eventually
replace six older CH-47D Chinooks.
The seven advanced Chinooks were ordered as part
of a U.S. Government Foreign Military Sales agreement with
Australia in 2012.
“Our CH-47D
Chinooks have been real workhorses for Australia, both here and on
operations overseas, and our new CH-47F Chinooks are set to be
even more dependable, affordable and capable assets,” said Rear
Admiral Tony Dalton of Australia’s Department of Defence. “We are
very pleased with how Boeing and the United States Army have
worked together to deliver this important capability to Australia
ahead of schedule and on budget.”
Australia has one of the most
advanced and highly capable Chinook fleets in the world. Major
developments on the CH-47F include a digital cockpit, an advanced
communications system and new avionics. Those allow the Australian
Army to operate more effectively with U.S. and international
forces through the easy exchange of digital maps that facilitate
coordinated responses for military and humanitarian missions. The
Australian Chinook configuration also includes a new rotor brake
that enables shipboard operations by actively stopping the rotor
blades rather than allowing the blades to naturally ‘spin down’
once the engine is turned off after landing.
The Australian Army’s 5th
Aviation Regiment, 16th Aviation Brigade, operates the Chinooks
from their home base in northern Queensland, Australia.
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