Boeing delivers first Special Operations Chinook through sickness and storm


Boeing recently delivered the first next-generation MH-47G Block II Chinook to U.S. Army Special Operations. Boeing Photo

If working through a global viral pandemic was not enough of a challenge, Boeing’s Philadelphia plant in August was struck by a tropical storm while assembling the first MH-47G Block II Chinook for U.S. Special Operations Command.

Through scourge and storm, employees at the company’s Philadelphia plant managed to keep the highly-modified, performance-boosted aircraft on schedule for a formal, socially distanced delivery ceremony on Sept. 1. Col. Phil Ryan, commander of U.S. Army Special Operations Aviation Command (USASOAC), accepted the aircraft, which will be assigned to the famed 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment (SOAR), also called the “Night Stalkers.”

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Aircraft 2909, as it’s called, was loaded into final assembly in October, and was well on its way to completion when Covid-19 struck in March, forcing a two-week closure of most operations.

“The storm clouds rolled in around March and things got tough for everyone,” Andy Builta, Boeing vice president and H-47 program manager, said during the delivery ceremony. “There was uncertainty, risk, disruption, trepidation … and a whole lot of hand sanitizer. The team washed up, donned masks, and doubled down on getting her to where we are today. Seven days per week, for months and months, we built this aircraft through the pandemic.”

Just a few weeks prior to delivery, Philadelphia took a direct hit from a tropical storm that rampaged up the U.S. East Coast.

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Boeing’s Chinook team rode out the storm in the company’s delivery center “while their basements were filling with water … in the off chance they’d be able to get back to work,” Builta said.

Aircraft 2909 is both the first MH-47G Block II and the first Block II aircraft ever delivered to the U.S. Army. The company is on contract for 23 more MH-47G Block II Chinooks, having signed a contract with SOCOM in July.

Block II introduces a lighter, more structurally rigid airframe, a beefed-up drivetrain and Boeing’s advanced composite rotor blades (ACRBs) designed to provide a 1,500-pound (680-kilogram) increase in lift. Three engineering and manufacturing development CH-47F Block II aircraft are in flight test at Boeing’s Mesa, Arizona, facility.

 

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