Showing posts with label PZL Swidnik. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PZL Swidnik. Show all posts
Thursday, December 19, 2013
Monday, June 25, 2012
Philippine Air Force to get 25 more helicopters in December
MANILA, Philippines -– The Philippine Air Force (PAF) will get 25
more helicopters late this year to augment its depleting air assets.
This was announced during the Air Power Symposium 2012 held at the
SMX Convention Center, Mall of Asia in Pasay City on Friday as part of
its preparation for the forthcoming 65th PAF anniversary celebration on
July 6.
The symposium was hosted by Lt. Gen. Lauro Catalino G. de la Cruz, PAF commanding general.
This year’s theme was “Mobilizing Air Power for the Nation’s Multi-Dimensional Challenges.”
De la Cruz said four of the helicopters will be the last of the eight
brand-new combat utility Sokol choppers the Department of National
Defense ordered from PZL Swidnik of Poland.
The arrival of the final four Sokol helicopters will boost the
firepower of the PAF which is in dire need of air assets, particularly
fighter jets.
PZL Swidnik is the largest helicopter manufacturer in Poland.
The Sokol helicopter can carry 14 persons, including the pilot and
co-pilot and has a maximum speed of 260 kilometers per hour and a range
of 745 kilometers non-stop.
Each Sokol is armed with a variety of weapons such as air-to-ground
rockets, air-to-air missiles, M-60 machine guns and 20mm cannons and
climbs to an altitude of 19,680 feet.
The contract price of the Sokol choppers was P3 billion.
On the other hand, 21 refurbished UH-1H “Huey” helicopters will also be delivered in December this year.
“Hueys” are not only the workhorse of the military’s
counter-insurgency operations in ferrying troops to combat areas but are
also used during disasters, carrying food, water and medicines for
victims stranded in remote areas.
Some of the 21 “Huey” helicopters were refurbished in the United
States and the others were done by PAF engineers and aircraft mechanics.
The acquisition of new combat helicopters is part of the Modernization Program of the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP).
During the day-long affair, De la Cruz said the symposium, which is
an annual event of the Air Force since 1982, except for some broken
years, “is designed primarily to discuss and promote the value of air
power to a wider constituency.”
But for 2012, the forum was unique as it included the holding of “a
5-in-1 activity -- an academic forum, an air power symposium, a defense
exhibit, a historical photo display, and the first Youth LEAP or Youth
Leader Exchange for Air Power gathering.”
“We are holding this event no longer to cater mainly to an internal
audience or our friends in aviation, but to a greater multi-sectoral
representation of national security stakeholders and partners.”
De la Cruz stressed the importance of air power in the country’s defense.
“Today we all live in a highly complex and unpredictable security
environment, and that the threats we face demand from us no easy
solutions.”
Taking advantage of today’s new technology, De la Cruz allowed
questions asked via the Internet, Twitter, Facebook, or mobile phones.
The questions were flashed on the wide screen during the
question-and-answer portion of the symposium that turned out to be more
lively.
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Ben Cal | Philippines News Agency/InterAksyon.Com | June 25, 2012 | Article Link
Thursday, March 15, 2012
PAF not giving up on aged, battered Hueys
BUTUAN CITY, Philippines -- The crash of another Philippine Air Force UH-1H Huey helicopter in Kitcharao, Agusan del Norte last Sunday has again revived questions about whether the Vietnam War-era aircraft ought to be retired and replaced.
The PAF currently has 40 Hueys, which have served as the workhorse of the armed forces for transporting troops and supplies, and for search and rescue operations since the late 1970's.
In December 2010, the US turned over five refurbished Hueys to the Air Force.
But the PAF’s Huey fleet has been plagued by deaths and injuries from numerous crashes since the late 1980s, earning the aged choppers the derisive nickname, “flying coffins.”
Last year alone, five personnel were injured in a crash on April 1 and three lives were lost in another mishap in Sulu last October.
The incident in Kitcharao, the first this year, saw seven injuries.
Despite this, Lieutenant Colonel Elpedio Talja, commander of the PAF’s Tactical Operations Group 10 based in Lumbia, Cagayan de Oro City, said: “We are still confident that with proper maintenance, the ‘Huey’ is still airworthy and an essential part of our air force. Our existing helicopters are still reliable and perform well. All that is needed are good checkups and spare parts.”
He said the Air Force has no plans yet of retiring the existing UH-1H fleet, which will be working together with the recently arrived PZL Swidnik W-3 Sokols from Poland.
“The purchase of eight Sokol combat utility helicopters is a welcome (development) for the armed forces. Actually there are many modernization projects in the pipeline; a lot of plans are in the works like long range patrol aircraft, light attack helicopters and fighter aircraft,” he said.
Last February, four of the eight Sokols, which are based on the Soviet Hind attack helicopters, were delivered to the Philippine government. The remaining choppers will be delivered in the second half of the year.
As it is, the PAF remains way behind other air forces in the region.
The last of F-5 Freedom fighters, which had been used for decades as interceptors for external defense, were decommissioned in September 2005.
The need for long-range patrol aircraft like the US’ P-3 Orion, has also been in discussion since the late 1990's as part of military’s modernization program.
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Erwin Mascarinas | InterAksyon.com | 15-Mar-12, 10:25 AM | Article Link
Sunday, March 11, 2012
PAF to train new Sokol chopper pilots
AIR FORCE CITY, Clark, Pampanga, March 10 (PNA) – Six helicopter pilots of the Philippines Air Force (PAF) who underwent a two-month training in Poland to fly the newly- acquired W-3A Sokol combat utility helicopters, will form the core group of pilot-instructors who will train incoming PAF Sokol pilots.
Maj. Irvin D. Tanap, one of the six PAF helicopter pilots who went to Poland, told the Philippines News Agency Friday that new Sokol chopper pilots will be trained in the coming months.
The PZL-Swidnik, the Polish manufacturer of the Sokol helicopters, delivered on Friday the first batch of four of the eight helicopters ordered by the government for the Air Force to boost its firepower and lift capability.
The Polish company is represented in the Philippines by AgustaWestland, a Finmeccanica company based in Italy.
The other five pilots who underwent training in Poland were Maj. Randy G. Buena, Maj. Nomar Alinsangan, Capt. Joseph Alexander Marquez, Capt. Roderick Reyes and Capt. Mark Anthony Fernandez.
The training was provided by PZL-Swidnik, the manufacturer of the W-3A Sokol combat utility helicopter, a six-ton class twin-engine helicopter capable of carrying up to 12 passengers and two pilots.
The helicopter has been certified by the European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) and the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) for its outstanding operational capability, effectiveness, rugged and reliable in all conditions.
The W-3A Sokol helicopter can perform in a long range of operations, making it an excellent utility aircraft with a low maintenance cost.
According to Major Tanap, who had flown many combat sorties in Mindanao, particularly the all-out war between the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) in 2000, the newly-acquired Sokol choppers will be mainly used to transport troops and supplies.
He said the helicopter can carry a load of 2,100 kilograms and fly 300 nautical miles (480 kilometers), non-stop which is the distance from Manila to Cebu.
The eight brand-new choppers acquired at a cost of US$ 66 million are armed with two M60 machine guns and air-to-ground rockets, although the helicopters can be equipped with air-to-air heat-seeking missiles.
As a multi-role aircraft, the Sokol helicopters can be fitted with firefighting equipment called expendable belly tank that can be dropped where a fire is raging, and can also be used in medical evacuation and rescue missions at sea or in the mountain, transport combat casualties and disaster victims as the case may be.
Another feature of the chopper is its non-retractable landing gear designed to withstand landings on unprepared and rough ground. It has a cruise speed of 235 kilometers per hour with a maximum endurance of more than four hours flying.
It can climb up to 4,520 meters or 14,829 feet and can hover at 2,550 meters or 8,364 feet.
The delivery of the Sokol helicopters comes at a time when the PAF most needed them for quick transport of troops in the event of an emergency -- man-made or natural.
Defense Secretary Voltaire T. Gazmin, who formally received the four choppers during a turnover ceremony here Friday, said that “our acquisition of these brand-new air assets shall certainly bolster the fire fighting capabilities of our Air Force in accordance with our modernization goals.”
“The placement of these aircraft in our Air Force inventory shall surely boost its development of mission-essential capabilities - mobility, firepower and accuracy, communications survivality and the ability to detect threat elements,” Gazmin said.
The helicopters are also fitted with night vision equipment to enable the pilots to see during night flying missions.
Journalists who covered the turnover ceremony were taken for 30-minute flight aboard the W-3A Sokol helicopters that went around Pampanga, including a view from the air of the areas hit by lahar during the eruption of Mt. Pinatubo in 1990.
Maj. Gen. Lauro Catalino dela Cruz, PAF commanding general, said the new helicopters will boost the PAF’s ability to transport troops during combat operations and conduct rescue missions.
Dela Cruz jokingly said that “sometimes the joke hurts that we only have air but no force, but eventually this will be a thing of the past.”
The PAF waited for over two decades before they got the brand new W-3A Sokol helicopters from Poland.
The last time the Air Force acquired new helicopters was in 1989 when the government bought a fleet of MG-520 attack helicopters, although the PAF got some second-hand aircraft in the 1990s and in the first decade of 2000.
Lt. Col. Mike Okol, PAF spokesman, said the PAF has welcomed the delivery of the Sokol helicopters and is looking forward to get more air assets in the near future.
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Ben Cal | Philippine News Agency | March 11,2012 | Article Link
Saturday, March 10, 2012
Philippine Air Force no more "all air, no force"
CLARK, Pampanga—The joke about the Philippine Air Force (PAF) is that it is “all air and no force”—and that hurts.
But that may soon be over.
Saying better times are at hand, the PAF’s new commanding general, Maj. Gen. Lauro Catalino dela Cruz, on Friday attended the blessing of four of eight Polish multi-role helicopters worth P2.8 billion which the Philippines received as part of its modernization program.
The new W-3 Sokol (Falcon) helicopters will be used for combat support as well as disaster relief missions, Dela Cruz said in turnover ceremonies at the former US Clark Air Base in Pampanga province.
Dela Cruz said the acquisition of the new sophisticated machines gave a “glimpse of many more changes to come.”
‘Thing of the past’
From being the best in Southeast Asia after World War II until the 1960s, the PAF saw its squadrons of fighter jets become obsolete without being replaced despite modernization plans.
The PAF deeply felt its decline when the last of its F5 “Blue Diamond” fighter jets was officially decommissioned in 2005, leaving the military incapable of intercepting intruders in the country’s airspace. Meanwhile, the number of accidents involving refurbished planes and helicopters piled up.
“The lack of equipment has always been our handicap. But despite that, we never let our guard down and instead focused on our strength, the talent of our people,” Dela Cruz said at brief ceremonies at Air Force City. “Sometimes the joke hurts that we only have air and no force.”
“But eventually this will be a thing of the past,” he added. “We can now see a horizon of better times, the beginning of an Air Force that is adequately equipped and skilled.”
Morale boosters
The guests, Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin and Armed Forces of the Philippines Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Jessie Dellosa, poured champagne on the helicopters’ noses during the ceremonies.
The new “Sokol” combat utility helicopters are expected to take some of the load off the military’s workhorse, the refurbished Vietnam War-era UH-1H “Huey” utility helicopters.
Used for transporting troops and cargo, the new helicopters are considered crucial for the emergency medical evacuation of ground troops in combat operations and for search and rescue missions during disasters.
Dela Cruz said the arrival of the new helicopters was a big morale booster.
“I know many of our fellow soldiers in the Philippine Army and the Marines will be very happy with the improved capability of their Air Force,” Dela Cruz said.
Demonstration ride
Maj. Randy Buena, group leader of six military pilots who have flown the new helicopters for test flights, said they were “amazed” at what the machines could do.
“It’s a beautiful aircraft,” Buena said before members of the media were given a demonstration ride on two of the helicopters.
This reporter was in a group of nine media members who, with two pilots and two crew members, flew for 40 minutes from Air Force City base through Crow Valley up to the crater of Mt. Pinatubo and back.
Unlike a ride in the single-engine Huey, the ride in the Sokol was smooth throughout despite the turbulence outside.
The pilots demonstrated the chopper could go on auto-pilot and showed off manuevers.
According to the briefer, the Sokols are equipped with the latest navigation and avionics systems that allow them to operate in all weather conditions day and night.
Credible defense
The PAF currently has 40 UH-1H helicopters, 18 MG-520 helicopter gunships, two Italian S211 jets with three undergoing repairs, plus about a dozen tuboprop OV-10 attack and observation planes, spokesperson Lt. Col. Miguel Ernesto Okol said. One C-130 transport aircraft is in service and two are undergoing repairs expected to be completed this year, he added.
The Philippines has been fighting a decades-long communist insurgency, al-Qaida-linked terrorists with military assistance largely from the United States, its longtime ally, and rarely acquires arms and equipment from other countries.
Manila last year said it would seek 12 F-16 fighter jets from Washington amid its simmering territorial dispute in the West Philippine (South China) Sea with Beijing. Washington has provided a Coast Guard cutter to the Philippines and agreed to send another one this year.
Foreign Secretary Albert del Rosario said the Philippines wanted to build “a minimum credible defense posture and the US has expressed their willingness to help us.”
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Dona Z. Pazzibugan | Philippine Daily Inquirer | March 10th, 2012 | Article Link
Friday, March 09, 2012
Christening of the Sokols
Photos taken this morning's christening at the 410th Hangar, Air Force City, Clark, Pampanga, Philippines.
Photos by:
Philippine Air Force, Armed Forces of the Philippines, Department of National Defense
Philippine Air Force to get 4 new choppers
The Philippine Air Force will be upgraded with four new choppers as part of the Armed Forces of the Philippines modernization plan, the government said Thursday.
The arrival of the four of eight SOKOL multi-purpose combat utility helicopters is part of the P2.8 billion acquisition contract between the AFP and Polish manufacturing company PZL-SWIDNIK SA, according to a statement by the Presidential Communications Operations Office.
The turnover of the choppers signals the near completion of the initial phase of the modernization program which focuses on improving the AFP’s ability to conduct internal security operations.
Under this phase, the target acquisition include eight combat utility helicopters, seven attack helicopters, one C-130 aircraft, a long-range patrol aircraft and 18 basic trainer aircraft.
The government said the SOKOL helicopters are certified by the European Aviation Safety Agency and the Federal Aviation Administration, and have been proven to be effective and reliable in all weather conditions.
They also include flexible internal and external cargo capacity, making them capable of performing a wide range of operations and excellent utility choppers.
Under Republic Act No. 7898, or the AFP Modernization Act of 1995, the military has received a total fund of P331 billion for its upgrade.
“The plan follows a strict schedule for upgrades in order to modernize the AFP to a level where it can effectively and fully perform its constitutional mandate to defend the sovereignty and protect and preserve the patrimony of the Republic,” the statement said.
Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin will be the guest of honor during the formal turnover of the choppers, which will be headed by PZL-SWIDNIK SA president Mieczyslaw Majewski, to be held at the Air Force City in Clark, Pampanga on Friday.
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Shielo Mendoza | Yahoo! Southeast Asia Newsroom | Article Link
The arrival of the four of eight SOKOL multi-purpose combat utility helicopters is part of the P2.8 billion acquisition contract between the AFP and Polish manufacturing company PZL-SWIDNIK SA, according to a statement by the Presidential Communications Operations Office.
The turnover of the choppers signals the near completion of the initial phase of the modernization program which focuses on improving the AFP’s ability to conduct internal security operations.
Under this phase, the target acquisition include eight combat utility helicopters, seven attack helicopters, one C-130 aircraft, a long-range patrol aircraft and 18 basic trainer aircraft.
The government said the SOKOL helicopters are certified by the European Aviation Safety Agency and the Federal Aviation Administration, and have been proven to be effective and reliable in all weather conditions.
They also include flexible internal and external cargo capacity, making them capable of performing a wide range of operations and excellent utility choppers.
Under Republic Act No. 7898, or the AFP Modernization Act of 1995, the military has received a total fund of P331 billion for its upgrade.
“The plan follows a strict schedule for upgrades in order to modernize the AFP to a level where it can effectively and fully perform its constitutional mandate to defend the sovereignty and protect and preserve the patrimony of the Republic,” the statement said.
Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin will be the guest of honor during the formal turnover of the choppers, which will be headed by PZL-SWIDNIK SA president Mieczyslaw Majewski, to be held at the Air Force City in Clark, Pampanga on Friday.
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Shielo Mendoza | Yahoo! Southeast Asia Newsroom | Article Link
PAF Gears Up With Brand New Combat Utility Helicopters
Jesus Villamor Air Base, Pasay City - The Philippine Air Force (PAF) will formally accept the initial four (4) of the eight (8) brand new multi-purpose combat utility helicopters as part of the P2.8B acquisition contract between the ARMED FORCES OF THE PHILIPPINES (AFP) and WYTWORINIA SPREZETU KOMUNIKACY JNEGO “”PZL-SWIDNIK”SPOLJA AKCY JNA in a simple ceremony on March 9, 2012, from 8:00am to 12:00noon at the 410th Hangar, Air Force City, Clark, Pampanga.
The arrival of these brand new CUH signals the near completion of the initial phase of the PAF’s Modernization Plan and people could expect more advanced aircraft acquisitions, apt for territorial defense, soon.
In a press statement, PAF PIO Director Lt. Col. Miguel Ernesto G. Okol PAF (GSC) said that the continuation of the AFP Modernization Program is due “to the strong determination of our Defense Secretary Voltaire T. Gazmin, not to mention the solid commitment of H.E. President Benigno Aquino III – our Commander in Chief, to see a modernized Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) during his term.”
Dubbed as “Back to Basics,” the first phase of the Modernization Program focuses on improving the AFP’s ability to conduct Internal Security Operations (ISO). Under this phase, the target acquisitions include eight (8) combat utility helicopters, seven (7) attack helicopters, one (1) C-130 aircraft and a long-range patrol aircraft and 18 Basic Trainer Aircraft.
For the Capability Upgrade Program (CUP), Okol added that “more advanced aircraft are expected in Phases 2 and 3 where PAF related components are grouped into what it calls “Horizon Programs”, with Horizon 2 expected to begin in the 2012 to 2016 time frame.”
For Horizon 2, PAF expects the delivery of Territorial Defense assets such as Surface Attack Aircraft, Lead-In Fighter Trainers, Long Range Patrol Aircraft, Air Defense Radar, and a Special Mission aircraft, among others which will greatly boost the country’s defense stance against external threats.
Initially, Republic Act No. 7898, otherwise known as the AFP Modernization Act of 1995 has given the military the opportunity to modernize with a total fund of P331B. The modernization plan follows a strict schedule for upgrades in order to modernize the AFP to a level where it can effectively and fully perform its constitutional mandate to defend the sovereignty and protect and preserve the patrimony of the republic.
Various domestic security concerns since 1999, prompted the AFP to realign its modernization priorities to procure the necessary operational and intelligence requirements to support Internal Security Operations (ISO). Along with the equipment acquisition is the realization of providing significant attention to the other four components of the program, which is indispensable for ISO.
The Sokol helicopters, once formally accepted by PAF, will greatly boost the search and rescue, medical evacuation and combat utility missions of the PAF. Certified by the European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) and the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), these 6-tonne class twin-engine helicopters have been proven to be effective, rugged and reliable in all weather conditions. An added feature (of a SOKOL helicopter) includes its high flexibility and significant internal and external cargo capacity – making it capable of performing a wide range of operations and an excellent utility helicopter.
With the modernization in place, the newly appointed PAF Commanding General, Maj. Gen. Lauro Catalino G. Dela Cruz AFP continues to initiate programs that will ensure that PAF also modernizes from within by strengthening the inner core of its airmen with discipline, a strict sense and value for time, continued fiscal and financial reforms and an appreciation for the organization’s role in Internal Peace and Security Plan (IPSP) “Bayanihan”.
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Department of National Defense - Philippines | Thursday, March 8, 2012 | Article Link
Thursday, February 23, 2012
The new PAF CUH W-3A Sokol flies over OCS
The new PAF CUH W-3A Sokol flies over OCS in Camp O'Donnel. (Photo courtesy of Sandy @ Philippine Defense Forum) |
Photo Link...
Wednesday, February 22, 2012
New Sokol choppers amaze Philippine troops
MANILA, Philippines—Philippine troops and civilians were awed by the latest military air asset acquisitions, which went on test flights Monday afternoon, a military spokesman said.
In a press briefing Tuesday, Colonel Arnulfo Marcelo Burgos Jr. said the Sokol choppers, which flew from Clark Air Base in Pampanga, amazed the troops and civilians at Fort Magsaysay in Nueva Ecija where the aircraft passed by.
He said, “The troops were impressed with the capabilities of the Sokol choppers as they executed several air maneuvers.
Major Enrico Ileto of the 7th Infantry Division said the Philippine Army Aviation Battalion of the Light Armor Division stationed at Fort Magsaysay may have been the first Army unit to establish radio contact with the brand-new choppers.
“Pulse rates ran high with enthusiasm for soldiers assigned here when they noticed a unique chopping sound of the air in the background being accustomed to the thud of a Huey helicopter or any other rotary aircraft the Armed Forces Philippines has,” he said.
The helicopters, half of the originally eight scheduled for delivery were from Augusta PZL SWIDNIK of Italy and Poland, arrived last week at Clark Air Base.
The Sokol helicopter or “Falcon” in Polish, is a “more capable utility platform” and can be fitted with equipment depending on the mission that makes it an “ideal utility helicopter” for the air force, he said. It has night vision goggle-capabilities and is equipped with an SN 350 autopilot, which means it “can fly hands free especially in long transit flights.”
While the Huey can carry only seven passengers, the Sokol can accommodate 10 passengers with a maximum takeoff weight of 14, 110 lbs. and an endurance of three hours and 19 minutes. It can reach a maximum range of 402 nautical miles in a single flight with airspeed of 140.5 knots, Air Force spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Miguel Ernesto Okol earlier said.
“The Sokol is fitted with gun mounts for the M60D machine gun on both sides and when utilized during search- and-rescue or over-water operations, it can be equipped with pilot-controlled emergency flotation gear attached to the lowest portion of the aircraft. It can also perform various missions other than combat to support the country’s peace and development efforts,” he added.
The acquisition cost is P2.8 billion and the procurement has undergone “rigid screening process.” The rest of the helicopters are expected to arrive in the fourth quarter of 2012 or first quarter of 2013.
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2:55 am | Wednesday, February 22nd, 2012
Tuesday, February 21, 2012
Philippine Air Force conducts test on newly delivered Sokol Choppers
PTV Department of National Defense - Philippines Armed Forces of the Philippines Official Gazette of the Republic of the Philippines
Photo Link
Thursday, February 16, 2012
Military acquires eight combat helicopters for P2.8b
FOUR of eight Sokol combat utility helicopters from Swidnik of Poland have arrived, an official said Wednesday.
“The brand-new choppers arrived last night in Clark Air Base in Pampanga,” said Deputy Chief of Staff for Plans Maj. Gen. Roy Deveraturda.
“A group of technicians and pilots from the Air Force are conducting inspection and assessment and, if satisfied, they will immediately assemble them.”
The helicopters were the first batch of a P2.8-billion order placed a year ago. The next and last batch is scheduled to be delivered in the fourth quarter.
“These utility helicopters are multi-purpose,” Deveraturda said.
“You can use these for transporting troops or for air evacuation and disaster response. They can also be converted into ambulance choppers.”
Air Force spokesman Lt. Col. Miguel Ernesto Okol said the choppers could be fitted with specialized equipment to match their mission, making them ideal utility helicopters.
For combat missions, the Sokol can be fitted with gun mounts for M60D machine guns on both sides, and when used for search and rescue over water operations, it can be equipped with pilot-controlled emergency flotation gear attached to the lowest portion of the aircraft.
Deveraturda said the Armed Forces was discussing the procurement of a squadron of F-16 jet fighters on the next phase of its modernization program.
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by Florante S. Solmerin
February 16,2012
ManilaStandardToday.com
4 new choppers for Air Force arrive in Clark
MANILA, Philippines—Two years since it placed its order, the Philippine Air Force (PAF) received four brand-new combat utility helicopters to upgrade its dwindling fleet of vintage “Huey” utility helicopters.
The four new combat utility helicopters from Augusta PZL Swidnik of Italy and Poland arrived in Clark Air Base in Pampanga Tuesday, according to PAF.
They are the first batch of a total of eight helicopters that the PAF ordered back in February 2010 for P2.8 billion.
The P2.8 billion covers the price of the eight “Sokol” helicopters (sokol means falcon in Polish), the pilots’ training as well as maintenance and technical support.
PAF spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Miguel Ernesto Okol said the four Sokol helicopters will be assembled and will undergo test flights before a formal blessing and turnover.
The second batch of four other helicopters is expected to be delivered in the last quarter of the year.
Compared to the UH-1H Huey helicopters, Okol said the Sokol is a “more capable utility platform.”
It is night vision goggle-capable and equipped with autopilot equipment. While the Huey can carry only seven passengers, a Sokol helicopter can accommodate 10.
Okol said it has a maximum takeoff weight of 14,110 lbs. and endurance of three hours and 19 minutes and can reach a maximum range of 402 nautical miles in a single flight with an airspeed of 140.5 knots.
The Sokol is also fitted with gun mounts on both sides.
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5:19 am | Thursday, February 16th, 2012
Wednesday, February 15, 2012
AFP gets 4 new choppers
MANILA, Philippines - The military announced Wednesday that it has received 4 brand new combat utility helicopters from PZL Swidnik of Poland.
Maj. Gen. Roy Deveraturda, AFP deputy chief of staff for plans, said the 4 choppers arrived at Clark Air Base Tuesday night. A Philippine Air Force assessment team is currently inspecting the shipment.
Deveraturda said the helicopters can be used for disaster response, transportation of troops and evacuation of the wounded.
He said the AFP is expecting delivery of 4 more helicopters in the last quarter of the year.
He said the Philippine Air Force currently has about 40 operational helicopters including UH-1H “Huey” helicopters and MD-520-MG gunships from the United States.
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ABS-CBNnews.com
Posted at 02/15/2012 12:21 PM
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