"The real success story for us: it's been on schedule [and] it's met its cost targets perhaps better than any other aviation program we have got that's active right now," said Col. Thomas Todd, project manager for Army utility helicopters, during an April 3 press briefing at the Army Aviation Association of America conference in Nashville, Tenn.
In the field, Todd said, the Lakota has maintained remarkably high reliability rates. "It maintains consistently 90 percent operational availability rates," Todd said. "We obviously take a lot of pride in the fact that 90 percent means [a commander] gets nine out of 10 to fly. It makes that unit commander, no matter where they are and what mission they are performing, more effective."
In a time of constrained budgets, Todd said that the Lakota also delivers on maintenance costs. As a light utility helicopter, the UH-72A Lakota was pursued as a replacement for the OH-58A and C Kiowas as well as the UH-1 Iroquois. Repair parts for the Lakota are less expensive than for the older aircraft, and are delivered quicker.
"When we compare our parts fill rate is higher, and our parts cost or our contracts cost is easily 30-40 percent less," Todd said. "That's a huge measuring stick for us, in these resources constrained times."
Source : US Army
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