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33 Things You Probably Don’t Know About the CH-47 Chinook
33 Things You Probably Don’t Know About the CH-47 Chinook
The twin-engine, tandem-rotor CH-47 Chinook helicopter is one of the world’s most iconic and recognizable military aircraft. But here are some things you may not know about the granddaddy of all heavy-lift helicopters:
- Like several other U.S. Army helicopters, the Chinook takes its name from Native American culture and, specifically, the Chinookan People of the Northwestern United States.
- The CH-47 was designed to replace the Sikorsky CH-37 Mojave, which was retired from the Army’s fleet in the late 1960s.
- Veritol Aircraft Corporation, the original developer of the CH-47, was acquired by Boeing in 1960.
- The new helicopter was originally designated the Vertol Model 107 or V-107.
- Development work on the CH-47 began in 1958 and the Chinook took its first flight in 1961.
- That flight – and every other one since – has been powered by a pair of Honeywell T55 engines.
- The “CH” stands for “Cargo Helicopter.”
- Originally fielded in the Vietnam War, the CH-47 has undergone a series of upgrades to increase lift and airworthiness in combat environments.
- Designed to carry about 36 passengers, one Chinook is reported to have carried 147 refugees in a single lift in the waning days of the Vietnam War.
- The CH-47 was one of the first two helicopters powered by a turbine engine. The other was the UH-1 Huey.
- The first fully-equipped Army Chinook, designated the CH-47A, entered service in August 1962 with a gross weight of 33,000 pounds.
- The Chinook is the U.S. Army’s only heavy-lift cargo helicopter supporting combat and other missions.
- Secondary missions include medical evacuation, search and rescue, parachute drops, disaster relief and aircraft recovery.
- The CH-47 is considered the “workhorse” of the U.S. Army helicopter fleet.
- The Chinook has several means of loading cargo including multiple doors across the fuselage, a wide loading ramp located at the rear of the fuselage and three external hooks to carry underslung loads.
- The Chinook's ability to carry large, underslung loads has been of significant value during natural disaster and humanitarian relief missions.
- The CH-47 can lift close to 48,000 pounds at 4,000 feet and 95 degrees F.
- The helicopter flies with a minimum crew of three – pilot, copilot and flight engineer.
- Honeywell T55 engines have more than 12 million hours of operation under their belts.
- The CH-47F is considered the world's fastest military helicopter with a maximum speed of 315 km/hr (196 mph).
- The latest version of the T55 engine – Honeywell’s next-generation T55-714C – generates 6,000 shaft-horsepower at sea level compared to just 2,050 for the original T55.
- The Chinook is one of only two military aircraft developed in the 1960s still in production and service after 50 years – the other is the C-130.
- Twenty-two countries currently fly the CH-47 Chinook. The U.S. Army and U.K. Royal Air Force are the two largest operators.
- The CH-47F upgrade program included the installation of a new digital cockpit and modifications to the airframe to reduce vibration.
- Boeing and Honeywell developed an advanced digital cockpit equipped with multifunction liquid crystal displays and electronic flight instruments.
- The Chinook is capable of balancing on its two rear wheels, on the edge of a cliff for example, while still hovering in a maneuver called a pinnacle landing.
- Empty, the CH-47F Chinook weighs 26,800 pounds.
- The MH-47 is a special-operations version of the Chinook.
- The Chinook has a mission radius of 200 miles.
- A commercial model of the Chinook, the Boeing-Vertol Model 234, is used worldwide for logging, construction, fighting forest fires and supporting petroleum-extraction operations.
- The newest version of Honeywell’s powerful, efficient T55 engine is currently being evaluated by the Army to demonstrate its capabilities.
- The new T55-714C engine offers 25% better reliability, carries a 22% heavier payload and provides an 8% improvement in fuel efficiency.
- It’s available as a new-production engine or as an upgrade for the T55-714A engine that now equips most of the world’s C-47 Chinook fleet.