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AgustaWestland AW109

The AgustaWestland AW109, originally the Agusta A109, is a lightweight, twin-engine, eight-seat multi-purpose helicopter designed and initially produced by the Italian rotorcraft manufacturer Agusta. It was the first all-Italian helicopter to be mass-produced.[1] Its production has been continued by Agusta's successor companies, presently Leonardo S.p.A. (formerly AgustaWestland, merged into the new Finmeccanica since 2016).[2]

AW109
An AW109E formerly operated by No. 32 Squadron RAF in 2012
Role Search and rescue/utility helicopter
Manufacturer Agusta
AgustaWestland
Leonardo S.p.A.
First flight 4 August 1971 (1971-08-04)
Introduction 1976
Status Active service, in production
Primary users Italian Army
Rega (Swiss Air Rescue)
South African Air Force
Royal New Zealand Air Force
Produced 1971–present
Variants AgustaWestland AW109S Grand
Developed into AgustaWestland AW119 Koala

Development of the A109 commenced during the late 1960s as an indigenous rotorcraft suited to commercial operations. A twin-engine arrangement was pursued in response to market interest, while work on the civil model was prioritised over the military-orientated A109B project. On 4 August 1971, the first of three prototypes made its maiden flight. On 1 June 1975, the type received certification from the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), permitting its service entry in 1976. The A109 has been used in a wide variety of roles, including light utility, VIP transport, aeromedical, law enforcement, search and rescue (SAR), and several military roles. Dedicated military models have been produced for both land and sea operations. Several models with alternative engines, expanded fuselages, and alternative equipment fitouts have been produced. Some AW109s feature an convertible interior to quickly adapt the rotorcraft between roles. Various third party companies also offer adaptions and services for the type.

Following the merger of Agusta and the British company Westland Helicopters to form AgustaWestland, the A109 has been rebranded as the AW109. International involvement in the programme has also been pursued; the company has established final assembly lines at sites in both Italy and the US. Furthermore, hundreds of AW109 fuselages have been manufactured by the Polish aerospace company PZL-Świdnik since the mid-1990s. AgustaWestland formed a joint venture with the Changhe Aircraft Industries Corporation in 2004 that produces and supports the AW109, includes a final assembly line, in China. The AW109 has been in continuous production for 40 years. The AgustaWestland AW119 is a derivative of the AW109, the principal difference being that it is powered by a single engine and has a fixed undercarriage.

Development

Origins

 
Agusta A109 K2 of the Rega over Mount Pilatus

Work on what would become the AW109 commenced during the late 1960s at the Italian helicopter manufacturer Agusta, which sought to design an indigenous rotorcraft suitable for commercial activities. Known as the A109, early designs were of a single-engine helicopter.[3] However, the design team came to recognise that the market found a twin-engine rotorcraft to be more attractive, thus the project was reoriented to fulfil this in 1969, opting to outfit it with a pair of Allison 250-C14 turboshaft engines. While early considerations had been made for a militarised model, which the company internally referred to as the A109B, Agusta intentionally placed a low priority on the work for this variant in favour of other market sectors. In particular, design efforts were concentrated on the eight-seat A109C model.[4]

On 4 August 1971, the first of three prototypes performed the type's maiden flight.[5] The A109 was subject to a protracted flight testing phase, which was largely attributable to the discovery of dynamic instability that took roughly one year to resolve via a modified transmission design.[6] Almost four years later, the first production helicopter was officially completed during April 1975. On 1 June 1975, the type received certification for visual flight rules (VFR) from the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), permitting the A109 to be operated in North America.[3]

During 1976, deliveries of production A109s commenced to civil customers. The type offered several advantages over the then-market leading Bell 206, including its greater top speed, twin-engine redundancy, and increased seating capacity.[3] In 1975, Agusta's design team revisited the concept of a military version; to support their work, a series of flying trials were carried out between 1976 and 1977 involving a total of five A109As that had been outfitted with Hughes Aircraft-built TOW missiles. From these endeavours, two different military versions of the A109 emerged, one being intended for light attack/close air support missions while the other was optimised for shipboard operations.[7]

Further development

 
A Belgian A109BA performing a display flight, 2013

Shortly following after the launch of the initial production model, Agusta begun work on additional models, primarily for the civil sector. During 1981, an A109A Mk2, that featured a widened cabin, was made available to operators.[8] In 1993, the A109 K2 model was introduced, which was powered by alternative engine in the form of the Turbomeca Arriel 1K1. During 1996, the A109 Power was launched, which was broadly similar to the K2 except for the adoption of yet another powerplant, the Pratt & Whitney Canada PW206 engine.[3] By 2008, according to AgustaWestland, the A109 Power was being operated across 46 countries. In 2006, an enlarged variant, the A109S Grand, was introduced.[3]

The A109 was renamed the AW109 as a consequence of the July 2000 merger of Finmeccanica S.p.A. and GKN plc's respective helicopter subsidiaries Agusta and Westland Helicopters to form AgustaWestland. Since the mid-1990s, fuselages for the AW109 have been manufactured by PZL-Świdnik, which became a subsidiary company of AgustaWestland in 2010. In June 2006, the 500th fuselage was delivered by the Polish aerospace company PZL-Świdnik, marking 10 years of co-operation on the AW109 between the two companies.[9] In 2004, AgustaWestland formed a joint venture with the Changhe Aircraft Industries Corporation for the support and production of the AW109 in China; by 2009, the joint venture was reportedly capable of performing the final assembly of the AW109 in addition to independently manufacturing major sections, such as the fuselage.[10]

In February 2014, AgustaWestland announced the development of the AW109 Trekker, an updated models. It is equipped with skid landing gear (being the first twin-engine helicopter produced by the company to have this feature) and is powered by a pair of FADEC-equipped Pratt & Whitney Canada PW207C engines; its avionics are supplied by Genesys Aerospace, which have been designed for single-pilot operations.[11] The Trekker reportedly expands upon the utility capabilities of the standard AW109.[12] Akin to the prior models, the final assembly of the AW109 Trekker is undertaken at sites in both the US and Italy.[3][13]

Design

 
An AW109E parked on the grass

The AW109 is a lightweight twin-engine helicopter, known for its speed, elegant appearance and ease of control.[3][14][15] Since entering commercial service, several revisions and iterations have been made, frequently introducing new avionics and engine technologies. AgustaWestland have promoted the type for its multirole capabilities and serviceability. The type has proven highly popular with VIP/corporate customers; according to AgustaWestland, 50% of all of the AW109 Power variant had been sold in such configurations. Other roles for the AW109 have included emergency medical services, law enforcement, homeland security missions, harbor pilot shuttle duty, search and rescue, maritime operations, and military uses.[3] In 2008, AgustaWestland claimed the AW109 to be "one of the industry’s best-selling helicopters".[3]

A range of turboshaft powerplants have been used to power the numerous variants of the AW109, from the original Allison 250-C14 engines to the Turbomeca Arriel 1K1 and Pratt & Whitney Canada PW206 of more modern aircraft.[3] Powerplants can be replaced or swapped for during airframe overhauls, resulting in increasing lifting capacity and other performance changes. In the case of single-engine failure, the AW109 is intended to have a generous power reserve even on a single engine.[8] The engines drive a fully articulated four-blade rotor system.[16] Over time, more advanced rotor blade designs have been progressively adopted for the AW109's main and tail rotors, such as composite materials being used to replace bonded metal,[17] these improvements have typically been made with the aim of reducing operating costs and noise signature. According to Rotor&Wing, the type is well regarded for its "high, hot, and heavy" performance.[3]

 
Head-on view of a low-flying AW109E, 2008

According to AgustaWestland, the AW109 Power features various advanced avionics systems, these include a three-axis autopilot, an auto-coupled Instrument Landing System, integrated GPS, a Moving Map Display, weather radar, and a Traffic Alerting System.[18] These systems are designed to reduce pilot workload (the AW109 can be flown under single or dual-pilot instrument flight rules (IFR)) and enable the use of night vision goggles (NVG) to conduct day-or-night operations.[19] The AW109 has a forced trim system which can be readily and selectively activated by the controlling pilot using triggers located on the cyclic and collective which hold the control inputs at the last set position if activated.[3][16] All critical systems are deliberately redundant for fail-safe operations; the hydraulic system, hydraulic actuators, and electrical system are all dual-redundant, while the power inverters are triple-redundant.[8] The AW109 also has reduced maintenance requirements due to an emphasis on reliability across the range of components used.[19]

Some models of the AW109 feature the "quick convertible interior", a cabin configuration designed to be flexibly re-configured to allow the rotorcraft to be quickly adapted for different roles, such as the installation or removal of mission consoles or medical stretchers. Mission-specific equipment can also be installed in the externally accessible separate baggage compartment, which can be optionally expanded. Optional cabin equipment includes soundproofing, air conditioning, and bleed air heating.[19] Aftermarket cabin configurations are offered by third parties; Pininfarina and Versace have both offered designer interiors for the AW109, while Aerolite Max Bucher has developed a lightweight emergency medical service interior.[3] The majority of AW109s are fitted with a retractable wheeled tricycle undercarriage, providing greater comfort than skids and taxiing capability.[14][15] For shipboard operations, the wheeled landing gear is reinforced, deck mooring points are fixed across the lower fuselage, and extensive corrosion protection is typically applied.[20]

Optional mission equipment for the AW109 has included dual controls, a rotor brake, windshield wipers, a fixed cargo hook, snow skis, external loudspeakers, wire-strike protection system, engine particle separator, engine compartment fire extinguishers, datalink, and rappelling fittings.[19] A range of armaments can be installed upon the AW109, including pintle-mounted machine guns, machine gun pods, 20mm cannons, rocket pods, anti-tank missiles and air-to-air missiles.[20][21] Those AW109s operated by the U.S. Coast Guard, later designated as MH-68A, had the following equipment installed: a rescue hoist, emergency floats, FLIR, Spectrolab NightSun search light, a 7.62 mm M240D machine gun and a Barrett M107 semi-automatic 12.7 mm (.50 caliber) anti-material rifle with laser sight.[22]

Operational history

Various branches of the Italian military have operated variants of the AW109; the Guardia di Finanza has operated its own variant of the AW109 since the 1980s for border patrol and customs duties, by 2010, it was in the process of replacing its original AW109s with a new-generation of AW109s.[1]

During 1982, the Argentine Army Aviation deployed three A109As to the Falkland Islands during the Falklands War. They operated with the helicopter fleet (9 UH-1H, 2 CH-47C and 2 Pumas) in reconnaissance and liaison roles. One of the helicopters was destroyed on the ground by a British Harrier attack; the others were captured and sent to Europe aboard HMS Fearless. The British Army Air Corps decided to use those helicopters in domestic operations (being flown by 8 Flight AAC to support SAS regiment deployments in the UK), alongside two additional A109 which were purchased later following favorable use of the first two; all were retired in 2009.[23][24] The improved AW109E and SP – GrandNew versions have also been operated by No. 32 Squadron of the Royal Air Force to transport members of the British Royal Family.[25][26]

In 1988, 46 A109s were sold to the Belgian Armed Forces; it was later alleged that Agusta had given the Belgian Socialist Party over 50 million Belgian francs as a bribe to secure the sale. The resulting scandal led to the resignation and later conviction of NATO Secretary General Willy Claes.[27] Belgium has operated an A109 aerial display team.[28] In early 2013, a pair of Belgian AW109s were deployed to Sévaré, Mali, to perform medical evacuation mission in support of the French-led Operation Serval.[29] In June 2013, Belgian newspaper La Libre Belgique alleged that several former Belgian military helicopters had been sold via a private company to South Sudan in violation of a European Union embargo on weapons sales.[30][31]

 
Pair of South African Air Force (SAAF) A109 LUHs landing in formation

During the 1990s, the US Coast Guard, seeking to tackle drug trafficking on small speed boats via armed aerial interdiction helicopters, evaluated several options and selected the AW109 as the winner. For a number of years, eight armed AW109s, designated MH-68A Sting Ray, were leased from AgustaWestland and deployed at Coast Guard land facilities and onboard cutters. Positive experience with the AW109 led to the Coast Guard deciding to arm all of its helicopters and, following adaptions of their existing assets, the AW109s were returned after the lease expired.[3]

In September 1999, the South African Air Force (SAAF) placed an order for 30 AW109s;[3] 25 of the 30 rotorcraft were assembled locally by Denel Aviation, starting in 2003.[32][33] As many as 16 SAAF AW109s were deployed for patrol, utility, and medical evacuation missions during the 2010 FIFA World Cup.[34] In July 2013, the SAAF reported that 18 AW109s had effectively been grounded due to lack of funding, these rotorcraft being only occasionally activated but not conducting flights; in 2013, only 71 flight hours were allocated to the whole AW109 fleet. The type may be reduced to flying VIPs rather than being operationally capable; South Africa is also considering selling a number of AW109s, and may cease helicopter operations altogether.[35]

In 2001, 20 AW109s were ordered for the Swedish Armed Forces,[3] receiving the Swedish military designation of Hkp 15. In 2010, it was reported that considerable demands were being placed upon the AW109 fleet, in part due to the delayed delivery of the NHIndustries NH90.[36] In early 2015, a pair of Swedish AW109s were deployed on board the Royal Netherlands Navy ship HNLMS Johan de Witt, their first-ever deployment on board a foreign vessel, in support of a multinational anti-piracy mission off the coast of Somalia; the AW109 reportedly achieve a 100% availability rate over the course of three months.[37]

 
An Australian AW109E during a rescue demonstration, 2008

Between 2007 and 2012, three AW109E Power helicopters were operated under lease by the Royal Australian Navy (RAN) to train naval aircrew.[38]

In May 2008, the Royal New Zealand Air Force (RNZAF) placed an order for five AW109LUH rotorcraft to replace their aging Bell 47 Sioux in a training capacity; they are also used in the utility role to complement the larger NHIndustries NH90 and has seen limited use in VIP missions.[39]

During August 2008, Scott Kasprowicz and Steve Sheik broke the round-the-world speed record using a factory-standard AgustaWestland AW109S Grand, with a time of 11 days, 7 hours and 2 minutes. The AW109S Grand is also recorded as being the fastest helicopter from New York to Los Angeles.[40][41]

 
Philippine Air Force AW109 Light Armed Helicopter during the Exercise Balikatan 2016

In 2013, the Philippine Air Force (PAF) and the Philippine Navy independently ordered batches of AW109 Power rotorcraft; additional AW109s were ordered in 2014.[42] The PAF AW109s are used as armed gunships, while both armed and unarmed AW109s are operated by the Philippine Navy.[43] During the Battle of Marawi, multiple PAF AW109s engaged in combat the ISIS-affiliated Maute Group.[44] During November 2020, a PAF AW109 was involved in a joint operation of Armed Forces of the Philippines Joint Task Force (JTF) - Sulu against Abu Sayyaf kidnappers in northern Mindanao, firing upon a boat in conjunction with strafing fire from Philippine Navy Multipurpose Assault Craft.[45]

Variants

 
Agusta A109A Mk.II of the Italian police
 
Former Dyfed-Powys Police Air Support Unit Helicopter (X-Ray 99) demonstration at police HQ Open Day 2008
A109A
The first production model, powered by two Allison Model 250-C20 turboshaft engines. It made its first flight on 4 August 1971. Initially, the A109 was marketed under the name of "Hirundo" (Latin for the swallow), but this was dropped within a few years.
A109A EOA
Military version for the Italian Army.
A109A Mk.II
Upgraded civilian version of the A109A.
A109A Mk.II MAX
Aeromedical evacuation version based on A109A Mk.II with extra wide cabin and access doors hinged top and bottom, rather than to one side.
A109B
Unbuilt military version.
A109BA
Version created for the Belgian Army. Based on the A109C but fitted with fixed landing gear, sliding doors and a tail rotor guard in place of a lower tail fin.
A109C
Eight-seat civil version, powered by two Allison Model 250-C20R-1 turboshaft engines.[15]
A109C MAX
Aeromedical evacuation version based on A109C with extra-wide cabin and access doors hinged top and bottom, rather than to one side.[46]
A109D
One prototype only
A109E Power
Upgraded civilian version, initially powered by two Turbomeca Arrius 2K1 engines. Later the manufacturer introduced an option for two Pratt & Whitney PW206C engines to be used – both versions remain known as the A109E. Marketed as the AW109E and Power.
A109E Power Elite
A stretched cabin version of A109E Power. Features a glass cockpit with two complete sets of pilot instruments and navigation systems, including a three-axis autopilot, an auto-coupled Instrument Landing System and GPS.[18]
A109LUH
Military LUH "Light Utility Helicopter" variant based on the A109E Power. Operators include South African Air Force, Swedish Air Force, Royal New Zealand Air Force, Nigerian Air Force, as well as Algeria and Malaysia. Known as the Hkp15A (utility variant) and 15B (ship-borne search and rescue variant) with the Swedish Air Force.
MH-68A
Eight A109E Power aircraft were used by the United States Coast Guard Helicopter Interdiction Tactical Squadron Jacksonville (HITRON Jacksonville) as short-range armed interdiction helicopters from 2000 until 2008, when they were replaced with MH-65C Dolphins.[47] Agusta designated these armed interdiction aircraft as "Mako" until the U.S. Coast Guard officially named it the MH-68A Stingray in 2003.[22]
A109K
Military version.
A109K2
High-altitude and high-temperature operations with fixed wheels rather than the retractable wheels of most A109 variants. Typically used by police, search and rescue, and air ambulance operators.
A109M
Military version.
A109 km
Military version for high altitude and high temperature operations.
A109KN
Naval version.
A109CM
Standard military version.
A109GdiF
Version for Guardia di Finanza, the Italian Finance Guard.
A109S Grand
Marketed as the AW109 Grand, it is a lengthened cabin-upgraded civilian version with two Pratt & Whitney Canada PW207 engines and lengthened main rotor blades with different tip design from the Power version.
AW109SP
AW109 GrandNew
single pilot IFR, TAWS and EVS, especially for EMS.
AW109 Trekker
A variant of the AW109S Grand with fixed landing skids.[48]
CA109
Chinese model of the AW109E for China mainland market by Jiangxi Changhe Agusta Helicopter Co., Ltd., a Leonardo Helicopter Division(formerly AgustaWestland) and Changhe Aviation Industries Joint Venture Company established in 2005.[49]

Operators

The AW109 is flown by a range of operators including private companies, military services, emergency services and air charter companies.

Military and government operators

  Algeria
  Albania
  Angola
  Bangladesh
 
AW109E Power operated by Bangladesh Navy
  Belgium
 
Belgian Air Component A109BA anti-tank variant.
  Bulgaria
  Cameroon
  Chile
  Ecuador
  • Bomberos Quito
  Egypt
  Greece
  Italy
  Japan
  Latvia
  Malaysia
  Mexico
  New Zealand
  Nigeria
  Peru
  Philippines
  Slovenia
  South Africa
  Sweden
 
A Swedish Armed Forces A109 LUH, designated Hkp-15A
  Turkmenistan
  Uganda
  United Kingdom

Former military and government operators

  Argentina
  Australia
  Italy
  Paraguay

  Poland

  United Kingdom
  United States
 
A U.S. Coast Guard MH-68A Stingray
  Venezuela

Accidents

Displayed

Specifications (AW109 Power with PW206C) 2850 Kilo version

 
 
Flight deck of an AW109, 2012

Data from ‘’Leonardo’’"AW109 Power". Leonardo.

General characteristics

  • Crew: 1 or 2
  • Capacity: 6 or 7 passengers
  • Length: 11.448 m (37 ft 7 in) fuselage
  • Height: 3.50 m (11 ft 6 in)
  • Empty weight: 1,590 kg (3,505 lb)
  • Max takeoff weight: 2,850 kg (6,283 lb)
  • Powerplant: 2 × Pratt & Whitney Canada PW206C Turboshaft engine, 418 kW (560 hp) each
  • Main rotor diameter: 11.00 m (36 ft 1 in)

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 311 km/h (193 mph, 168 kn)
  • Cruise speed: 285 km/h (177 mph, 154 kn)
  • Never exceed speed: 311 km/h (193 mph, 168 kn)
  • Ferry range: 932 km (579 mi, 503 nmi)
  • Rate of climb: 9.8 m/s (1,930 ft/min)

Notable appearances in media

See also

Related development

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists

References

Citations

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Bibliography

  • "The A-109A – Agusta's Pace-Setter". Air International, October 1978, Vol. 15 No. 4. pp. 159–166, 198.
  • Cliff, Roger. Chad J. R. Ohlandt and David Yang. Ready for Takeoff: China's Advancing Aerospace Industry. "Rand Corporation", 2011. ISBN 0-8330-5208-X.
  • Barrie, Douglas. "Air Forces of the World". Flight International, 10–16 September 1997, Vol. 152 No. 4591. pp. 35–71.
  • Hoyle, Craig. "World Air Forces Directory". Flight International, 13–19 December 2011, Vol. 180 No. 5321. pp. 26–52.
  • McClellan, J. Mac. "Agusta A109 Mk II Plus". Flying, February 1989. Vol. 116. No. 2. ISSN 0015-4806. pp. 34–38.
  • Moll, Nigel. "Agusta A109A: City Slicker". Flying, April 1992. Vol. 119. No. 4. ISSN 0015-4806. pp. 62–70.

Further reading

  • "El Agusta A109 del CAECOPAZ" (in Spanish). Aviones en Argentina. 13 June 2021. Retrieved 17 July 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  • "Golondrinas del Ejército" (in Spanish). Roll Out. 18 November 2021. Retrieved 17 July 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)

External links

  • AW109 Power page on Leonardo
  • GrandNew page on Leonardo
  • A109S presentation on BlueSkyRotor

agustawestland, aw109, originally, agusta, a109, lightweight, twin, engine, eight, seat, multi, purpose, helicopter, designed, initially, produced, italian, rotorcraft, manufacturer, agusta, first, italian, helicopter, mass, produced, production, been, continu. The AgustaWestland AW109 originally the Agusta A109 is a lightweight twin engine eight seat multi purpose helicopter designed and initially produced by the Italian rotorcraft manufacturer Agusta It was the first all Italian helicopter to be mass produced 1 Its production has been continued by Agusta s successor companies presently Leonardo S p A formerly AgustaWestland merged into the new Finmeccanica since 2016 2 AW109An AW109E formerly operated by No 32 Squadron RAF in 2012Role Search and rescue utility helicopterManufacturer Agusta AgustaWestland Leonardo S p A First flight 4 August 1971 1971 08 04 Introduction 1976Status Active service in productionPrimary users Italian ArmyRega Swiss Air Rescue South African Air ForceRoyal New Zealand Air ForceProduced 1971 presentVariants AgustaWestland AW109S GrandDeveloped into AgustaWestland AW119 KoalaDevelopment of the A109 commenced during the late 1960s as an indigenous rotorcraft suited to commercial operations A twin engine arrangement was pursued in response to market interest while work on the civil model was prioritised over the military orientated A109B project On 4 August 1971 the first of three prototypes made its maiden flight On 1 June 1975 the type received certification from the Federal Aviation Administration FAA permitting its service entry in 1976 The A109 has been used in a wide variety of roles including light utility VIP transport aeromedical law enforcement search and rescue SAR and several military roles Dedicated military models have been produced for both land and sea operations Several models with alternative engines expanded fuselages and alternative equipment fitouts have been produced Some AW109s feature an convertible interior to quickly adapt the rotorcraft between roles Various third party companies also offer adaptions and services for the type Following the merger of Agusta and the British company Westland Helicopters to form AgustaWestland the A109 has been rebranded as the AW109 International involvement in the programme has also been pursued the company has established final assembly lines at sites in both Italy and the US Furthermore hundreds of AW109 fuselages have been manufactured by the Polish aerospace company PZL Swidnik since the mid 1990s AgustaWestland formed a joint venture with the Changhe Aircraft Industries Corporation in 2004 that produces and supports the AW109 includes a final assembly line in China The AW109 has been in continuous production for 40 years The AgustaWestland AW119 is a derivative of the AW109 the principal difference being that it is powered by a single engine and has a fixed undercarriage Contents 1 Development 1 1 Origins 1 2 Further development 2 Design 3 Operational history 4 Variants 5 Operators 5 1 Military and government operators 5 2 Former military and government operators 6 Accidents 7 Displayed 8 Specifications AW109 Power with PW206C 2850 Kilo version 9 Notable appearances in media 10 See also 11 References 11 1 Citations 11 2 Bibliography 12 Further reading 13 External linksDevelopment EditOrigins Edit Agusta A109 K2 of the Rega over Mount Pilatus Work on what would become the AW109 commenced during the late 1960s at the Italian helicopter manufacturer Agusta which sought to design an indigenous rotorcraft suitable for commercial activities Known as the A109 early designs were of a single engine helicopter 3 However the design team came to recognise that the market found a twin engine rotorcraft to be more attractive thus the project was reoriented to fulfil this in 1969 opting to outfit it with a pair of Allison 250 C14 turboshaft engines While early considerations had been made for a militarised model which the company internally referred to as the A109B Agusta intentionally placed a low priority on the work for this variant in favour of other market sectors In particular design efforts were concentrated on the eight seat A109C model 4 On 4 August 1971 the first of three prototypes performed the type s maiden flight 5 The A109 was subject to a protracted flight testing phase which was largely attributable to the discovery of dynamic instability that took roughly one year to resolve via a modified transmission design 6 Almost four years later the first production helicopter was officially completed during April 1975 On 1 June 1975 the type received certification for visual flight rules VFR from the Federal Aviation Administration FAA permitting the A109 to be operated in North America 3 During 1976 deliveries of production A109s commenced to civil customers The type offered several advantages over the then market leading Bell 206 including its greater top speed twin engine redundancy and increased seating capacity 3 In 1975 Agusta s design team revisited the concept of a military version to support their work a series of flying trials were carried out between 1976 and 1977 involving a total of five A109As that had been outfitted with Hughes Aircraft built TOW missiles From these endeavours two different military versions of the A109 emerged one being intended for light attack close air support missions while the other was optimised for shipboard operations 7 Further development Edit A Belgian A109BA performing a display flight 2013 Shortly following after the launch of the initial production model Agusta begun work on additional models primarily for the civil sector During 1981 an A109A Mk2 that featured a widened cabin was made available to operators 8 In 1993 the A109 K2 model was introduced which was powered by alternative engine in the form of the Turbomeca Arriel 1K1 During 1996 the A109 Power was launched which was broadly similar to the K2 except for the adoption of yet another powerplant the Pratt amp Whitney Canada PW206 engine 3 By 2008 according to AgustaWestland the A109 Power was being operated across 46 countries In 2006 an enlarged variant the A109S Grand was introduced 3 The A109 was renamed the AW109 as a consequence of the July 2000 merger of Finmeccanica S p A and GKN plc s respective helicopter subsidiaries Agusta and Westland Helicopters to form AgustaWestland Since the mid 1990s fuselages for the AW109 have been manufactured by PZL Swidnik which became a subsidiary company of AgustaWestland in 2010 In June 2006 the 500th fuselage was delivered by the Polish aerospace company PZL Swidnik marking 10 years of co operation on the AW109 between the two companies 9 In 2004 AgustaWestland formed a joint venture with the Changhe Aircraft Industries Corporation for the support and production of the AW109 in China by 2009 the joint venture was reportedly capable of performing the final assembly of the AW109 in addition to independently manufacturing major sections such as the fuselage 10 In February 2014 AgustaWestland announced the development of the AW109 Trekker an updated models It is equipped with skid landing gear being the first twin engine helicopter produced by the company to have this feature and is powered by a pair of FADEC equipped Pratt amp Whitney Canada PW207C engines its avionics are supplied by Genesys Aerospace which have been designed for single pilot operations 11 The Trekker reportedly expands upon the utility capabilities of the standard AW109 12 Akin to the prior models the final assembly of the AW109 Trekker is undertaken at sites in both the US and Italy 3 13 Design Edit An AW109E parked on the grass The AW109 is a lightweight twin engine helicopter known for its speed elegant appearance and ease of control 3 14 15 Since entering commercial service several revisions and iterations have been made frequently introducing new avionics and engine technologies AgustaWestland have promoted the type for its multirole capabilities and serviceability The type has proven highly popular with VIP corporate customers according to AgustaWestland 50 of all of the AW109 Power variant had been sold in such configurations Other roles for the AW109 have included emergency medical services law enforcement homeland security missions harbor pilot shuttle duty search and rescue maritime operations and military uses 3 In 2008 AgustaWestland claimed the AW109 to be one of the industry s best selling helicopters 3 A range of turboshaft powerplants have been used to power the numerous variants of the AW109 from the original Allison 250 C14 engines to the Turbomeca Arriel 1K1 and Pratt amp Whitney Canada PW206 of more modern aircraft 3 Powerplants can be replaced or swapped for during airframe overhauls resulting in increasing lifting capacity and other performance changes In the case of single engine failure the AW109 is intended to have a generous power reserve even on a single engine 8 The engines drive a fully articulated four blade rotor system 16 Over time more advanced rotor blade designs have been progressively adopted for the AW109 s main and tail rotors such as composite materials being used to replace bonded metal 17 these improvements have typically been made with the aim of reducing operating costs and noise signature According to Rotor amp Wing the type is well regarded for its high hot and heavy performance 3 Head on view of a low flying AW109E 2008 According to AgustaWestland the AW109 Power features various advanced avionics systems these include a three axis autopilot an auto coupled Instrument Landing System integrated GPS a Moving Map Display weather radar and a Traffic Alerting System 18 These systems are designed to reduce pilot workload the AW109 can be flown under single or dual pilot instrument flight rules IFR and enable the use of night vision goggles NVG to conduct day or night operations 19 The AW109 has a forced trim system which can be readily and selectively activated by the controlling pilot using triggers located on the cyclic and collective which hold the control inputs at the last set position if activated 3 16 All critical systems are deliberately redundant for fail safe operations the hydraulic system hydraulic actuators and electrical system are all dual redundant while the power inverters are triple redundant 8 The AW109 also has reduced maintenance requirements due to an emphasis on reliability across the range of components used 19 Some models of the AW109 feature the quick convertible interior a cabin configuration designed to be flexibly re configured to allow the rotorcraft to be quickly adapted for different roles such as the installation or removal of mission consoles or medical stretchers Mission specific equipment can also be installed in the externally accessible separate baggage compartment which can be optionally expanded Optional cabin equipment includes soundproofing air conditioning and bleed air heating 19 Aftermarket cabin configurations are offered by third parties Pininfarina and Versace have both offered designer interiors for the AW109 while Aerolite Max Bucher has developed a lightweight emergency medical service interior 3 The majority of AW109s are fitted with a retractable wheeled tricycle undercarriage providing greater comfort than skids and taxiing capability 14 15 For shipboard operations the wheeled landing gear is reinforced deck mooring points are fixed across the lower fuselage and extensive corrosion protection is typically applied 20 Optional mission equipment for the AW109 has included dual controls a rotor brake windshield wipers a fixed cargo hook snow skis external loudspeakers wire strike protection system engine particle separator engine compartment fire extinguishers datalink and rappelling fittings 19 A range of armaments can be installed upon the AW109 including pintle mounted machine guns machine gun pods 20mm cannons rocket pods anti tank missiles and air to air missiles 20 21 Those AW109s operated by the U S Coast Guard later designated as MH 68A had the following equipment installed a rescue hoist emergency floats FLIR Spectrolab NightSun search light a 7 62 mm M240D machine gun and a Barrett M107 semi automatic 12 7 mm 50 caliber anti material rifle with laser sight 22 Operational history EditVarious branches of the Italian military have operated variants of the AW109 the Guardia di Finanza has operated its own variant of the AW109 since the 1980s for border patrol and customs duties by 2010 it was in the process of replacing its original AW109s with a new generation of AW109s 1 During 1982 the Argentine Army Aviation deployed three A109As to the Falkland Islands during the Falklands War They operated with the helicopter fleet 9 UH 1H 2 CH 47C and 2 Pumas in reconnaissance and liaison roles One of the helicopters was destroyed on the ground by a British Harrier attack the others were captured and sent to Europe aboard HMS Fearless The British Army Air Corps decided to use those helicopters in domestic operations being flown by 8 Flight AAC to support SAS regiment deployments in the UK alongside two additional A109 which were purchased later following favorable use of the first two all were retired in 2009 23 24 The improved AW109E and SP GrandNew versions have also been operated by No 32 Squadron of the Royal Air Force to transport members of the British Royal Family 25 26 In 1988 46 A109s were sold to the Belgian Armed Forces it was later alleged that Agusta had given the Belgian Socialist Party over 50 million Belgian francs as a bribe to secure the sale The resulting scandal led to the resignation and later conviction of NATO Secretary General Willy Claes 27 Belgium has operated an A109 aerial display team 28 In early 2013 a pair of Belgian AW109s were deployed to Sevare Mali to perform medical evacuation mission in support of the French led Operation Serval 29 In June 2013 Belgian newspaper La Libre Belgique alleged that several former Belgian military helicopters had been sold via a private company to South Sudan in violation of a European Union embargo on weapons sales 30 31 Pair of South African Air Force SAAF A109 LUHs landing in formation During the 1990s the US Coast Guard seeking to tackle drug trafficking on small speed boats via armed aerial interdiction helicopters evaluated several options and selected the AW109 as the winner For a number of years eight armed AW109s designated MH 68A Sting Ray were leased from AgustaWestland and deployed at Coast Guard land facilities and onboard cutters Positive experience with the AW109 led to the Coast Guard deciding to arm all of its helicopters and following adaptions of their existing assets the AW109s were returned after the lease expired 3 In September 1999 the South African Air Force SAAF placed an order for 30 AW109s 3 25 of the 30 rotorcraft were assembled locally by Denel Aviation starting in 2003 32 33 As many as 16 SAAF AW109s were deployed for patrol utility and medical evacuation missions during the 2010 FIFA World Cup 34 In July 2013 the SAAF reported that 18 AW109s had effectively been grounded due to lack of funding these rotorcraft being only occasionally activated but not conducting flights in 2013 only 71 flight hours were allocated to the whole AW109 fleet The type may be reduced to flying VIPs rather than being operationally capable South Africa is also considering selling a number of AW109s and may cease helicopter operations altogether 35 In 2001 20 AW109s were ordered for the Swedish Armed Forces 3 receiving the Swedish military designation of Hkp 15 In 2010 it was reported that considerable demands were being placed upon the AW109 fleet in part due to the delayed delivery of the NHIndustries NH90 36 In early 2015 a pair of Swedish AW109s were deployed on board the Royal Netherlands Navy ship HNLMS Johan de Witt their first ever deployment on board a foreign vessel in support of a multinational anti piracy mission off the coast of Somalia the AW109 reportedly achieve a 100 availability rate over the course of three months 37 An Australian AW109E during a rescue demonstration 2008 Between 2007 and 2012 three AW109E Power helicopters were operated under lease by the Royal Australian Navy RAN to train naval aircrew 38 In May 2008 the Royal New Zealand Air Force RNZAF placed an order for five AW109LUH rotorcraft to replace their aging Bell 47 Sioux in a training capacity they are also used in the utility role to complement the larger NHIndustries NH90 and has seen limited use in VIP missions 39 During August 2008 Scott Kasprowicz and Steve Sheik broke the round the world speed record using a factory standard AgustaWestland AW109S Grand with a time of 11 days 7 hours and 2 minutes The AW109S Grand is also recorded as being the fastest helicopter from New York to Los Angeles 40 41 Philippine Air Force AW109 Light Armed Helicopter during the Exercise Balikatan 2016 In 2013 the Philippine Air Force PAF and the Philippine Navy independently ordered batches of AW109 Power rotorcraft additional AW109s were ordered in 2014 42 The PAF AW109s are used as armed gunships while both armed and unarmed AW109s are operated by the Philippine Navy 43 During the Battle of Marawi multiple PAF AW109s engaged in combat the ISIS affiliated Maute Group 44 During November 2020 a PAF AW109 was involved in a joint operation of Armed Forces of the Philippines Joint Task Force JTF Sulu against Abu Sayyaf kidnappers in northern Mindanao firing upon a boat in conjunction with strafing fire from Philippine Navy Multipurpose Assault Craft 45 Variants Edit Agusta A109A Mk II of the Italian police Former Dyfed Powys Police Air Support Unit Helicopter X Ray 99 demonstration at police HQ Open Day 2008 A109A The first production model powered by two Allison Model 250 C20 turboshaft engines It made its first flight on 4 August 1971 Initially the A109 was marketed under the name of Hirundo Latin for the swallow but this was dropped within a few years A109A EOA Military version for the Italian Army A109A Mk II Upgraded civilian version of the A109A A109A Mk II MAX Aeromedical evacuation version based on A109A Mk II with extra wide cabin and access doors hinged top and bottom rather than to one side A109B Unbuilt military version A109BA Version created for the Belgian Army Based on the A109C but fitted with fixed landing gear sliding doors and a tail rotor guard in place of a lower tail fin A109C Eight seat civil version powered by two Allison Model 250 C20R 1 turboshaft engines 15 A109C MAX Aeromedical evacuation version based on A109C with extra wide cabin and access doors hinged top and bottom rather than to one side 46 A109D One prototype only A109E Power Upgraded civilian version initially powered by two Turbomeca Arrius 2K1 engines Later the manufacturer introduced an option for two Pratt amp Whitney PW206C engines to be used both versions remain known as the A109E Marketed as the AW109E and Power A109E Power Elite A stretched cabin version of A109E Power Features a glass cockpit with two complete sets of pilot instruments and navigation systems including a three axis autopilot an auto coupled Instrument Landing System and GPS 18 A109LUH Military LUH Light Utility Helicopter variant based on the A109E Power Operators include South African Air Force Swedish Air Force Royal New Zealand Air Force Nigerian Air Force as well as Algeria and Malaysia Known as the Hkp15A utility variant and 15B ship borne search and rescue variant with the Swedish Air Force MH 68A Eight A109E Power aircraft were used by the United States Coast Guard Helicopter Interdiction Tactical Squadron Jacksonville HITRON Jacksonville as short range armed interdiction helicopters from 2000 until 2008 when they were replaced with MH 65C Dolphins 47 Agusta designated these armed interdiction aircraft as Mako until the U S Coast Guard officially named it the MH 68A Stingray in 2003 22 A109K Military version A109K2 High altitude and high temperature operations with fixed wheels rather than the retractable wheels of most A109 variants Typically used by police search and rescue and air ambulance operators A109M Military version A109 km Military version for high altitude and high temperature operations A109KN Naval version A109CM Standard military version A109GdiF Version for Guardia di Finanza the Italian Finance Guard A109S Grand Marketed as the AW109 Grand it is a lengthened cabin upgraded civilian version with two Pratt amp Whitney Canada PW207 engines and lengthened main rotor blades with different tip design from the Power version AW109SP AW109 GrandNew single pilot IFR TAWS and EVS especially for EMS AW109 Trekker A variant of the AW109S Grand with fixed landing skids 48 CA109 Chinese model of the AW109E for China mainland market by Jiangxi Changhe Agusta Helicopter Co Ltd a Leonardo Helicopter Division formerly AgustaWestland and Changhe Aviation Industries Joint Venture Company established in 2005 49 Operators EditThe AW109 is flown by a range of operators including private companies military services emergency services and air charter companies Military and government operators Edit AlgeriaGendarmerie Nationale 50 Algerian police 51 AlbaniaAlbanian Air Force 52 AngolaNational Air Force of Angola 53 BangladeshBangladesh Navy 52 AW109E Power operated by Bangladesh Navy BelgiumBelgian Air Component 52 Belgian Air Component A109BA anti tank variant BulgariaBulgarian Border Police 54 CameroonCameroon Air Force 55 ChileCarabineros de Chile 56 EcuadorBomberos Quito EgyptEgyptian Air Force 57 GreeceHellenic Air Force 58 ItalyPolizia di Stato 59 Carabinieri 60 61 Guardia di Finanza 62 Italian Army 52 Vigili del Fuoco 63 State Forestry Corps 64 JapanTokyo Metropolitan Police 65 LatviaState Border Guard 66 MalaysiaMalaysian Army 52 MexicoMexican Air Force 52 New ZealandRoyal New Zealand Air Force 52 NigeriaNigerian Air Force 52 Nigerian Navy 52 PeruPeruvian Army 52 PhilippinesPhilippine Air Force 52 Philippine Navy 52 SloveniaSlovenian Air Force 67 Slovenian Ministry of Defence 68 Slovenian Police 69 South AfricaSouth African Air Force 52 Transnet National Ports Authority 70 SwedenSwedish Armed Forces 52 A Swedish Armed Forces A109 LUH designated Hkp 15A TurkmenistanTurkmen Air Force 71 UgandaUganda National Police 72 United KingdomRoyal Air Force 52 Former military and government operators Edit ArgentinaArgentine Army operated 9 aircraft 1979 2007 73 AustraliaRoyal Australian Navy operated 3 aircraft 2007 2012 74 75 ItalyItalian Air Force operated 3 aircraft 76 ParaguayParaguayan Air Force 77 Poland Air ambulances in Poland 78 79 United KingdomArmy Air Corps 80 A109E of the Empire Test Pilots School United StatesUnited States Coast Guard 81 A U S Coast Guard MH 68A Stingray VenezuelaVenezuelan Army 82 83 Accidents EditOn 20 November 2009 an AW109E Power of Air ambulances in Poland crashed during landing 78 79 On 16 January 2013 2013 01 16 Vauxhall helicopter crash an AW109 on charter to Rotormotion clipped a construction crane attached to the St George Wharf Tower in Vauxhall London before crashing to the ground and bursting into flames killing the pilot and a person on the ground The helicopter was completely destroyed and the crane was also seriously damaged 84 On 24 December 2018 2018 12 24 in the 2018 Puebla helicopter crash an AW109 taking off from an airport on the outskirts of Puebla on a flight to Mexico City crashed about 3 5 miles north of the airport Gov Martha Erika Alonso and ex Gov Rafael Moreno Valle died in this incident 85 86 On 10 June 2019 2019 06 10 in the 2019 New York City helicopter crash an AW109E crashed at approximately 1 43 p m ET on the roof of the AXA Equitable Center at 787 Seventh Avenue in New York City killing the pilot and creating a fire 87 Displayed EditA109A from Corpo Forestale on display inside Rome s zoo A109A at Fleet Air Arm Museum Yeovil England Former AE 331 of the Argentine Army Aviation captured in the Falklands War 88 Specifications AW109 Power with PW206C 2850 Kilo version Edit Flight deck of an AW109 2012 Data from Leonardo AW109 Power Leonardo General characteristicsCrew 1 or 2 Capacity 6 or 7 passengers Length 11 448 m 37 ft 7 in fuselage Height 3 50 m 11 ft 6 in Empty weight 1 590 kg 3 505 lb Max takeoff weight 2 850 kg 6 283 lb Powerplant 2 Pratt amp Whitney Canada PW206C Turboshaft engine 418 kW 560 hp each Main rotor diameter 11 00 m 36 ft 1 in Performance Maximum speed 311 km h 193 mph 168 kn Cruise speed 285 km h 177 mph 154 kn Never exceed speed 311 km h 193 mph 168 kn Ferry range 932 km 579 mi 503 nmi Rate of climb 9 8 m s 1 930 ft min Notable appearances in media EditMain article Aircraft in fiction AgustaWestland AW109See also Edit Aviation portalRelated development AgustaWestland AW109S Grand Agusta A129 Mangusta AgustaWestland AW119 KoalaAircraft of comparable role configuration and era Bell 222 230 Bell 427 Bell 429 GlobalRanger Bell 430 Eurocopter AS365 Dauphin Eurocopter EC135 MD Helicopters MD Explorer Sikorsky S 76 HAL Dhruv HAL Light Utility HelicopterRelated lists List of rotorcraftReferences EditCitations Edit a b Law Enforcement Italy Archived 5 March 2016 at the Wayback 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Slovenia Announce The Procurement Of One A109 Power Helicopter AgustaWestland Archived from the original on 1 June 2013 Retrieved 7 February 2013 Slovenian police helicopter unit PDF policija si Archived PDF from the original on 3 June 2013 Retrieved 7 February 2013 Martin Guy June 2019 AW109SPs on port duties Air International Vol 96 no 6 p 117 ISSN 0306 5634 Dominguez Gabriel Gibson Neil 4 August 2017 Turkmenistan releases footage of AW109 helos conducting live fire drill IHS Jane s 360 Archived from the original on 4 August 2017 Retrieved 4 August 2017 Uganda Orders W 3A A109 Helicopters DefenceWeb 15 July 2014 Archived from the original on 23 July 2014 Retrieved 16 July 2014 Agusta 109 in Argentine military service gacetaeronautica com Archived from the original on 20 July 2013 Retrieved 7 February 2013 Australian Navy retires the A109 shephardmedia com Archived from the original on 16 June 2013 Retrieved 7 February 2013 Australian Navy retires the A109 Royal Australian Navy Retrieved 22 July 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Italian Air Force Aircraft Types aeroflight co uk Archived from the original on 10 August 2017 Retrieved 10 December 2014 FAP Historia Los Anos 90 1990 1999 fuerzaaerea mil py Retrieved 7 February 2013 a b Lotnicze Pogotowie Ratunkowe Wypadek smiglowca Lotniczego Pogotowia Ratunkowego in Polish Retrieved 22 March 2021 a b Incident Agusta A109E Power SP HXA 20 Nov 2009 Aviation safety net Retrieved 2 May 2022 8 Flight Army Air Corps eliteukforces info Archived from the original on 22 January 2013 Retrieved 7 February 2013 MH 68A Stingray Agusta A109E globalsecurity org Archived from the original on 2 April 2013 Retrieved 7 February 2013 Venezuela Army Aviation aeroflight co uk Archived from the original on 28 July 2013 Retrieved 7 February 2013 Ejercito de Venezuela Agusta A109 Hirundo Archived from the original on 18 June 2013 Retrieved 7 February 2013 London helicopter crash Two die in Vauxhall crane accident BBC Online 16 January 2013 Archived from the original on 26 March 2013 Retrieved 20 June 2018 Mexico Helicopter crash claims Puebla governor ex governor Fox News 24 December 2018 Archived from the original on 25 December 2018 Retrieved 25 December 2018 Mexican governor and politician husband killed in helicopter crash CNN 24 December 2018 Archived from the original on 25 December 2018 Retrieved 25 December 2018 Helicopter crashes into New York City building CNN 10 June 2019 Archived from the original on 12 June 2019 Retrieved 10 June 2019 Exhibitions Reserve Collections Agusta 109A AE 331 Fleet Air Arm Museum Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 9 May 2015 Bibliography Edit The A 109A Agusta s Pace Setter Air International October 1978 Vol 15 No 4 pp 159 166 198 Cliff Roger Chad J R Ohlandt and David Yang Ready for Takeoff China s Advancing Aerospace Industry Rand Corporation 2011 ISBN 0 8330 5208 X Barrie Douglas Air Forces of the World Flight International 10 16 September 1997 Vol 152 No 4591 pp 35 71 Hoyle Craig World Air Forces Directory Flight International 13 19 December 2011 Vol 180 No 5321 pp 26 52 McClellan J Mac Agusta A109 Mk II Plus Flying February 1989 Vol 116 No 2 ISSN 0015 4806 pp 34 38 Moll Nigel Agusta A109A City Slicker Flying April 1992 Vol 119 No 4 ISSN 0015 4806 pp 62 70 Further reading Edit El Agusta A109 del CAECOPAZ in Spanish Aviones en Argentina 13 June 2021 Retrieved 17 July 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Golondrinas del Ejercito in Spanish Roll Out 18 November 2021 Retrieved 17 July 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Agusta A109 AW109 Power page on Leonardo GrandNew page on Leonardo A109S presentation on BlueSkyRotorPortals Italy Companies Aviation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title AgustaWestland AW109 amp oldid 1121397068, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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