MH-60S Knighthawk helicopter is developed by Sikorsky. Credit: Tomás Del Coro.
The aircraft entered service in February 2002. Credit: US Army photo by Spc Eric J Cullen / Shutterstock.
MH-60S aircraft is powered by two T700-GE-401C turboshaft engines. Credit: Sgt Tony Tolley.
Lockheed Martin’s Owego Helo Systems division was contracted for the aircraft’s cockpit. Credit: Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 Generic (CC BY-SA 2.0) license.

The multi-mission Sikorsky MH-60S Knighthawk helicopter entered service in February 2002. The US Navy uses the MH-60S helicopters to carry out missions such as vertical replenishment, combat search and rescue, special warfare support and airborne mine countermeasures.

The helicopter began full-rate production in August 2002. The first deployment of the new helicopter took place on board USS Essex, Wasp Class amphibious assault ship, in January 2003 and a number of MH-60S helicopters were deployed in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom.

The helicopter was originally designated CH-60S as a replacement for the US Navy’s Boeing CH-46D Sea Knight heavy-lift helicopters in the vertical replenishment role.

The helicopter was re-designated MH-60S as a result of an expansion in mission requirements to include a range of additional combat support capabilities. Retirement of the US Navy Sea Knights concluded in September 2004. The US Navy operates 275 MH-60S helicopters.

MH-60S Knighthawk orders and deliveries

Sikorsky was awarded the US Navy contract to develop the MH-60S in 1997. The production aircraft made its maiden flight in January 2000. The operational evaluation (Opeval) began in November 2001 at the Naval Air Warfare Centre at Patuxent River in Maryland and concluded in May 2002.

“The multimission Sikorsky MH-60S Knighthawk helicopter entered service in February 2002.”

CAE was contracted to develop two MH-60R tactical operational flight trainers (TOFTs) for delivery by late 2013.

In June 2007, the Royal Navy of Thailand became the first international customer of the MH-60S with an order for two helicopters, which were delivered in August 2011. They are used for maritime utility, logistics and troop transport.

Lockheed Martin was awarded a $10m contract in September 2010 to develop software for MH-60R and MH-60S helicopters. MH-60R is a multi-mission helicopter with anti-surface and anti-submarine warfare as primary missions.

The US Navy awarded a contract worth $360m to Lockheed Martin in January 2011 for supplying advance spectrum systems for deployment in the MH-60R by April 2013.

MH-60S naval helicopter design

The structure of the MH-60S is based on the proven design features of the UH-60L Black Hawk and the naval variant, the SH-60B Seahawk.

The helicopter uses the baseline structure of the Black Hawk with Seahawk T-700-GE-401C engines, hover-in-flight refuelling and fuel dumping. It also has the Seahawk’s rotor system and dynamics, including the automatic rotor blade folding system, rapid folding tail pylon, transmission and drive train with improved durability gearbox, rotor brake and automatic flight control computer. The helicopter uses the Seahawk rescue hoist for search and rescue missions and the naval cockpit doors.

The MH-60S uses the Black Hawk airframe, which provides the larger cabin volume and double-doors needed for cargo and passenger transport, enabling troops to embark and disembark quickly.

The MH-60S retains the Black Hawk’s provisions for mounting the external pylons to carry stores and equipment, providing the added capability to carry out a wide range of missions.

The MH-60S has the Black Hawk’s 9,000lb external cargo hook, gunner’s window, landing gear with tie-downs and wire strike protection, along with hover IR suppresser, automatic stabilisation equipment and fuel cells.

New design features incorporated into the Knighthawk include the tail cone bulkhead and the large cabin is fitted with a new cabin cargo handling system.

MH-60 common cockpit

The helicopter is equipped with the new glass MH-60 common cockpit, which is also fitted on the US Navy MH-60R developed by Sikorsky to replace the Seahawk.

The prime contractor for the common cockpit is the Owego Helo Systems division of Lockheed Martin Systems Integration at Owego New York.

The cockpit includes four 8in × 10in active-matrix liquid crystal displays and dual programmable operator keysets. The avionics includes dual flight management computers and an audio management computer.

The navigation suite includes a Northrop Grumman (Litton) LN-100G dual embedded global positioning system and inertial navigation system. Telephonics Corp supplies the communication management system.

The pilot and co-pilot sit side by side on armour-protected seats. A third crew member is seated next to the forward cabin window. The forward-hinged doors are jettisonable.

Lockheed Martin was awarded a USN contract in November 2004 for an upgrade that included the integration of Link 16, a Ku-band datalink and an improved multispectral targeting system, MTS-A.

MTS-A includes seven fields of view colour TV camera, a forward-looking infrared system with electronic zoom, laser rangefinder / designator / illuminator and triple mode video auto tracker. A further contract in September 2005 included a 12-satellite GPS receiver and ground proximity warning system.

Mission systems

The helicopter is designed in an air transport configuration that is easily modified with mission kits, for example, mine countermeasures systems and combat search and rescue kits. The heated and ventilated main cabin can accommodate up to 20 armed troops.

Airborne mine countermeasures

The MH-60S, fitted with airborne mine countermeasures (AMCM) made its first flight in July 2003.

Lockheed Martin Systems Integration – Owego, with Sikorsky, is the integrator for the MH-60S mine countermeasures systems, including Raytheon airborne mine neutralisation system (AMNS) with BAE Systems Archerfish expendable underwater vehicle that destroys the mines; Northrop Grumman rapid airborne mine clearance system (RAMICS), a non-towed mine neutralisation system that will clear near-surface and surface moored mines, using a Kaman Aerospace laser target sensor, and a 30mm mk44 gun; Raytheon AN/AQS-20A towed sonar with mine identification system, which entered production in September 2005; Northrop Grumman airborne laser mine detection system, AN/AES-1 ALMDS, which began low-rate initial production in September 2005; and EDO Corporation organic airborne and surface influence sweep (OASIS).

AN/AES-1 ALMDS detects and classifies floating and near-surface moored mines, using pulsed laser light. The ALMDS pod is mechanically attached to the MH-60S with a standard bomb rack unit 14 (BRU-14) mount.

Combat search and rescue (CSAR)

In the combat search and rescue role, the MH-60S replaced the HH-60H in 2007. Lockheed Martin was awarded a contract in December 2004 to integrate the armed helicopter mission kit on the CSAR MH-60S.

The kit includes a digital map, AN/AAS-44 FLIR, the electronic warfare self-defence suite fitted on the MH-60R, an additional pylon to carry Hellfire air-to-surface missiles and mk54 digital torpedo, and crew-served weapons, including 7.62mm guns from port and starboard cabin windows and 0.50-calibre guns from the port and starboard cabin doors. Development testing was completed in February 2007 to be followed by operational evaluation and service entry.

Countermeasures

The MH-60S countermeasures suite includes Northrop Grumman AN/APR-39AV(2) radar warner, ATK AN/AAR-47V(2) missile warner and the BAE Systems IEWS AN/ALQ-144V(6) infrared countermeasures set.

MH-60S Knighthawk helicopter engines

The helicopter is equipped with two General Electric T700-GE-401C turboshaft engines.

The engine is configured with one centrifugal and five axial stages and has a take-off rating of 1,260kW. The helicopter carries 2,233l of fuel in internal fuel tanks. The helicopter is equipped with a hover-in-flight refuelling system (HIFR) and fuel dump vents.

Pentagon initiated the integrated high-performance turbine engine technology programme (IHPTET) with the US Army, leading to the definition of the common engine programme (CEP). It is planned that the all-new engine defined under the CEP will eventually be fitted on the MH-60S helicopter.

The engines drive a four-blade main rotor. The helicopter is equipped with electrically actuated blade folding for ease of storage of the helicopter onboard the ship.