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CF Shipboard
Maritime Helicopter — Sikorsky CH-124 Sea King |
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The 'Sea Thing' by Sikorsky
The reputation of the CF Sea King has suffered in recent years but, when first bought for
the Royal Canadian Navy in 1963, they were the best in the world. The Sea King has
since gone into (and remains in) naval service around the world. Sikorsky initially developed the
Sea King for the US Navy as their dedicated shipboard anti-submarine warfare (ASW) platform. The primary
role for CH-124s in Canadian service was also ASW. However, with the end of the Cold War, the submarine threat
has virtually ceased to exist. Shipboard resupply and other utility missions became the CH-124s' new
emphasis. Operation Apollo returned the Sea Kings to more bellicose roles – flying
patrols and covering naval boarding parties with the Sea King's pintle-mounted 7.62mm C6 machinegun.
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Getting Caught Up in the Plot or the CF's Shipboard 'Beartrap'
In earlier days, the Royal Canadian Navy's Sea King astonished the world. To enable the then-CHSS-2 to
serve aboard small RCN destroyers, an ingenious retrieval device called the beartrap was developed. A
probe-tipped cable was lowered from the Sea King to the vessel's pitching deck. The
beartrap's frame captures the probe and 'reels in' the helicopter. [1] Once on the deck,
the Sea King's tail is secured by another probe. The rotor and tail boom are folded. Then, the
beartrap frame (complete with the attached helicopter) is drawn along guide rails in the deck into the
hanger.
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" ... Time hovers o'er, impatient to destroy ... " [2]
Beartraps allowed CH-124s to 'land-on' in the worst possible weather, and Canadian
Sea Kings gained a reputation for continued operations when our NATO
allies had ceased flying. Aircrews of high calibre are vital for these operations but they
alone are not enough. An equally high degree of reliability is required from both aircraft and systems.
The CF Sea Kings can no longer deliver either – their 40-year old airframes, engines, and
dynamics are just worn out. Dangerous enough for any shipborne operation. But the CH-124s are still
expected to perform missions which can entail four hours of flying, no more than 60m above the surface of the
North Atlantic, at night, in mid-winter. Something has to give.
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Sea King Successor – the Sikorsky Cyclone
At the conclusion of the infamously drawn-out Sea King replacement (the Maritime Helicopter Project [3] or MHP) the winner was announced. Sikorsky's H-92 was to enter
Canadian service as the CH-148 Cyclone in 2008. Two
years later, only an 'empty' prototype has arrived. CH-124s due to retire in 2010 must serve on
until 2012 [?]

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[1] In reality, CH-124s are flown onto the deck. Pilots apply power to resist the beartrap's pull,
reducing power to ease down to the deck.
[2] Narrow-hulled Canadian destroyers were prone to pitching and rolling. By using the beartrap,
a CH-124 could be set down onto the deck of a ship pitching 9°, rolling through 31°,
and heaving 6m / second. Small wonder then that beartraps are now standard worldwide.
[3] A Sea King replacement was first selected in the 1980s – the Anglo-Italian EH-101 (later to
enter Canadian service as the SAR CH-149 Cormorant. But, the ASW model EH-101 to replace the
Sea King was cancelled in 1993. Finally, in July 2004, the new H-92 was selected.
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Photo Credits —
CH-124A Sea King side view: Stephen Priestley, all other images:
Canadian Forces / Department of National Defence
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