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Background  –  New(er) Engines for the FWSAR  CC-115  Buffalo ?

Update:  DND embarked on a 'Buffalo Avionics Life Extension – Lite' (through Viking and Field Aviation) but with no further mention of re-engining. If  'new' engines are bought for the CC-115 fleet, they will be used T-64s (presumably the CT64-820-4 of the DHC-5D and 'E ).

Buffalo Wings with Hot Sauce: Re-Engined CC-115s?
DND has announced that the six  Comox-based CC-115 Buffalo fixed-wing search and rescue aircraft might stay in service longer than expected.  The Buffs may get new engines. It is not clear if  fresh  CT64s are being sought (GE only makes turboshaft versions of  the T64 family [1] now) or if a new engine type would be considered.

If a totally new engine type is being considered, a look at other T64 swaps is obvious. The FWSAR candidate, Alenia C-27J, was derived from  the T64-powered G.222 or C-27A.[2] Modernized C-27Js now have Rolls-Royce AE2100 turboprops ( in common with C-130J Hercules ) which would represent a substantial power increase.[3]

If Canadian content were a consideration (the Buffalo is a Canadian design, after all) another engine type [4] suggests itself –  Pratt & Whitney Canada's PW127G. This turboprop is a near  perfect  match [5] for  CT64s but isn't  fitted to any CF aircraft. Ironically, PW127Gs do power a potential Buffalo replacement – the C-295.

With the limited remaining life of  the Buffalo fleet, one other possibility occurs –  with CC-130Es retiring, the CF will have spare T56-A-15 turboprops available. These T56 engines are are much younger than the airframes they powered. [6]  And T56s have three bonuses – they are in stock, have more time left  than Buffs, and  Hercs are maintained  in Abbotsford. [7] An additional bonus, if these Buffalo engine conversions proceed, is time gained to reconsider DND's position on Search and Rescue.

[1] The CC-115 Buffalo is currently powered by two General Electric 2,970 shp/2,214 kW CT64-410-3 turboprops (known to the US military as T64-GE-14s). DeHavilland Canada certified civilian DHC-5E Buffalos with 3,133 shp (2,336 kW) CT64-820-4s. The only T64 variant now in production is the 4,380 shp (3,266 kW) T64-GE-416 turboshaft for Sikorsky CH-53 helicopters. T64 turboprops are no longer being built.
[2] The C-27 started life in 1970 as the T64-powered Aeritalia G.222, ten of  which were sold to the USAF as C-27As. Alenia introduced the AE2100-powered C-27J as a stablemate to the LockheedMartin C-130J. A marketing partnership between the firms was dropped when LM unsucessfully entered its C-130J  into the USAF / US Army’s  troubled  Joint Cargo Aircraft  program in direct competition with the C-27J.
[3] The Rolls-Royce (formerly Allison) AE2100D3 generates 4590shp – considerably more power than the Buffalo CT64-410-3's 2,825 shp.
[4] When first preparing this page, we suggested the larger PW150 turboprop as CT64 replacement. Viking Air has now recommended the PW150 for a new-build Buffalo variant. Fitting PW150s would give a dramatic increase in performance. That said, less powerful PW127Gs would be a less difficult fit for the nacelles. (The related PW120 is in CF service but, at 2,000 shp, isn’t powerful enough for the Buffalos.)
[5] A CT64-820/PW127G comparison – take-off power: 2,825 shp/2,920 shp; length: 10.20"/84.00"; width 26.90/26.00"; height 40.40"/33.00".
[6] In 1987,  to extend the useful lives of the CC-130Es,  their 4,200 shp Allison T56-A-7 turboprops were replaced with 'H model  4,591 shp T56-A-15s.  25  'E  and older 'H models will be retired so considerable stocks are available for remaining 'Hs and any potential conversions.
[7] Cascade Aerospace at YXX won the CC-130 Optimized Weapon System Management (OWSM) maintenance contract in October 2005. 'Herc Solutions' involves Cascade (prime contractor), Marshall's,  Derco, and  Standard Aero  (the existing engine contractor for CF T56s).