Naval Air Station Patuxent River, MD – July 11, 2019ย  – The CH-53E Super Stallion helicopter reached a major milestone this year by logging more than one million flight hours since it first entered service with the Marine Corps in 1981.

The CH-53E is a versatile machine used for amphibious assault and long-range insertion, delivering troops, vehicles and supplies. This rapid resupply vehicle is still one of the most used aircraft in the United States military air arsenal.

โ€œThe CH-53E has seen more work than was ever anticipated it would see,โ€ said Major Matthew Baumann, H-53 In-Service, Naval Air Systems Command Heavy Lift Helicopter program office (PMA-261) co-lead.

Currently, there are 142 CH-53E Super Stallions in service. Though out of production, the CH-53E is in the middle of a โ€œRESETโ€ โ€“ a rolling period of rebuilding, upgrading and increasing safety, reliability and capabilities to lengthen its service life through 2032.

According to Baumann, the first 25 helicopters have completed their RESET process, โ€œallowing the squadron commanders to plan for training, operations and maintenance with renewed confidence,โ€ he said.

Resetting of the CH-53E fleet is an important segue from the current platform to the new CH-53K King Stallion, which will be its heavy-lift replacement.

โ€œThe CH-53K is the most powerful helicopter ever built by the United States military,โ€ said Colonel Perrin, PMA-261 program manager. โ€œIt will be safer, faster and more capable than any previous heavy lift helicopter in the battlespace.โ€

Its development is currently in the testing and capability requirements phase, with a goal of bringing the CH-53K to fleet Marines by 2024.

โ€œItโ€™s a game-changer,โ€ said Perrin. โ€œWe canโ€™t wait to have the K available for fleet use. But for now weโ€™ve got a capable, reliable and safe helicopter doing heavy-lift for our Marines.โ€