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CH-46 Sea Knights Landing at Ridley Park, June 2015
CH-46E Sea Knight Cabin
Boeing CH-46 Sea Knight Landing at Ridley Park, June 2015
CH-46 Sea Knights Taking Off from Ridley Park, June 2015
CH-46E Sea Knight Flight Deck
CH-46C Sea Knight in US Army Livery
CH-46 Sea Knight from USMC Helicopter Squadron 774 departs Ridley Park Site
U.S. Marine CH-46A Sea Knight in Flight
U.S. Marines CH-46A Sea Knight Flight Line
CH-46A Sea Knight Manufacturing at Boeing Vertol
CH-46 Marine Sea Knight
U.S. Marine CH-46A Sea Knight Helicopters in Winter Training Excercises
Silhouetted Marines with CH-46E Sea Knights
Marines with CH-46A Sea Knight Helicopter
CH-46A Marine Sea Knight
CH-46A Marine Sea Knight
First U.S, Navy UH-46A (CH-46 Prototype) Sea Knight lifting cargo
Model 107 Test Bed Vehicle Hovering over Vertol Division
Marine Silhouette with CH-46E Sea Knight
US Marine Corps CH-46D Sea Knight Helicopter in Flight
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Two of the last CH-46 Sea Knights in service with the U.S. Marine Corps, June 2015
In addition to moving troops and equipment in Marine combat assault missions, the CH-46 Sea Knight was used for medical evacuation, aircraft recovery, firefighting, disaster relief and search and rescue operations.
In 1960, Boeing bought Vertol, a helicopter manufacturer in Philadelphia, Pa. The company had three tandem-rotor helicopters under production: the Chinook for the Army, the Sea Knight for the Navy and the Marines, and the commercial 107-II for the airlines. The twin-turbine tandem-rotor CH-46A Sea Knight won a design competition for a medium assault transport helicopter for the Marine Corps in 1961 and made its first flight in August 1962.
Between 1964 and 1990, Boeing Vertol delivered over 600 Sea Knights. During the 1980s and 1990s, Boeing developed modification kits and upgrades to modernize the Sea Knights.
The U.S. Marine Corps retired the CH-46 Sea Knight in August 2015.
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Unique identifier
BI45945
Boeing ID
mpf15-0112-0028
Type
Image
Size
2704px × 1800px 13MB
License type
RM
Keywords
2010s
blue skies
Boeing
copy space
day
flying
flying in formation
full body views
ground shots
historic production status
military livery
motion blur
nobody
out of production
rotorcraft blades
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