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         The 
         Bell Huey was the first mass-produced helicopter powered by a jet 
         turbine. With its distinctive "whomp-whomp" sound that could be heard 
         miles away, the UH/AH-1 aircraft have totalled more than 27 million 
         flight hours since Oct. 20, 1956 when the "granddaddy" of all H-1's, 
         the XH-40, made its first flight. Since then, more than 16,000 H-1 
         helicopters have been produced by Bell and its licensees -- making it 
         the most successful military aircraft in aviation history. 
         
         Officially the UH-1 
         series is the Iroquois. But its unofficial name, Huey, became so 
         commonly used that the AH-1 attack version was officially named the 
         Huey Cobra.  
          
         The Huey story traces back some four decades. In 1955, with an interest 
         in a utility helicopter designed around a turboshaft engine, the US 
         Army had the US Air Force develop a new helicopter for its use. At that 
         time the US Army did not have its own aircraft development capability. 
         The design selected, Bell's Model 204, was to be powered by a new 
         Lycoming T-53 engine of some 850 shaft horsepower and featured a 
         typical Bell two-blade teetering rotor.  
         In the original 
         helicopter designation series, the first three aircraft received the 
         XH-40 designation.  
          
         First flight of the new design was in October 1956, development and 
         production following.  
          
         When the US Army adopted its own two-letter designation system, the 
         H-40 became the HU-1 (Helicopter Utility). From this designation came 
         Huey, the name by which it has remained known. The US Department of 
         Defence ( DOD ) standard designation system reversed this to UH-1, the 
         first designation in the new DOD helicopter series. With larger engines 
         and increased capacity, the UH-1 was developed through successive 
         models.  
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