Thank you, sir.
The dry-run capability of our H-92 Cyclone will be fully certified and tested before we accept the aircraft. The program is going extremely well, actually. The air vehicle has been flying with very few problems since October 2008. It is a fairly significantly modified and upgraded version of an H-92. It is fly-by-wire, which takes the complex hydraulics and so on of flight control out of the aircraft. It has automatic rotor- and tail-folding capability. It is very sophisticated.
That program has been flying very well. They will be doing at-sea trials off HMCS Montreal next week in Halifax. We have landed the aircraft on our modified ships successfully and they have taken off successfully, and now we're going to do actual at-sea live motion in the wind conditions off HMCS Montreal.
I just have a broader comment about big, complex air programs like that. The track record shows that it takes about ten years to do one like that. The Europeans, for example, have really struggled with the NH90 maritime helicopter. It's extremely light.
We're at the five-year, three-month point, not counting the previous history of the CHs and all the rest of that stuff. We're at five years, three months of what typically takes ten years. In November, we're scheduled to take our first of six maritime helicopters to begin our training and operational testing phase of what we think is going to be an outstanding helicopter. And the program remains well under budget.
If you ask me if I am happy with the maritime helicopter project, yes, I am. Have there been challenges? Yes. Has it been an extremely difficult program? We have asked for things on that helicopter that no one else in the world has done. It will be, clearly, the best in the world, by a big margin. But the performance specifications, including run-dry capability, are very high standards to meet.
That's a long answer. I'm sorry.