Hindustan Ajeet

The Indian Air Force issued a requirement for an improved Gnat in 1972 as an interceptor and also have a secondary ground-attack role. The aircraft was given the name “Ajeet”, Sanskrit for “Invincible” or “Unconquered” and was to be manufactured by HAL. It was to have more hardpoints, wet wings and a Martin-Baker ejection seat. Hindustan Aeronau¬tics developed the Ajeet lightweight jet fighter from the Folland/ Hawker Siddeley Gnat which HAL license-produced.

Hindustan Ajeet Article

The prototype Ajeet first flew in March 1975 and the first production aircraft (E1956) followed in September 1976.

Ajeets of No.22 Squadron with a Hunter T.66 two-seater

The Ajeet aircraft was comparable to the Gnat in handling, albeit on the heavier side. A clean Gnat (without drop tanks) was significantly more agile and manoeuvrable than a clean Ajeet. The trainer on the other hand was even heavier. In the few 1vs1 sorties against the fighter, it was noticed that the trainer lost out while manoeuvring in the vertical plane. Another issue that one had to be careful of was while opening throttle and seeking full power as the engine took a long time to achieve 100%.

The main changes from the Gnat are improved navigation and communications systems and the use of new wing fuel tanks which replace the previous underwing tanks. The last feature allows an increased warload to be carried, although drop tanks can still be carried underwing on two of the four stations for longer range.

Armament comprises two 30 mm Aden cannon and rockets or bombs. Maximum speed with the 4,500 lb thrust Rolls Royce Orpheus 701 01 turbojet remains subsonic at Mach 0.96.

Deliveries began to the Indian Air Force in 1976. Of the total of 79 aircraft ordered for the Indian Air Force about one third had been delivered by early 1980 and operated between 1977 and 1991.

For nearly 30 years of its operational service in India the Gnat/ Ajeet did not have a type trainer. Pilots in India, after dual checks in the Hawker Hunter, were required to do the first solo on the Gnat directly. The dual checks were given on a Hunter trainer by simulating a Gnat approach (much shallower) by lowering flaps to only 15 degrees and not full flaps down. Once cleared after the mandatory dual checks, the pilots were shown the various attitudes of nose up and take off, strapped in the cockpit and two airmen sitting on the tail plane under the flight commander’s supervision. The cockpit was very cosy and seated at 20 degrees incline of the ejection seat. A taxi run with a full throttle roll on the runway got the pilot ready for his first solo in the Gnat.

The development of the HAL Ajeet trainer started in the late 70s. A proposal within a time frame of 54 months at an estimated cost of Rs.4.16 crores, put up by Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL) in June 1975, was approved by the Government in February 1976. Government sanctioned in April 1980, procurement of 12 trainer aircraft from the HAL at a cost of Rs. 1 crore each. The aircraft were to be delivered at the rate of six each during 1982-83 and 1983-84.

Developed from the single-seat Ajeet lightweight fighter, the prototype trainer version flew on September 20, 1982. The Ajeet trainer, had a lengthened fuselage (1.4 meters longer than the Ajeet fighter) with two seats mounted in tandem and two internal fuel tanks on the spine removed to accommodate the extra seat. The 30 mm cannon and four stores pylons were retained, although the cannon could be removed and replaced with additional fuel tanks (increase capacity by 273 Litres). The engine remained the same Orpheus 701. However, the trainer had an inferior Power/ weight ratio as compared to the fighter version and handled sluggishly.

first prototype Ajeet Trainer E2426

In December 1982 Sqn Ldr DK Powar was flying the first prototype of the Ajeet Trainer (E2426), the 14th sortie the aircraft had undertaken. The unfortunate accident was probably due to differences in pre-flight inspection procedures of HAL and IAF ground crew, leading to the oxygen not being switched on. At higher altitudes, hypoxia set in, leading to disorientation and complete loss of consciousness and fatal crash. A second prototype flew in September 1983.

The program was put in abeyance, but over the next two years, the IAF had a re-think and it was revived in late 1984. However, in 1986, when IAF agreed on the withdrawal of the Ajeet Aircraft, the order for the trainer was in limbo again.

The first Ajeet Trainer induction at Sulur BRD. The aircraft was handed over to Wg Cdr Ranjith Tathgur of No.18 Squadron “Flying Bullets”

The order for full production of Ajeet Trainers having been withdrawn, two prototypes with HAL were inducted into the IAF finally in late 1987 (and early 1988) and were handed over to 18 sqn then based at Bagdogra. Two aircraft bearing serial numbers E2427 and E2414 were handed over to the squadron. The first aircraft delivered was a production aircraft while the other a prototype modified to production standard. These two were the only aircraft built (other than the one that crashed).

Their usage fell far short of the initial projected hours. The utilisation rate achieved by these trainer aircraft was poor as it ranged from 0.15 to 5.30 hours per month during January 1988 to May 1990. One cause of the low utilization could have been the limited utility of the aircraft as laid out in the syllabus. The aircraft was supposed to provide three dual check sorties with each having a laid down profile. It did not have the required instrumentation and lights for night flying as the Ajeet itself was day operational only. Further, with the Ajeet in winding down mode, the squadron pilot and aircraft strength was depleted.

When the Ajeets were finally phased out in March 1991, apparently the Ajeet Trainers were still serviceable and were flown to the BRD in Sulur. In all, the two Ajeet Trainers served the IAF for only three and a half years across two squadrons.

In December 1988, right after 18 sqn had wound up, the two trainers were ferried from Bagdogra to Kalaikunda.

Two Ajeet Trainers were the last aircraft in the 33-year successful legacy of the Gnat fighter and its variants that served the IAF until the early 90s. The Ajeet Trainers served the IAF for only three and a half years across two squadrons and flew little, remaining a footnote in the annals of Indian aviation history.

Engine: 4,500 lb thrust Rolls Royce Orpheus 701 01 turbojet
Maximum speed: Mach 0.96 / 716 mph / 1,152 km/h
Wing span: 22 ft 1 in (6.73 m)

Hiller HJ-1 / HOE-1 / YH-32 Hornet

Early in 1952, Hiller approached the Navy about authorizing construction of an evaluation quantity of Hornets. The proposal was accepted because it was felt that a revised Hornet might meet a Marine Corps requirement for an ultralight flying vehicle. By summer a fixed-price contract had been negotiated for delivery of five units, three to go to the Navy as the HOE-1. Impressed by the simplicity of the original HJ-1, the Army asked to take the remaining two (serials 53-4663 and -4664) under the designation YH-32. At the end of 1954, Army officials ordered a dozen more Hornets (55-4963 through -4974), and Hiller’s own test and demonstration requirements brought the total of second-generation Hornets to twenty-five, including the three ULV gunships. The twelve aircraft were all delivered by late 1956. This evaluation quantity of HOEs and YH-32s marked the first production of tip-jet-powered helicopters in history, and the first procurement of such vehicles by U.S. military services.

HOE-1

Hiller H-32 Article

Although the new military helicopter shared the name and designation of the original HJ-1 “Hornet”, it was an all-new machine with no commonality. It had lightweight skids, and it had rudder pedals controlling a single-blade tail rotor. While not needed to offset torque, the tail rotor – which furnished crisper yaw control than was provided by the earlier Hornet’s rudder – helped during autorotation and permitted rapid sideways flight as required by increasingly stringent military control requirements.

The HOE-1/H-32 was designed by both Bob Anderson and James B. Edwards, the vice president of engineering, who had come to Hiller in January 1952 from Douglas Aircraft.
The HJ-1 suffered a growth in size and weight. A larger cockpit, fiberglass body and tail boom (the first structural use of fiberglass in aircraft construction), and other changes raised the empty weight from the original Hornet’s 160kg to 240kg, and the gross weight climbed to 480kg. As a result, the service ceiling fell from 3350m to 2100m. Even with 200 litres of fuel, the craft’s range shrank from 65km to 45km, its maximum powered endurance at economy cruise being roughly thirty minutes.

The joint military program by the Army and Navy had many extra-contractual changes that – including the dual certification programs – eventually consumed more than a million dollars of Hiller resources.

The first of the HOE/H-32 series flew in September 1953, with deliveries to commence the following spring. The services did not receive them until the end of 1954, because these machines had been procured on a “certification specification” basis rather than on the standard “mil. spec.” basis, and civil certification of the helicopter and its engine would take time, as both were new to the experience of the CAA.
The 8RJ2B ramjet engine was a refined and uprated version of the unit Hiller had developed in 1949. Now eight inches in diameter and weighing 5.7kg, it produced the equivalent of 45hp. Manufactured by Ryan in San Diego under license from Hiller, the 8RJ2B was made out of lnconel X, a high-nickel alloy. Because Inconel X corrodes on contact with lead – then commonly found in automotive gasoline, which was a likely fuel for this engine – the engine’s interior was coated with a protective ceramic material.
By August, the 8RJ2B had logged 559 hours in the air, 2104 hours on the whirlstand, and 1545 hours in free airstream static tests. Its early teething troubles had been completely solved, even the once nagging problem of flameouts. If flameouts should occur, the engine now reignited itself so quickly that the pilot never perceived the problem. Another selling point was the remarkable portability and simplicity of the 8RJ2B. An untrained person could change a Hiller Hornet’s engine in just three minutes with a screwdriver.

Ramjet testing on the ground included static duration runs, which were a sore point with residents of Belle Haven and East Palo Alto. One test in March 1953 lasted 200 hours, while another the following February ran for 150 hours. At night an inversion would often form over the entire San Francisco Bay area, causing the bam-bam-bam of the whirling ramjets to skip over much of the local area and bounce squarely into the fashionable Atherton and Menio Park neighborhoods. Residents often telephoning the plant at Palo Alto to complain. The problem was significantly reduced in the spring of 1954 by construction of a circular barrier 5.5m high and 12m in diameter, which was designed to muffle jet engine noise.
During the last days of ramjet certification in 1954, several overspeed runs were conducted on the whirlstand. At peak rpm, when the tip jet was subjected to as much as 14000 Gs (boosting its “weight” to some 80300kg), supporting bolts sheared and the 8RJ2B shot away through protective walls, acoustical barriers, and property fences before coming to rest some 150m from the test site. The test stand also departed the area, flying off toward San Francisco Bay. It was later recovered from nearby mud flats. The only known structural failure of a Hiller tip-power rotor, this test far exceeded expectations and overwhelmingly satisfied the stringent certification requirements.
On October 28, 1954, the CAA awarded Hiller’s 8RJ2B engine Type Certificate No. 280, officially approving it for commercial production and sale should Hiller so desire.

Parallel certification for the “Hornet” helicopter was not granted. The reason was the cold drag problem associated with autorotation, as with the earlier HJ-1. The new military Hornets descended steeply at almost 18m/s, but their massive rotors stored so much energy that landings were simple after one became accustomed to the high sink rate. Hiller test pilot and marketing executive Robert Boughton found that whereas one would begin to flare 15 to 18m above the ground in a normal helicopter, the “Hornet” demanded that one begin pulling up on the collective a full two to three hundred feet off the ground. Enough inertia was stored in the tip engines to permit the pilot to touch down, rise into the air again, and land a second time.
A solution to the unacceptably high sink rate was proposed to the military during development of the H-32 and HOE. The company suggested that the flameholders in the mouths of the ramjets be modified to function like controllable shutters. During autorotation, they could simply rotate shut to close off air-flow through the engine and greatly reduce cold drag.
If one engine failed, the “Hornet” could be flown some distance to a safe landing, although it could not maintain altitude. An automatic low-fuel power reduction further enhanced safety by alerting the pilot to land while sufficient fuel remained to do so under power. Still, with range so limited and the possibility of fuel starvation so great, flameholder shutters were clearly a desirable feature.
The military declined because its strict acceptance standards made no provision for such devices. Without them, the Hornet’s autorotation proved unacceptable to the CAA, which otherwise found the diminutive craft satisfactory. Civil certification was accordingly denied. Failure to achieve this production license removed any possibility of Hornets reaching the private market, although it is doubtful that Hiller would have chosen to market a civil version in any event.

YH-32

On a warm day the Hornet could barely hover over a metre above the ground with two people and a full fuel load. The Hornet was able to run on a wide variety of fuels, but the fuel tank held only enough for 25 minutes flying or 65km range. The rotor needed to be spun to 50 rpm by a small motor before the ramjets would start. Normal operating speed was 550 rpm. Fuel pressure was then built up, fuel flow valves were opened, and the starter button was depressed to fire a spark plug in each ramjet. Ninety seconds later, the Hornet’s rotor reached 450-500 rpm and away it flew. Pilots who had the chance to try it out reported generally pleasant and forgiving characteristics.

The museum owning the only remaining flyable example of the 17 Hornets built received complaints from neighbours a mile and a half away when they last flew it.

Gallery

HOE-1
Engine: 2 x 8RJ2B ramjets, 17kg / 31 lb of thrust each
Main rotor diameter: 7.0m / 23 ft
Fuselage length: 3.45m / 12 ft. 8 in
Height: 2.44m
Take-off weight: 487kg
Loaded weight: 1,200 lb.
Empty weight: 239kg
Max speed: 129km/h / 80 m.p.h
Cruising speed: 111km/h
Service ceiling: 3500m / 12,000 ft
Range: 450km
Typical range: 31 miles at 70 m.p.h. with full load.
Seats: 2

Hiller HJ-1 Hornet

Originally intended for the civil market with a price as little as $5,000, the Hiller Hornet was a tiny helicopter powered by ramjet engines mounted on the rotor tips.
Although Hiller never realized the long-held dream of flying crane production for want of government sponsorship, this program did have conspicuous successes. The comprehensive body of research it generated has paved the way for such helicopters to be built in the future, eliminating every real or imagined obstacle to their construction. This program also fostered the development of two generations of the Hiller HJ-1 Hornet.
The first of these generations began with the construction of three HJ-1s in Palo Alto in 1950. Just 2.1m high, weighing 400kg fully loaded, and topped with 7m-diameter rotors, these machines were far less complex than conventional helicopters. Only their Rotormatic paddles revealed them to be Hiller machines. Frank Peterson flew the first Hiller HJ-1 “Hornet” in August day in 1950.
The two-place craft was of simple construction, consisting mainly of a reinforced steel tube framework overlaid with a skin of fiberglass and plastic laminate. The Hornet was powered by two Hiller 8RJ2B ramjets, one fixed to the end of each main rotor blade, with an auxiliary one horsepower gasoline engine being used to spin the rotor blades up to the 50 rpm required prior to ignition of the ramjets.
The HJ-1 “Hornet” generated substantial public interest when unveiled by Hiller in February 1951. At that time it was announced that the company might offer them for sale at less than $5,000 each. Its top speed was 130km/h, cruise was 110km/h, the service ceiling was 3350m, and the initial rate of climb was 5.6m/s. The only drawback was range, as a fully loaded HJ-1 could travel only a little under 65km.
The HJ-1 was stable for a small helicopter because of its Rotormatic paddles and high-inertia rotor. The docile manners ended at autorotation.
Whereas conventional helicopters autorotate at 9m/s or so, the Hiller “Hornet” plummeted at 15m/s, because the intakes of its ramjets retarded rotor windmilling. Hiller’s aeronautical engineers christened this aerodynamic braking “cold drag”. However slowly it turned during autorotation, the rotor – with the weight of ramjets at its tips – had plenty of accumulated kinetic energy left to trade for lift when the time came. One merely needed skill, nerve, and fast reflexes to know when to haul up on the collective lever.
Hiller Test Pilot Bruce Jones was the first person to autorotate a tip-powered helicopter. Ground observers stood aghast as he hurtled downward in the HJ-1, came to a radical flare in the nick of time, and settled to the ground. With a mix of relief and anger, Hiller’s non-pilot contracts manager ran up to the Hornet, shouting that the craft was not insured.
“Listen,” the pilot replied hotly, steadying himself on rubbery legs. “I’m lucky to be alive! The aircraft was falling at 15m/s and I was falling at 10, and I barely caught up with the controls to land the damn thing!”
Jones, a veteran World War II flier and a former Bell helicopter demonstration pilot, soon became the undisputed master of Hornet autorotations. An argument arose on the Hiller flight line one summer day in 1951 over what accuracy, if any, was possible during “deadstick” landings. Jones settled the issue once and for all by autorotating from 900m to land within 15m of dead center of the Hiller apron.
With no torque to counter, the “Hornet” dispensed with a tail rotor in favor of a simple airplane-style rudder canted to take advantage of rotor downwash. Pedals were likewise eliminated; side-to-side movement of the collective lever worked the rudder to provide yaw control. An overhead cyclic stick provided lateral and longitudinal control as in the early model 360. On the touchy subject of noise, Hiller publicity releases optimistically stated that “the Hornet’s sound range compares favorably with that of a conventional-powered helicopter.”
The “Hornet” had just two controls (cyclic and collective-cum-rudder) and tachometer, fuel flow gauge, airspeed indicator, altimeter, and starter button on its instrument panel.
The Korean War preempted plans to market the HJ-1. Viewing its rapidly expanding backlog of military helicopter orders, and an uncertain public demand for the HJ-1, Hiller Helicopters announced in September 1951 that plans for marketing a civil version of the Hornet had been indefinitely deferred.

Hiller UH-12 / H-23 / HTE-1 / OH-5

UH-12E

Stanley Hiller Jr designed the Model 360 which has enjoyed considerable commercial success since its first flight in 1948. It was derived from the UH-5 which had proved very unstable during trials and had subsequently been fitted with a new stability system patented as the Hiller ‘Rotormatic’. It entailed fitting the two-blade rotor with two small paddles which acted as a control rotor and were also connected to a hanging stick. This servo ‘paddle control’ system tilts the rotor head and actuates the cyclic pitch control.
The Hiller 360 received its FAA (Federal Aviation Administration) approval in October 1948 and a year later a production model designated Model 12 made the first transcontinental helicopter flight across the USA. At that time it still had an open cockpit, and the 178hp Franklin 6V4-178-B33 was in an open engine bay.

Hiller UH-12 Article

Known as the Hiller UH-12 as Hiller had become part of United Helicopters, the Hiller UH-12, incorporating a two-bladed main rotor and a two-bladed tail rotor on an upswept boom. The UH-12 had a framed ‘bubble’-type cabin, no fuselage structure around the engine, skid undercarriage and a 175hp Franklin 6V4-178-B33 engine. Maximum takeoff weight was 1015kg.

The UH-12A Raven production two-seat UH-12 with collective pitch ballast system and wooden rotor blades for civil and military customers had a takeoff gross weight of 1082kg. With an uprated engine and new UH-12A rotor blades, it was purchased by the US Army and Navy for battlefield evacuation and observation tasks, with the designation H-23 Raven, whilst the Navy ordered the same basic model as the HTE-1 for training.

The commercial UH-12A to UH-12D became the OH-23A to OH-23D Raven respectively for service with the US Army, and the US Navy acquired UH-12As as HTE-1 and HTE-2.

HTE-2

The UH-12A successor, the H-23B, powered by a 200-210hp Franklin engine, was the first version used by the US Army as a trainer. 216 were assigned to the Primary Flying School at Fort Walters and another 237 were used for various tasks. The Hiller UH-12 was the US Army’s primary trainer until 1965.
The UH-12B (and as the HT Mk.1 for the Royal Navy) normally had skid or flotation gear, but a wheeled undercarriage was fitted to a batch ordered by the US Navy (the HTE-2).

In 1955 the UH-12C, was basically a UH-1B. It retained the 200hp Franklin engine, but had all-metal rotor blades and a “goldfish bowl” cockpit canopy and three seats. From 1956, 145 were delivered to the US Army as the H-23C.

UH-12C

A purely military version, the UH-12D / OH-12D, flew on 3 April 1956 and 483 went to the US Army. The Franklin engine had been replaced by the more powerful 320hp Lycoming VO-540, and the transmission had also been changed to increase the service life of the helicopter.

The commonest version was the UH-12E which had a more powerful 305hp Textron Lycoming VO-540-A1A engine. The US Army replaced nearly all the OH-23Ds by Hiller 12Es, designated OH-23G 3-seat dual control trainer. In 1960 the Model E4 was developed from the Hiller 12E, with a longer cabin to seat four and an anhedral stabilizer on the tail boom. Twenty-two of these were acquired by the US Army as the OH-23F, for geodetic research.

Hiller UH-12E ZK-HFG

In 1963 the US Army was buying 137 more Hiller OH-23 observation helicopters to meet its requirements until a five-way competition for a light helicopter was decided at Ft. Rucker, Alabama. In 1963 the British navy was adding seven UH-12E to the 14 bought in 1962. The Royal Navy used its 12E’s to train fleet pilots at Culdrose Naval Air Station in Cornwall. They were fitted for instrument flying. 12E were also in use with Canada’s army and air force, known as CH-112.

The UH-12EL was a UH-12E retro-fitted with Ham-Standard rotor stability augmentation system, stainless steel rotor blades and 1400kg TOGW.
UH-12E3 was the revised designation for Hiller Aircraft Corp production UH-12E with 3 seats, and UH-12E3T the Hiller Aircraft Corp UH-12ET.
The UH-12E4 featured inverted rear tail planes and lengthened cabin to accommodate pilot plus rear bench seat for 3 pax. All new helicopters now have these features and they can be retrofitted on Model 12Es. Designated UH-12E4T when fitted with Soloy conversion to 400shp Allison 250-C20B turboshaft. This engine conversion was jointly developed with Soloy Conversions of Chehalis, Washington who began work on it in 1976.

The UH-12ET was the UH-12E fitted with Soloy conversion to 400shp Allison 250-C20B turboshaft.
UH-12E5 was the UH-12E4 fitted with five seats and 340hp Textron Lycoming VO-540 piston engine. A prototype was flown but no further development was undertaken.
The Korean War gave an added impetus to improvements and when the Hiller 12E appeared in 1959 it came either as the L3 with a 305hp Lycoming VO-540-C2A or as the SL3 with a supercharged 315hp TIVO-540-A2A engine.
The UH-12SL was the UH-12E with supercharged Textron Lycoming TIVO-540 engine and ‘L’ series rotor head with gyro-controlled stability augmentation system.
UH-12L was UH-12SL with unsupercharged VO-540 engine.

Civil versions with uprated powerplant included the UH-12E variants suffixed L3, L4, SL3 and SL4. The last civil variant, which appeared in 1963, was the Hiller 12L4 which was also used as a test-bed for a PT6 turbine, but the project was taken no further.
Total sales of the Hiller 12E family exceeded 2000. Over 1,600 UH-12s went to the US Army and were used in Korea and Vietnam.
At the height of UH-12/OH-23 production Hiller was taken over by the Fairchild Corporation, but in 1973 a new company, Hiller Aviation, acquired design rights and production tooling for the UH-12E, and for some years provided support for the world-wide fleet of UH-12 variants.
UH-12E5T was a proposed turbine-powered UH-12E5 with Allison 250-C20B. Not built.
UH-12J-3 was an unofficial designation for Soloy-converted UH-12E.
UH-12SL4 was the UH-12L with the E4 four-seat cabin.

The Canadian army acquired OH-23Gs which it operated with the designation CH-112 Nomad, and the Royal Navy used a number of ex-US Navy HTE-2s under the designation Hiller HT.Mk 2.
In April 1984 Hiller became a subsidiary of Rogerson Aircraft of Port Angeles, Washington. Renamed Hiller Helicopters and later Rogerson Helicopters, the company, now known as Rogerson Hiller, relaunched the piston-engined UH-12E in 1991 as the Hauler, and a number have been exported. The company is also proposing the Allison turbine-powered UH-12ET development for the US Army’s NHT (New Training Helicopter) requirement.
The Model 12 has the usual equipment for helicopter safety and civil work, but can also be fitted with a night-lighting kit, a 454kg capacity cargo hook, twin heavy duty cargo racks, and auxiliary fuel tanks. Equipped with extra tanks the 12E has a maximum range of 676km. Production of both the 12E and 12E-4 is ran at about five a month.

A number were fitted with an Allison 250-C20 turbine as Soloy UH12E-SCL conversions. The 400shp Allison (derated to 305 shp) is mounted slanting backwards from the adaptor gearbox, leaving a large uncluttered area where the previous engine was.

Gallery

UH-12
Engine: 175hp Franklin 6V4-178-B33
TOGW: 1015kg
Undercarriage: skid

UH-12A
1950
Engine: 200hp Franklin 6V4-200-C33 or Franklin 6V-335-B, 210 hp
TOGW: 1082kg

UH-12B / HT Mk.1
Engine: 200hp Franklin 6V4-200-C33 or Franklin 6V-335-B, 210 hp
TOGW: 1128kg

HTE-2
Engine: 200 h.p. Franklin
Rotor dia.: 35 ft
Weight: 2,500 lb
Max. Speed: 84 mph
Seats: 3

UH-1C
Engine: 200hp Franklin 6V4-200-C33

UH-12D / OH-23D Raven
Engine: 241kW / 250hp Textron Lycoming VO-435-A1C
Main rotor diameter: 10.82m
Length: 8.53m
Height: 2.97m
Empty weight: 824kg
TOGW: 1240kg
Max speed: 153km/h
Cruising speed: 132km/h
Service ceiling: 4025m
Range: 330km

UH-12E / OH-23G
Engine: 305hp Textron Lycoming VO-540-A1A / Lycoming VO-540-C2A, 305 hp.
TBO: 1200 hrs.
Main rotor: 10.8 m / 35.3 ft.
Seats: 3.
Length: 40.7 ft.
Height: 10.1 ft.
Max ramp weight: 3100 lbs.
Max takeoff weight: 3100 lb / 1410 kg.
Standard empty weight: 1759 lbs.
Max useful load: 610 kg / 1341 lbs.
Max landing weight: 3100 lbs.
Max sling load: 1000 lbs.
Disc loading: 3.2 lbs/sq.ft.
Power loading: 10.2 lbs/hp.
Max usable fuel: 516 lbs.
Max rate of climb: 993 fpm.
Service ceiling: 15,000 ft.
Hover in ground effect: 10,400 ft.
Hover out of ground effect: 6800 ft.
Max speed: 83 kts.
Normal cruise @ 3000 ft: 51 kts.
Max cruise: 80 kts
Fuel flow @ normal cruise: 125 pph.
Endurance @ normal cruise: 3.9 hr.
Max range: 390 km.
Seats: 3.

UH-12EL
Engine: 305hp Textron Lycoming VO-540-A1A
TOGW: 1400 kg

UH-12E3
Seats: 3

UH12E Soloy
Engine: Allison 250-C20 turbine, 400 shp

UH-12E3T / UH-12ET
Seats: 3

UH-12EJ
Engine: Allison 250

UH-12ET
Engine: Soloy 400shp Allison 250-C20B turboshaft

Hiller 12E4
Engine: Lycoming VO-540-C2A, 305 hp.
Seats: 4.
Disc loading: 2.84 lb/sq.ft.
Pwr loading: 9.18 lb/hp.
Max TO wt: 2800 lb.
Empty wt: 1890 lb.
Equipped useful load: 886 lb.
Payload max fuel: 370 lb.
Range max fuel/ cruise: 274 nm/ 3.2 hr.
Range max fuel / range: 312 nm/ 4.7 hr.
Service ceiling: 16,200 ft.
Max cruise: 83 kt.
Max range cruise: 67 kt.
ROC: 1290 fpm.
HIGE: 10,800 ft.
HOGE: 7200 ft.
Max sling load: 1000 lb.
Fuel cap: 276/516 lb
Seats: 4

UH-12E4T
Engine: Soloy 400shp Allison 250-C20B turboshaft

UH-12E5
Engine: 340hp Textron Lycoming VO-540
Seats: 5

UH-12E-L3
Engine: Lycoming VO-540-C2B, 305 hp
Main rotor diameter: 35 ft 5 in / 10.80 m
Empty weight: 1759 lb / 798 kg
Normal TO weight: 2800 lb / 1270 kg
Max overload weight: 3100 lb / 1405 kg
Max cruise SL: 78 kt / 90 mph / 145 kph
Max ROC SL: 1290 fpm / 393 m/min
Service ceiling: 15,200 ft / 4630 m
Range w/aux fuel, 2800lb/1270kg: 379 nm / 437 mi / 703 km
Seats: 3
Baggage capacity: 125 lb / 57 kg
Cabin length: 5 ft 0 in / 1.52 m
Cabin width: 4 ft 11 in / 1.50 m
Cabin height: 4 ft 5 in / 1.35 m

UH-12SL
Engine: supercharged Textron Lycoming TIVO-540

UH-12L
Engine: Textron Lycoming VO-540 engine.

UH-12 L3
Engine: 305hp Lycoming VO-540-C2A

UH-12 SL3
Engine: supercharged 315hp TIVO-540-A2A

UH12E-SCL
Engine: Allison 250-C20 turbine, 305 shp.
Vne: 96 mph.
MAUW: 3100 lbs.
Empty wt: 1650 lbs.
Useful load: 1450 lbs.
Endurance(@ 90 mph, 22 gal/hr): 2:05 hr.
Range (@90mph): 188 sm.
Max ROC: 1706 fpm.
Max vertical ROC: 1463 fpm.

OH-23

Hiller FH1100 / RH1100 / OH-5

Hiller FH1100

The FH1100 originated from Hiller Aircraft Company’s entry for the US Army requirement of a Light Observation Helicopter (LOH). Designated OH-5A for the technical “fly-off’ it competed against Bell’s OH-4A (B206) and Hughes OH-6A (H369).

Hiller FH1100 Article

OH-5A

Fairchild Stratos Corporation acquired Hiller in 1964 believing they were about to secure a large military contract as the OH-5A stood out the preferred winner. Leaked production data of the OH-5A resulted in Howard Hughes successfully under bidding with the OH-6A. The first FH1100, N81005, flew on 21 January 1963, powered by the Allison T63 turbine engine. Fairchild meanwhile announced they would begin civilian helicopter production of a refined OH-5A, designated the FH1100, offered for sale in June 1966 with either 4 or 5 seats. It became the first US civil turbine helicopter to go into production with a modest 246 units completed by 1971. A small number were produced between 1983 and 1985.
This utility helicopter has a semi-monocoque fuselage and conventional tail boom. The semi-rigid two-blade main rotor, able to be stored folded, is controlled by dual hydraulics, with the primary assisting cyclic and collective, the secondary pump actuating the cyclic only.
A prototype was constructed by Helicopter Technology Inc. in Century, Florida, in 2002 for the new FH1100 to go back into production as the FHoenix.

RH1100

Under development in 1991 by Rogerson Hiller, the RH1100S features a lengthened and widened cabin and a LCD instrument display.

Gallery

FH1100
Engine: Allison 250-C18, 317 shp / 205 kW.
Vne: 110 kts.
Cruise: 95-100 kts.
MTOW: 1290 kg.
Useful load: 1335 lb / 605 kg
Range: 330 nm.
Seats: 5.
Length: 29 ft 9.5 in.
Rotor dia: 35 feet 4.75 in / 10.8 m
Ceiling: 14,000 ft.
Range: 348 miles.
Hook cap: 1500 lb.

FHoenix
Engine: Allison 250-C20.

RH1100S
Seats: 7.

Hillberg Turbine Exec

The Turbine Exec is a turbine kit to repower the Rotorway Executive kit helicopter. First flown in April 1997, the US$20,000 kit included the engine, gearbox reduction drive and tail rotor gearbox.

Max speed: 125 mph
Cruise: 100 mph
Range: 225 sm
Rate of climb: 1500 fpm
Service ceiling: 13,500 ft
Engine: Solar T6Z-T32
hp range: 150-170
Fuel capacity: 35 USG
Empty weight: 750 lb
Gross weight: 1425 lb
Height: 8 ft
Length: 22 ft
Disk span: 25 ft
Seats: 2

Hillberg EH1-02

The first flight was scheduled for the Spring of 1998.
Kits were to include everthing except radios, with plans selling for US$350, and kit for US$68,000.

Max speed: 170 mph
Cruise: 130 mph
Range: 390 sm
Rate of climb: 1500 fpm
Service ceiling: 13,500 ft
Engine: Solar T6Z-T32
hp range: 150-400
Fuel capacity: 45 USG
Empty weight: 900 lb
Gross weight: 1800 lb
Height: 8 ft
Length: 28 ft
Disk span: 25 ft
Seats: 2

Hillberg RotorMouse EH1-01

A turboshaft powered helicopter first flown in 1994. The first kit was shipped in January 1998. Plans were selling at US$350 and the kit price was US$68,000. Of aluminium construction, the Solar T62T32 or other engines with 150-225 hp are suitable.

Max speed: 160 mph
Cruise: 130 mph
Range: 300+ sm
Rate of climb: 4700 fpm
Engine: AiResearch, 145 hp
hp range: 145-250
Fuel capacity: 32.9 USG
Empty weight: 635 lb
Gross weight: 1300 lb
Height: 7.4 ft
Length: 20.1 ft
Disk span: 20 ft
Disk area: 314.2 sq.ft
Seats: 1

HESA Shahed 278 / Panha 287

Three prototypes, first of which made maiden flight late 1997 or early 1998; most-flown prototype had accumulated 200 hours by March 2001. Public debut late 2002 as HESA 278, having previously been reported as Panha 287.

A fonr-seater; intended for dual military/civil use, though designed primarily to meet military requirements. Designed entirely in Iran, according to manufacturer, although some sources report use of locally made airframe and dynamic components of Bell 206 JelRanger.

Power is by a single turboshaft. Prototypes have evaluated Rolls-Royce 250 and equivalents from Turbomeca and a Russian supplier, but final selection apparently not made by late 2002. Fuel capacity 287 litres.

Shahed 278
Max. take-off weight: 1451kg
Empty weight: 682kg
Max. level speed: 240km/h
Service ceiling: 6400m
Hovering ceiling IGE: 6200m
Hovering ceiling OGE: 4800m
Range: 340km