Kamov Ka-32

Ka-32MT

The Ka-27 came in four versions, the Ka-27, 28, 29, and 32. The Ka-32T is a utility transport helicopter, and the 32S is a utility version for operating in adverse weather. The 32K is a flying crane version of the Ka-27.

Kamov Ka-32 Article

Development of Ka-27/32 began in 1969 with the first flight of a common prototype in 1973. The first Ka-32 (SSSR-04173) flew on 8 October 1980, and the prototype of a utility version was shown at Paris Air Show June 1985.
The Ka-32 claimed several time-to-height and altitude records in 1983.
Series production of the Ka-32 has been going on in Kumertau since 1986.
New military versions were first exhibited at Moscow Air Show ’95.

Early publicity of the Kamov Ka 32 ‘Helix’ was associated with civil applications, including reconnaissance from the nuclear powered icebreak¬ers Arktika, Lemn, Rossiva and Sibir, and all forms of transport and agri-cultural flying. Photographs were first taken of an Aeroflot (civil) and AVMF (naval air force) examples at sea aboard the new destroyer Udaloy in September 1981, and NATO allocated the reporting name ‘Helix.

Conceived as completely autonomous ‘compact truck’, to stow in much the same space as Ka-25 with rotors folded, and to operate independently of ground support equipment, operation is by with single pilot. The twin fins are on a short tailboom, the upper rotor turning clockwise, the lower anti-clockwise. The rotor mast is tilted forward 3degrees. The twin turbines and APU are above the cabin, leaving the interior uncluttered, and the lower fuselage is sealed for flotation.
Control is by a dual hydraulically powered flight control systems, without manual reversion, spring stick trim. Yaw control is by differential collective pitch applied through the rudder pedals. A mix in the collective system maintains constant total rotor thrust during turns, to reduce pilot workload when landing on pitching deck, and to simplify transition to hover and landing. The twin rudders are intended mainly to improve control in autorotation, but are also effective in coordinating turns. Flight can be maintained on one engine at maximum T-O weight.
Titanium and composites are used extensively in the structure, with particular emphasis on corrosion resistance. The fully articulated three-blade coaxial contrarotatmg rotors have all-composites blades with carbon fibre and glass fibre main spars, pockets (13 per blade) of Kevlar-type material, and a filler similar to Nomex. The blades have a non-symmetrical aerofoil section, and each has a ground-adjustable tab. Each lower blade carries an adjustable vibration damper, comprising two dependent weights, on the root section, with further vibration dampers in the fuselage. A tip light is on each upper blade. The blades fold manually outboard of all control mechanisms, to a folded width within the track of the main landing gear. The rotor hub is 50% titaniuin/50% steel, and a rotor brake is standard. The Ka-32 is built with an all-metal fuselage and composite tailcone. The fixed incidence tailplane, elevators, fins and rudders have an aluminium alloy structure and composites skins. The fins toe inward approximately 25 degrees. A fixed leading-edge slat on each fin prevents airflow over the fin stalling in crosswinds or at high yaw angles.
The four-wheel type landing gear has oleo-pneumatic shock-absorbers and castoring nosewheels. Mainwheel tyres size 600×180 (Ka-32); 620×180, pressure 10.80 bar (Ka-32A). Nosewheel tyres size 400×150 (Ka-32); 480×200, pressure 5,90 bar (Ka-32A). Skis optional.
Power is from two 1,633kW Klimov TV3-117V (Ka-32) or TV3-117VMA (Ka-32A) turboshafts, with automatic synchronisation system, located side by side above the cabin, forward of the rotor driveshaft. A main gearbox brake is standard. An oil cooler fan is aft of the gearbox. Cowlings hinge downward as maintenance platforms, and fuel is in tanks under the cabin floor and inside tanks each side of the center-fuselage. The capacity of the main tanks 2180 litres and maximum capacity with two underfloor auxiliary tanks is 3,450 litres. Single-point pressure refuelling is behind a small forward-hinged door on the port side, where bottom of tailboom meets rear of cabin.
The pilot and navigator are side by side in the air conditioned flight deck, in adjustable seats. A rearward-sliding jettisonable door with blister window is each side. A seat behind the navigator, on the starboard side, is for an observer, loadmaster or rescue hoist operator. Windscreen anti-icing uses alcohol. Direct access from the flight deck to the cabin is available. The heated and ventilated main cabin of the Ka-32 can accommodate freight or 16 passengers, on three folding seats at the rear, six along the port side wall and seven along the starboard sidewall (13 passengers in the Ka-32A). Fittings can carry four stretchers. A rearward-sliding door is aft of the main landing gear on the port side, with steps below. An emergency exit door is on the opposite side. A hatch to the avionics compartment is on the port side of the tailboom.
There are three hydraulic systems. A main system supplies servos, mainwheel brakes and hydraulic winch when fitted. A standby system supplies only servos after main system failure, and an auxiliary system supplies brakes after a main system failure and adjusts the height of the helicopter fuselage above ground. The auxiliary system can also be connected to main system for checking all functions on the ground. The electrical system includes two independently operating AC generators and two batteries which cut in automatically or manually via inverters after an AC generating system failure. After failure of either generator, the other is switched automatically to supply both circuits. Two rectifiers supply DC power. Electrothermal de-icing of the entire profiled portion of each blade switches on automatically when the helicopter enters icing conditions. Hot air provides engine intake anti-icing. An APU is in the rear of the engine bay fairing on the starboard side, for engine starting and to power all essential hydraulic and electrical services on the ground, eliminating need for a GPU.
Flight avionics include an electromechanical flight director controlled from the autopilot panel, Doppler hover indicator, two HSI and air data computer. A fully coupled three-axis autopilot can provide automatic approach and hover at height of 25m over the landing area, on a predetermined course, using Doppler. Radar altimeter. Doppler box under tailboom.
The ASW version, known in the West as ‘Helix K, has a large box on each side (probably for sonobuoys), a box under the tail boom (probably for a MAD), a large chin radar and extremely comprehensive avionics including EW installations. ‘Helix B’ is a targeting aircraft for anti¬ship missiles.
A firefighting version of the Ka-32T was demonstrated in 1996.

Civil versions of the Ka-27 designated Ka-32T (transport) and Ka-32S (shipboard utility and ice reconnaissance) were developed in the mid-80s to fill Civil Aviation needs. They were optimised for carrying cargo inside the cabin or on a sling, loading and unloading ships both anchored at the roadstead and under way, supporting offshore oil rigs, search-and-rescue operations etc. Development of these aircraft was led by deputy Chief Designer M.A.Kupfer, with leading designer B.Ye.Sokolov as his assistant; Ye.N.Yamshchikov was leading engineer of the test programme. The prototype flew for the first time on October 8, 1980 at the hands of test pilot Ye.I.Laryushin. The Ka-32S differed from the Ka-32T in being fitted with a search radar and a navigation system required for ice-patrol flights. The Ka-32S and Ka-32T versions were in production by KAPP, with other conversions by Kamov at Lyubertsy.

Russian Emergencies Ministry Ka-32A11BC

The civil version is described as able to lift slung loads up to 5000 kg (11, 023 lb), and carry such a load over a range of 185 km (115 miles)

The Klimov VK-3000 turboshaft was to be certified in 2001 as alternative power plant, but no installations have been reported.

Customers included Aeroflot and its successors; operators in Bulgaria (32S), Canada (32A), Laos (air force; six Ka-32T), Papua New Guinea (32A), South Africa (32A), Switzerland (32A), Yemen (32S/T). Estimated 132 Ka-32s in civilian use, of which 50 were abroad in 1998. Between December 1993 and November 2000, 36 imported by LGI of South Korea for operation by Forestry Service (23 Ka-32Ts), National Maritime Police Agency (eight Ka-32Ss), Kyonggi Provincial Fire & Disaster HQ (two Ka-32Ts) and Kyongsang Buk-do Fire Defence Aviation Corps, National Parks and Ulsan Fire Defence HQ (one Ka-32T each); further 20 expected in settlement of Russian debt, of which 10 reportedly ordered in March 2003 and three delivered by end of 2001. Following lease of two (later three) Ka-32s, Cyprus government announced intention, August 2001, to purchase three. Algerian Air Force acquiring unknown number, three of which (two Ka-32T and one Ka-32S) noted at Saint Petersburg in August 2002.

Versions:

Ka-32A
Assemblies and systems of basic Ka-32 modified in 1990-93 to meet all requirements of Russian NLG-32-29 and NLG-32-33 and US FAR Pt 29/FAR Pt 33 airworthiness standards in categories A and B. First flight September 1990; Russian type certificates obtained for Ka-32A and its two 2190shp TV3-117VMA engines in June 1993. Production began 1996. Larger tyres. Optional pressure fuelling with reduced fuel capacity. Maximum accommodation for 13 passengers. Advanced avionics available, including Canadian Marconi dual CMA-900 flight management system, with EFIS, AFCS, CMA-2012 Doppler velocity sensor and CMA-3012 GPS sensor. Modification of helicopters to Ka-32A standard started by Kamov 1994. Civil transport version with 16 passenger seats and provision for lifting underslung loads.

Ka-32A1
Firefighting version of Ka-32A, first flown 12 January 1994. Equipped with Canadian or Russian variants of “Bambi Bucket”, capacity 5,000 litres. Two operated by Moscow fire service, with doorway-mounted steerable water cannon and three types of rescue cage, able to lift two, 10 or 20 people from roofs of tall buildings. Other equipment includes searchlights and loudspeakers. Fire service aircraft and others flown by anti-riot police controlled by Aviatika Concern ISC, set up by Moscow city authorities and private investors to develop urban air transport system. Several on lease to South Korean forestry department have Simplex 10900-050 system, including 2,955 litre belly tank which can be refilled in 1.5 minutes, plus 152 litre retardant tank. Ka-32 can also be fitted with 10900- 055 system with two panniers totalling 5,000 litres of water and 250 litres of retardant.
One Moscow fire service helicopter (RA-31073) retrofitted with large, forward-facing nose boom for fire suppression in tall buildings; trials completed April 2001; shown statically al Moscow Salon, August 2001. System developed by Soyuz Federal Centre of Double Technologies at Dzerginsk; water supply of 2.800 litres carried in two underslung tanks or helicopter can be connected to fire vehicle on ground for unlimited supply; hose boom movable in vertical plane only.

Ka-32A2
Ka-32A modification for police operations.
Police version used by Moscow Militia, first flown 21 March 1995; seen in camouflage finish (RA-06144) at Moscow Air Show ’95. Seats for 11 passengers, two of whom can operate pintle-mounted guns in port-side rear doorway and starboard rear window. Fuel tanks filled with polyurethane foam to prevent explosion after damage or catching fire. Equipped for abseiling from both sides of cabin. Hydraulic hoist; two sets of loudspeakers; L-2AG searchlight under nose. Militia reportedly has 25. Maximum T-O weight 12,700kg.

Ka-32A3
Ordered by Russian Ministry of Emergency Situations (MChS) to carry rescue and salvage equipment to disaster areas and evacuate casualties.

Ka-32A7
Armed export version (alternatively known as Ka-327) of Russian Border Troops’ Ka-27PV developed from military Ka-27PS for frontier and maritime economic zone patrol, with Osrninog (octopus) radar and pairs of Kh-25 ASMs, UPK-23-250 pods each containing a GSh-23L twin-barrel 23mm gun with 250 rounds, or B-8V-20 pods each with twenty 80mm S-8 rockets, on four underwing pylons. Displayed – but not yet integrated – with Kh-35 (AS-20 ‘Kayak’) active radar-homing ASMs. Provision for 30mm Type 2A42 gun above port outrigger. Optional twin searchlights on weapons pylons. Large oblique camera in starboard rear window. Search and rescue equipment standard, with ability to lift up to 10 survivors at a distance of 200km from base. Provision for 13 persons in cabin. Maximum T-O weight 11,000kg. Maximum level speed 260km/h. First flown 1995.

Ka-32-10
Announced 25 May 2001; projected 24-seat civil version with enlarged cabin; internal payload 4,000kg. Target certification date 2004.

Ka-32A11BC
Built in accordance with requirements of Transport Canada. FAR Pt 29 certification gained 11 May 1998, but full clearance achieved 26 February 1999, after installation of dual actuators in flight control system; first Russian helicopter to gain Western certification. Two development aircraft delivered to VIH Logging in May 1997; flew 4,000 hours up to February 1999; also used for firefighting; further 15 on order by 1998.

Ka-32A12
Version approved by Aviation Register of Switzerland.

Ka-32K
Flying crane (kran) with retractable gondola for second pilot under cabin. Prototype first flew December 1991; operational testing completed 1992. Supplied to Krasnodar Institute of Civil Aviation.

Ka-32M
Was under development by Kamov, to increase lifting capability to 7,000kg; retrofit with 1839kW TV3-117VMA-SB3 engines.

Ka-32S
(“Helix-C”): Shipborne (sudovoi) version, intended especially for polar use; in production since 1987. More comprehensive avionics, including autonomous navigation system and Osminog (octopus) undernose radar (search radius 200km), for IFR operation from icebreakers in adverse weather and over terrain devoid of landmarks; 300kg electric load hoist standard; additional external fuel tanks available 1994, strapped on each side at top of cabin; duties include ice patrol, guidance of ships through icefields, unloading and loading ships (up to 30 tonnes an hour, 360 tonnes a day). Simplex carbon fibre/epoxy tank, capacity 1,500 litres or 3,000 litres, and 12.0m spraybar can be fitted for maritime anti-pollution work. Spraytime 6 minutes with 1,500 litre tank. In maritime search and rescue role, can loiter for 1 hour anywhere within 480km of base, and return carrying four crew and 5,000kg payload. Maximum fuel capacity 2,650 litres; weight empty 6,997kg; maximum payjoad 3,300kg internally, 4,600kg externally, maximum level and cruising speeds as Ka-32T.

Ka-32T
Ka-32 utility model for civil or military use with stripped down equipment and avionics.
(‘Helix-C’): Utility transport (transportnyi), ambulance, flying crane and agricultural sprayer; production began in 1987. Limited avionics; for carriage of internal or external freight, and passengers, along airways and over local routes, including support of offshore drilling rigs. Military “Helix-C” similar; no undernose radome, but with dorsal ESM “flower pot” and other military equipment. Several seen on board carriers, operating in SAR and planeguard roles. Military version understood to be designated Ka-27 or Ka-27T.

Specifications:

Ka-32
Engine: 2 x Klimov TV3-117.
Instant pwr: 1642 kW.
Rotor dia: 15.9 m.
Fuselage length: 11.3 m.
No. Blades: 2 x 3.
MTOW: 12,600 kg.
Payload: 4000 kg.
Max speed: 146 kts.
Max cruise: 124 kts.
HOGE: 12,131 ft.
Service ceiling: 19,672 ft.
Range: 850 km.
Crew: 2.
Pax: 16.
External sling load: 11,000 lb (5 000 kg).

Ka-32A
Engine: 2 x Klimov TV3-117VMA
Instant pwr: 1640 kW.
Rotor dia: 15.9 m.
Main rotor disc area 440.0 sq.m (4,736 sq ft).
Fuselage length: 12.25m
Height: 5.4m
Width: 3.8m
MTOW: 12,700 kg.
Payload: 5850 kg (internal: 4000 kg, external: 5000 kg).
Useful load: 6085 kg.
Max speed: 140 kts / 260km/h
Max cruise: 124 kts / 230km/h
Max range: 650 km.
HIGE: 14,098 ft.
HOGE: 12,131 ft / 3500m
Service ceiling: 14,754 ft / 6000m
Crew: 1-3
Pax: 14.
Seats: 18.

Ka-32MT
Engines: 2 x Klimov TV3-117B turboshaft, 2250 shp.
Disc area: 356.1 sq.m
Max external load: 5000 kg.
MAUW: 12,600 kg.
Max speed: 230 kph.

Ka-32T
Engines: 2 x TV3-117VK turboshaft, 1620kW
Rotor diameter: 15.9m
Fuselage length: 12.25m
Height: 5.4m
Width: 3.8m
Max take-off weight: 11000kg
Internal payload: 3700kg
External payload: 4500-5000kg
Max speed: 250km/h
Hovering ceiling: 3500m
Service ceiling: 5000m
Range with internal fuel: 800km
Crew: 1-3
Passengers: 15

Ka-32S
Engines: 2 x TV3-117VK turboshaft, 1620kW
Rotor diameter: 15.9m
Fuselage length: 12.25m
Height: 5.4m
Width: 3.8m
Max take-off weight: 11000kg
Internal payload: 3700kg
External payload: 4500-5000kg
Max speed: 250km/h
Hovering ceiling: 3500m
Service ceiling: 5000m
Range with internal fuel: 800km
Crew: 1-3
Passengers: 15

Ka-32A

Kamov Ka-31

Later variants of the Ka-27 include the Ka-31 airborne early warning helicopter equipped with the E801M Oko (Eye) air and sea surveillance radar
The Ka-31 helicopter is intended for long-range detection of air targets of a fixed-wing/helicopter type, including detection at low altitudes, and over-waters ships, their tracking and automatic transmission of their data to the command posts.
Under the transport cabin floor there is a compartment housing the support-rotating mechanism of a 6-m span antenna. To prevent the interference in the antenna all-round rotation plane the nose landing gear legs are retracted rearward into the cowlings flight-wise and the main legs are retracted upward. In stowed position the antenna is kept against the fuselage bottom. A radio-electronic suite is installed for radar target detection, targets identification and transmission of the over-water and air situation data to the ship-based and ground-based command posts. The core of the on-board avionics suite is the solid-state radar. The radio-electronic package automatically controls the helicopter flight over the specified route in any weather and climatic conditions. When the radio-electronic package is on, the antenna is extended and the navigator has elected the operational mode, all further operations are performed automatically without operator interference. The navigator role is simply to control the systems operation and to duplicate target observation on the display screen.

Ka-31

Power is from two Klimov TV3-117VMA turboshafts, each 1,633kW, and started by APU. The fuel tanks are filled with reticulated polyurethane foam for fire suppression.

The Ka-31 (formerly Ka-29RLD: radiolokatsyonnogo Dozora: radar picket helicopter) development began in 1980 and was first flown in October 1987. Two examples (031 and 032) completed initial shipboard trials on the Admiral of the Fleet Kuznetsov (then Tbilisi) in 1990, state testing being completed in 1996.

Russian Navy early warning Ka-31

Following a 1996 evaluation, four Ka-31s were ordered in August 1999 by the Indian Navy for delivery in 2001 and basing aboard the the aircraft carriers and ‘Krivak’ class destroyers. A further five were ordered in February 2001. Limited production of the Ka-31 was launched (for Indian Navy) at Kumertau Aircraft Plant, Bashkiriya, in 1999. The Indian aircraft have 12-channel Kronshtadt GPS with Abris digital moving map and a 152x203mm AMLCD screen.

First flight of an Indian Ka-31 was on 16 May 2001, and by October 2001, the first two Indian airframes were delivered from KAPP to Kamov at Moscow for avionics installation. Flight trials were completed of the first two Indian aircraft by September 2002. The Indian Navy batch of was four priced at Rs4 billion (US$92 million) (2000), and the second five cost US$108 million (2001).
In October 2002, Kamov reported a second export customer for Ka-31s in addition to Indian Navy.

Ka-31 aboard Indian Navy frigate INS Tabar – June 1988

Ka-31
Crew: 2-3
Rotor diameter: 15.90m
Fuselage length: 11.30m
Height: 5.60m
Max take-off weight: 12500kg
Max speed: 255km/h
Cruising speed: 220km/h
Hovering ceiling: 3700m
Range with max fuel: 680km
Endurance: 1.5-2h

Kamov KA-252TB / Ka-29 / Ka-33

Ka-29

The Ka-27 came in four versions, the Ka-27, 28, 29, and 32. The Ka-29 and Ka-29TB are assault transport helicopters.
In 1973 in response to a Navy requirement the OKB started the design and construction of a transport/attack derivative of the Ka-27 – the Ka-29 shipboard helicopter. Deputy Chief Designer S.N.Fomin was entrusted with heading the design effort. Leading designer G.M.Danilochkin became his assistant, while B.V.Barshevsky was appointed leading engineer of the test programme.

Ka-252TB prototype (also known as Izdelie D2B or Izdelie 502) first flew 28 July 1976 with test pilot Ye.I.Laryushin at the controls, possibly with a Ka-25 nose or original narrow Ka-27/Ka-32 nose. Production at Kumertau (KAPP) from 1984.

Powered by two Klimov TV3-117VMA turboshafts, each of 1,633kW, the engines are started by APU and fuel tanks are filled with reticulated polyurethane foam for fire suppression. The Ka-29 has a wider flight deck than the Ka-27 for a crew of two. Three flat-plate windscreen glazings instead of a two-piece curved transparency, and 350kg of armour ia around the cockpit and engines. The main cabin has a port-side door, aft of the landing gear, divided honzontally into upward- and downward-opening sections. The lower section forming steps when open. The cabin can hold up to 16 assault troops, four stretcher patients, seven seated casualties and medical attendant in ambulance role, and with internal or slung cargo provisions.

The basic airframe is of the Ka-27 with a broader flight deck, and E-801 or E-801M (export) Oko (eye) early warning radar system by Radio Engineering Institute, Nizhny Novgorod, including large rotating radar antenna (area 6.0sq.m). It stows flat against underfuselage and deploys downward, turning through 90 degrees into vertical plane before starting to rotate at 6 rpm. The landing gear retracts upward to prevent interference, nosewheels into long fairings. Once the system has been switched on, the antenna extended and operation mode selected, data on air targets flying below the helicopter’s altitude are acquired, evaluated and transmitted automatically to command centre, requiring only two crew (pilot and navigator, latter monitoring – but not operating – the system) in the helicopter. The Ka-29 is fitted with a Kronshtadt Kabris GPS navigation and display system. Loiter speed is 100 to 120km/h at up to 3,500m; loiter duration 2h 30 min. Maximum surveillance radius is 100 to 150km for fighter-size targets, or 250km for surface vessels, with up to 20 targets tracked simultaneously. The antenna can be retracted manually or explosively jettisoned in the event of a forced landing.
Two large panniers were on the starboard side of cabin, fore and aft of the main landing gear on helicopter numbered 032 (forward panniers only on 031). The hatch window is deleted above the starboard rear pannier, and a new TA-8Ka APU positioned above the rear of the engine bay fairing, with slot-type air intake at the front of the housing, displacing the usual ESM and IR jamming pods, and gives the radar and antenna an independent power supply. Tyre size 620×180 on main wheels, 480×200 on nosewheels. Tailcone extended by fairing tor flight recorder; no armour, stores pylons or outriggers.

The Ka-29 armament in the Ka-29TB assault version comprised anti-tank guided missiles, gun pods, unguided rockets, free-fall bombs and submunitions dispensers. The transport version could accomodate 16 fully-armed troops or carry outsize loads weighing up to 4000kg on a sling and was armed with a rapid-firing 7.62-mm machine-gun.
Comparing the test results of the single-rotor Mi-24 and the co-axial Ka-29 equipped with the same models of sights, fixed gun armament and unguided rockets, weapon accuracy on the Ka-29 proved to be approximately twice as high. In 1987 G.M.Danilochkin was awarded the State Prize for his role in the development of the Ka-29’s weapons system.
Armament was a four-barrel Gatling-type GShG-7.62 7.62mm machine gun, with 1,800 rounds, flexibly mounted behind down ward-articulated door on starboard side of nose; four pylons on outriggers, for two four-round packs of 9M114 Shturm (AT-6 ‘Spiral’) ASMs and two UV-32-57 57 or B-8V20 80mm rocket pods. Alternative loads include four rocket packs, two pods each containing a 23mm gun and 250 rounds, or twn ZAB 500 incendiary bombs. Internal weapons bay for torpedo or bombs. Provision fur 30mm Type 2A42 gun above port outrigger, with 250-round ammunition feed from cabin.

The State acceptance trials were completed in May 1979 and production began in 1984.
The Ka-29 entered service with the Northern and Pacific Fleets in 1985 and were photographed on board the assault ship Ivan Rogov in the Mediterranean in 1987. At the time they were thought to be the Ka-27B and were given the NATO reporting name ‘Helix-B’. Identified as the Ka-29 combat transport at Frunze (Khodinka) Air Show, Moscow, August 1989.

The Ka-29TB (‘Helix-B’) armed derivative for day/night, VFR and IFR, transport and close support of seaborne assault troops has in-the-field conversion from one role to the other. With non-retractable landing gear and a 50cm wider armoured flight deck, the were reportedly used by the Experimental Combat Group in the Chechen War in 1996.
The Ka-33 is a civilianised version of Ka-29TB shipborne assault transport. The designation was revealed at the Moscow Air Show in August 1997.

The Ka-29RLD radar picket helicopter was developed as the Ka-31.

A total of 59 Ka-29s were built, for Russian Federation Naval Aviation (about 45) and Ukrainian Navy (about 12).

Ka-29
Engine: 2 x Klimov TV3-117V.
Instant pwr: 1642 kW.
Rotor dia: 15.9 m.
Length: 11.6m
Height: 5.40m
Empty weight: 5520kg
MTOW: 11,500 kg.
Payload: 2000 kg (external payload 4000 kg).
Max speed: 151 kt / 250km/h
Max cruise: 127 kts.
Range with 2000kg payload: 460km
Range with max fuel: 740km
HOGE: 12,131 ft.
Service ceiling: 14,098 ft / 5000m
Crew: 2
Pax: 16

Ka-29

Kamov Ka-27 / Ka-28

Ka-27

The design process started in 1969, with the prototype first flown on 24 December 1973, replacing the Ka-25 Hormone ship-borne helicopter, the Ka-27 Helix entered service in 1980 and was first observed on the Soviet destroyer Udaloy in September 1981, entering operational service in 1983 aboard the Admiral Kuznetsov Aircraft Carrier or the Peter the Great Nuclear Cruiser.

The design of the Ka-27 is very similar in its external appearance to the previous Ka-25, as it must be accommodated in the same hangars as its predecessor.

Aircraft Carrier Admiral Kuznetsov

The blades of the main rotors have three blades each. It has two Isotov turbines of 2,225 HP each, mounted on the upper part of the pilot’s cabin. In the event that a turbine fails, it has a transmission mechanism, which is coupled with the turbine shaft that maintains its power and allows the two rotors to rotate at the same time for a few minutes, in order to land.

The rear of the fuselage features two tail stabilizers.
It has a four-wheel landing gear, the front wheels free to rotate so that it can be easily maneuvered on the deck and the two rear wheels can also rotate, making it easier to handle in the internal hangars. During flight the landing gear is retracted and in the Templar alert versions, a large rotating antenna is deployed in the lower part of the fuselage.

It also has an external winch.

The Ka-27 retains the Hormone’s coaxial counter-rotating rotor arrangement for com¬pactness, but features an enlarged fuselage, increased fuel, two 1,660kW (2,170 s.h.p.) Isotov TV3-117BK turbo-shafts, a redesigned tail, and all-weather avionics. Broadly based on the Ka-25, the Ka-27 features redesigned broader chord rotor blades, strengthened transmissions and undercarriage, and two tail fins.

At least 16 were observed on the former ‘Kiev’ class carrier/cruiser Novorossiysk 1983, during replacement of Ka-25s with Ka-27s.

Three versions of the Ka-27 were initially identified; Helix A, the ASW variant with under-nose search radar, dipping sonar, sonobuoys, and towed MAD; Helix B, an infantry assault version; and Helix C, a SAR helicopter with additional fuel tanks and rescue hoist.

Manufactured by KUMAPE, the Ka-27 came in four versions, the Ka-27, 28, 29, and 32. The Ka-27 is a naval helicopter, having two variants, the Ka-27PL which are used in pairs for anti-submarine use, and the Ka-27PS which is used for search and rescue. The Ka-28 is an (ASW) export version of the
ka-27PL. The Ka-29 and Ka-29TB are assault transport helicopters. The Ka-32T is a utility transport helicopter, and the 32S is a utility version for operating in adverse weather. The 32K is a flying crane version of the Ka-27.
Modern variants include the Ka-31 airborne early warning helicopter equipped with the E801M Oko (Eye) air and sea surveillance radar

A crew of three are pilot, tactical coordinator, and ASW systems operator and most versions have a ventral weapons bay for two torpedoes, four depth charges, or other stores.

Variants:

Ka-27K
Prototype for anti-submarine warfare.

Ka-28 Helix-A
Ka-27PL for export customers with 1,618kW / 2170shp TV3-117BK turboshafts and 3,680kg of fuel in 12 tanks. Ka-32 type broad cockpit door and bulged windows.

Ka-27E
Version for exploration in areas of radioactive contamination.

Ka-27PL Helix-A
Ka-27 for anti-submarine missions with extended cockpit with additional windows and three crew, enlarged belly weapons bay for four torpedoes and upgraded electronics suite. Russian navy Ka-27PLs carry Kh-35 anti-ship missiles. Normally operated in pairs, one tracking hostile submarine, other dropping depth charges.

Ka-27PS Helix-D
ASR version of Ka-27, As Ka-27PL without weapons bay, rescue winch, external fuel tanks, searchlight and other rescue equipment.

Ka-27PSD
PS version with extended range.

Ka-27PV
Armored version of the 27PS.

Ka-28
Export version of the Ka-27PL.

Specifications:

Ka-27
Engines: 2 × Isotov, 1,660 kW (2,225 HP)
Rotor diameter: 15.8m
Empty weight: 6,500kg
Loaded weight: 11,000kg
Useful load: 4,000kg
Maximum operating speed: 270km/h
Cruising speed: 205km/h
Range: 980km
Service ceiling: 5,000m
Machine guns:1 × GShG-7.62 rotary four-barrel, 1,800 rounds.
Cannons: 1 × 2A42 30mm
External supports: 4

Ka-27
Engine: 2 x Klimov TV3-117.
Instant pwr: 1642 kW.
Rotor dia: 15.9 m.
Fuselage length: 11.3 m.
Height: 5.4m
No. Blades: 2 x 3.
Disc Area: 199 sq.m
MTOW: 12,600 kg.
Payload: 4000 kg.
Max speed: 146 kt / 270km/h
Max cruise: 124 kts.
Cruising speed: 230km/h
HOGE: 12,131 ft.
Service ceiling: 19,672 ft / 4300m
Range: 850 km.
Endurance: 4.5h
Crew: 2-3
Pax: 16.

KA-27PS
Engine: 2 x Klimov TV3-117.
Instant pwr: 1642 kW.
Rotor dia: 15.9 m.
MTOW: 11,000 kg.
Max speed: 146 kts.
Max cruise: 124 kts.
Max range (max pax): 750 km.
HOGE: 12,131 ft.
Service ceiling: 19,672 ft.
Crew: 1.
Pax: 12.

Ka-27
Ka-27

Kamov Ka-25

Originally from an urgent requirement placed in 1958, in the 1960s it became clear that from the Ka-20 helicopter Kamov’s bureau, under chief engineer Barshevsky, had developed the standard ship-based machine of the Soviet fleets, replacing the Mi-4. Designated Ka-25 and allotted the new Western code name of “Hormone”, it was in service in at least five major versions, with numerous sub-types, including the Hormone A (ship-based ASW), Hormone B (over-the-horizon-targetting) and Hormone C (SAR). The air to surface missiles carried by the Ka 20 demonstrator did not appear on the Ka 25. The most obvious external differences be¬tween Harp and Hormone are a strengthening of the undercarriage, with the addition of a second strut, and a slight redesign of the vertical tail surfaces.

Kamov Ka-25 Article

For the first time, Kamov designers fitted a rotary-wing aircraft with a mission avionics suite and weapons system which allowed the helicopter to navigate above water surface devoid of any reference points and fulfill the task of locating and destroying a submarine, both in manual and automatic mode. During prototype construction the designers – for the first time in OKB history – had to adapt it to the ship. The Ka-25’s take-off weight increased 5-fold compared to that of the Ka-15 for an increase in dimensions by a factor of only 1.6. To reduce the rotor-craft’s dimensions for hangar stowage during cruise, the designers created an electromechanical rotor blade folding system. This made the helicopter quite compact with the overall length with the blades folded was only 11.0m.

Powered by two GTD-3F turboshaft engines developed by V.A.Glushenkov, the Ka-25 first flew in 1961 with test pilot D.K.Yefremov at the controls. The Ka-25 was shown in Soviet Aviation Day flypast, Tushino Airport, Moscow, July 1961, carrying two dummy Air-to-Surface Missiles (ASMs not fitted to production aircraft), entering active service in 1965.
The engines are above the cabin and external mounting of operational equipment and auxiliary fuel leaves the interior uncluttered. Two 671kW Glushenkov GTD-3F turboshafts, mounted side by side above cabin, forward of rotor driveshaft, were on early aircraft and later aircraft have 738kW GTD-3BM turboshafts. There is independent fuel supply to each engine, and provision for carrying external fuel tanks on each side of cabin.
Equipment includes an autopilot tailored to deck operations and hover, twin-gyro platform and Doppler, duplicated HF, VHF, UHF, night lighting plus strobe, radio compass, radar altimeter, IFF and four passive RWRs.
Definitive Ka-25 prototypes incorporated anti-corrosion structure, cabin housing mission equipment. NII testing 1963-69. Rotors with lubricated hinges and aluminium blades with nitrogen-pressure crack warning, hydraulic control, alcohol deicing and auto blade folding. Forward-facing electrically heated inlets, lateral plain (no IR protection) exhausts, and rear drive to rotors and to large cooling fan for oil radiator served by circular aft-facing inlet above rear fuselage. Airframe entirely dural stressed-skin, mainly flush-riveted but incorporating some bonding and sandwich panels. Main fuselage devoted to payload; side-by-side dual control nose cockpit with sliding door on each side. Entry to main cabin is via a rearward-sliding door to rear of main landing gear on port side. The main cabin is 1.5m wide, 1.25m high and 3.95m long with sliding door on left and access at front to cockpit, and much of underfloor volume occupied by left right groups of tanks filled by left-side pressure connection. Cable fairing along right side of cabin. Short boom for tailplane with elevators and central fin and toed-in tip fins carrying rudders. Latter used mainly in autorotation, yaw control by pedals applying differential collective; mixer box holds total rotor thrust constant to reduce workload eg landing on pitching deck. Rotors not designed for negative-g. Two castoring front wheels (tyres 400×150) on vertical short strut with rear brace pivoted to fuselage to swing up and out to rear out of radar FOV. Two sprag-braked main wheels (600×180) each on vertical strut able to swing vertically on parallel V-struts pivoted to fuselage for same reason; landing loads reacted by diagonal shock retraction strut. Each wheel fitted for rapid-inflation buoyancy collar.
The Ka-25’s flight test programme revealed that each type of warship had its peculiarities as far as pitching and rolling characteristics and airflow over the deck were concerned. Development of methods of helicopter landings on ships of different categories in daytime and at night with the ship under way and at rest, as well as water landing techniques, was accomplished by test pilots V.M.Yevdokimov and N.P.Bezdetnov. They conducted a large amount of test work with a view to evaluating the automatic engine control system, mastering single-engine piloting techniques and making engine-out landings in autorotation mode without a landing run.

The State acceptance trials of the Ka-25 were completed in 1968.

Ka-25Ts Hormone B

At its own initiative, the OKB made an attempt to build a civil derivative of the Ka-25 – the Ka-25K intended for cargo and passenger transportation and for flying crane operations. In 1967 the Ka-25K prototype was successfully demonstrated in the static display and in flight at the Le Bourget / Paris Air Show in 1967. It had an extensively glazed gondola under the nose (in place of the fairing for the search radar of the military version), with a rearward-facing operator’s cockpit suspended under the forward fuselage for controlling the machine during operations with slung loads. A hatch was provided in the cabin floor for a cable to be lowered by winch. The cabin could take either a maximum load of 2000kg, 12 passengers or four stretchers and an attendant.
The engines, a pair of 900shp Glushenkov GTD-3 turboshafts, are mounted side-by- side forward of the transmission.
Design work on the Ka-25K was led by deputy chief designer I.A.Ehrlikh; the leading designer was S.V.Mikheyev. Although intended primarily as a flying crane, the Ka-25K can also be used as a conventional transport helicopter. In this role the chin gondola is removed, and the load is accommodated in the large hold. The floor has nine lash-down points for freight, which can be loaded through a sliding door in the left side.
Alternatively, up to 12 passengers can be carried on tip-up seats along the sides of the hold.
This variant was not put into production or service.

Two versions of the helicopter were designed in parallel: the Ka-25PL and the Ka-25Ts. The former is a submarine hunter equipped with weapons, the latter is a reconnaissance platform tasked with seeking out surface targets and designating them to the powerful artillery and rockert weapons placed on ships and at coastal bases. The airframe, rotor system and powerplant of these helicopters were designed with a maximum degree of commonality.

The Ka-25PL was exported to India, Syria, Bulgaria, Vietnam and Yugoslavia.

The Ka-25Ts (“Hormone-B”) special electronics version provides over-the-horizon target acquisition for ship-launched cruise missiles including SS-N-3B (NATO “Shaddock”) from “Kresta I” cruisers, SS-N-12 (“Sandbox”) from “Kiev” and “Slava” class cruisers, SS-N-19 (“Shipwreck”) from battle cruisers Kirov and Frunze, and SS-N-22 (“Sunburn”) from “Sovremenny” class destroyers. “Kiev” and “Kirov” class ships each carry three “Hormone-Bs”, other classes one; larger undernose radome (NATO “Big Bulge”) than Ka-25BSh, with spherical undersurface; cylindrical radome under rear cabin for datalink; when radar operates, all landing gear wheels can retract upward to minimise interference to emissions; cylindrical fuel container each side of lower fuselage.

The four landing wheels are each surrounded by a buoyancy bag ring which can be swiftly inflated by the gas bottles just above it. The traditional Kamov layout with superimposed coaxial rotors redu¬ces disc diameter, and automatic blade folding is provided for stowage in small hangars. The four ¬legged landing gear is specially tailo¬red to operation from pitching decks, each leg having an optional quick-infl¬ating flotation bag. The rear legs can be raised vertically, on their pivoted bracing struts, to lift the wheels out of the vision of the search radar always fitted under the nose.

NATO recognises two distinct variants of the Ka-25, and two radars have been identif¬ied. The smaller type is carried by the Hormone A variant on ASW missions; this model also has a towed MAD bird, dipping sonar, electro optical sensor (and possibly others), and an optional right side box of sonobuoys. Basically a ship-based and antisubmarine version operating from cruisers of the Kresta and Kara classes, Moskva and Leningrad carrier/cruisers and Kiev and Minsk ASW cruisers. The Moskva and Leningrad carrier/cruisers can carry about 18 Ka-25s; the larger Kiev and Minsk, about 30. Those of the Kara class carry three and the Kresta four (Kresta I) or five (Kresta II). Some models have been seen with different types of fairings. Some have big hatches beneath the fuselage, enclosing a bay for antisubmarine torpedoes, nuclear depth charges or other types of weapons.

A larger radar is fitted to the Hormone¬-B for electronic countermeasures, which is believed to be able to guide the SS N 12 ‘Sandbox’ cruise missile fired from friendly surface ships and, especially, submarines. Many other equipment items include a cylindrical container under the rear of the cabin and a streamlined pod under the tail.

Hormone-A has a search radar in a large fairing under the nose, and a towed magnetic anomaly detector (MAD), while a dipping sonar is housed in a compartment at the rear of the cabin. The helicopter also has electro-optical sensors.
The Hormone-B has no ventral loading doors.

The first ocean cruise of the Ka-25 took place in April-September 1967. The helicopter operated from the flight deck of the “Tobol” mothership, having logged 100 flight hours during the cruise. Deployment of helicopters on ships – both singly and in groups – was subjected to a very stringent testing on ships of various types, including the ASW cruisers “Moskva” and “Leningrad”.
The Ka-25 ensured the navigation of ships in the Polar North, operating from the nuclear-powered icebreaker “Sibir”. At the time, this task could only be tackled by the Ka-25 fitted with modern avionics, including a 360 degree search radar.

In 1982 Ka 25s were seen with¬out flotation gear but with a long ventral box housing (it is believed) a long wire guided torpedo. All Ka 25s have a large cabin normally provided with 12 folding seats additional to those for the crew of two pilots plus three sys¬tems operators. About 460 of all variants were built by 1975, and the type continued to play an important part in Soviet naval operations in 1989, operat¬ing from destroyers, cruisers, helicop¬ter carriers (18 are believed to be car¬ried on each of the two ships Moskva and Leningrad) and aircraft carriers (Kiev and Minsk each accommodate 16 ‘Hormone A’ and three ‘Hormone B’ helicopters). Ka-25s were used aboard the Kresta and Kara class cruisers and from shore bases.
The type has also been exported for ship and land based op¬erations.

The Hor¬mone C search and rescue helicopter is based on the ‘Hormone A’ without the latter’s mission equipment. The Ka-25C was utilised in vertical replenishment as well as search and rescue operations.
In all, 18 different modifications of the Ka-25 were designed and built, including the Ka-25PL basic ASW version, the Ka-25Ts over-the-horizon (OTH) targeting version, the Ka-25PS SAR version, the Ka-25BT mine countermeasures version, the civil Ka-25K flying crane etc.

Versions of the Ka-25 were in service with the armed forces of India (5), Russian Federation (65), Syria (5), Ukraine (18), Vietnam (5), and Yugoslavia.
12 Soviet Navy Ka-25BTs took part in minesweeping operations in the Suez Gulf.

Total production 1966-75 about 460.

Ka-25F

As early as 1968, when N.I.Kamov was still alive, the OKB joined the competition of design studies for an Army assault/transport helicopter. The Kamov contender was a derivative of the Ka-25 designated Ka-25F featuring a redesigned fuselage and skid undercarriage. The armament comprised a 23-mm GSh-23 cannon with 400 rounds in a chin turret, six UB-16-57 rocket pods with 57-mm unguided rockets, six “Falanga” (Solifuge) anti-tank guided missiles, and bombs. The Ka-25F project received a positive appraisal from the Air Force’s research institutes but lost out to the competing Mi-24 helicopter.

Versions:

Ka-25B (“Hormone-A”)
Ship-based anti-submarine helicopter, operated from former Soviet Navy missile frigates, cruisers, helicopter carriers and carrier/cruisers of “Kiev” class; major shortcoming is lack of automatic hover capability, preventing night and adverse weather use of dipping sonar. Replaced progressively by Ka-27PL (“Helix-A”).

Ka-25BSh
ASW version. I/J-band search radar with 360 degree scan in flat-bottom radome under nose, box for three vertical sonobuoys can be clipped aft on right side. Oka-2 dipping sonar at aft end of fuselage on centerline or (seldom fitted) APM-60 MAD sensor in pod on pylon under tail, large ESM receiver drum above boom with optional ADF sense blister immediately to rear, EO viewing port under boom, upgraded EW suite. Weapon bay 0.9m wide under centerline, initially with two bulged doors, later as largely external rectangular box, tailored mainly to two AS torpedoes (originally 450mm calibre) with wire reel on left side of fuselage; alternatively nuclear or conventional depth charges or other stores, max 1.9t. Replaced in CIS Navy by Ka-27PL, but serves with India, former Yugoslavia, Syria and Vietnam. ASCC “Hormone-A”.

Ka-25BShZ
Equipped to tow minesweeping gear.

Ka-25PL
Version developed to replace Ka-25B as ship-based anti-submarine helicopter.

Ka-25PS (“Hormone-C”)
Search and rescue version with special role equipment, including hoist. No weapon bay, radar as BSh, normal equipment includes winch, 12 seats, provision for stretchers and aux tanks; options include nose quad Yagi antenna for homing receiver, ESM, searchlight and loudspeaker. Replaced by Ka-27PS.

Ka-25Ts (“Hormone-B”)
Special electronics version, providing over-the-horizon target acquisition for ship-launched cruise missiles. ASW and ESM equipment and weapon bay omitted, internal fuel increased, OTH targeting and cruise-missile guidance radar with large elliptical (instead of rectangular) scanner reflector in bulged radome, secure data link to surface fleet including small antenna in vertical cylinder under rear centerline of fuselage.

Ka-25K
Single civil prototype (SSSR-21110) 1966 with gondola under lengthened nose for controlling 2t slung load; elec-deiced blades, option 12 passenger seats. No ASCC name.

Specifications:

Engines: 2 x Glushenkov GTD-3F turboshaft, 662kW / 900-shp
Rotor diameter: 15.74m / 51.64 ft
Fuselage length: 9.75m / 32 ft
Fuselage width: 12.35 ft
Height: 5.37 m / 17.61 ft
Max take-off weight: 7100kg / 16,500 lb
Empty weight: 4100kg
Max speed: 220km/h / 113 kts
Cruising speed: 200km/h
Service ceiling: 3500m / 11,500 ft
Range: 400km / 217 nm
Internal payload: 1500kg
External payload: 2000kg
Crew: 1-2

Engines: 2 x Glushenkov GTD-313M free-turbine turboshaft, 900 hp.
Main rotor diameter (both) 51 ft 8 in (15.75 m)
Fuselage length, about 34 ft (10.36 m)
Height 17 ft 8 in (5.4 m)
EmptyWeight: about 11,023 lb (5000 kg)
Maxi¬mum loaded weight 16,535 lb (7500 kg)
Maximum speed 120 mph (193 kph)
Service ceiling, about 11 000 ft (3350 m)
Range with exter¬nal tanks 650 km (405 miles)
Armament: one or two 400 mm AS torpedoes nuclear or other stores, internal.

Engines: 2 x GTD-3F turboshaft, 728kW
Rotor diameter: 15.74m
Fuselage length: 9.75m
Height: 5.37m
Max take-off weight: 7200kg
Empty weight: 4765kg
Max speed: 220km/h
Cruising speed: 180km/h
Service ceiling: 3500m
Range: 450km
Crew: 2-3

KA-25Ts Hormone B

Kamov Ka-20

To meet a Soviet Naval Air Force specification in the late fifties for an antisubmarine helicopter for ship or shore-based use, the Kamov bureau developed a helicopter powered by twin turbines installed side-by-side above the cabin, with two three-bladed coaxial, contra-rotating rotors as on their other aircraft. It was first seen at the Tushino air display in July 1961 and was assigned the NATO reporting name Harp.

The Harp was characterized by a large radome under the nose and a fairing beneath the tail boom. The armament consisted of two fixed machine guns in the nose and two small missiles at the sides of the fuselage.

The Ka 20 was later developed as the Ka 25 shipboard and shore-based antisubmarine helicopter. Despite the small number of changes made in the transition from prototype to production standard, the reporting name Harp was not continued, the Ka 25 being allocated the name Hormone.

Rotor diameter: 15.74 m (51ft 8 in)
Length: 9.83 m (32ft 3 in)
Weight: 7300 kg (16 100 lb)
Powerplant: 2900 shp Glushenkov GTD 3 turboshafts
Range: 400 km (250 miles)
Maximum speed: 220 km/h (137 mph)

Kamov A-7

This autogyro designed by Kamov was considerably more stream-lined than its predecessors. The rotor had three blades, the fuselage was completely covered by a light alloy skin and the landing gear was streamlined.
A later version, the A-7-3, which had two small fins below the stabilizer, was used during the last war for some observation missions.
Kamov created the only (in the World) armed autogyro (A-7-3) that saw (limited) combat action.

Kaman H-2 Seasprite

SH-2G(NZ)

The basic Seasprite design won a US Navy design competition during 1956 for a high performance, all-weather, multi-role utility helicopter, then designated the HU2K-1. The prototype Seasprite first flew on July 2, 1959 and an initial contract was for four prototypes and twelve production Kaman helicopters, now known as the UH-2A and given the name Seasprite. The initial production UH-2A models were powered by one engine, however, they were equipped for IFR operations and a total of 88 were ultimately built. The UH-2B was VFR equipped and 102 in total were built with fully retractable forward mounted main landing gears.

Kaman H-2 Seasprite Article

The UH-2A and UH-2B could each carry a 1814 kg (4,000 1b) slung load or 11 passengers, and work in planeguard, SAR, fleet reconnaissance, vertrep (vertical replenishment) and utility transport duties, operating from many surface warships as well as at shore bases.
The UH-2C, a re-definition of the UH¬2 and UH-2B, was the first to be fitted with two engines.
From 1967 Kaman converted of 88 earlier SH-2D Seasprites to the SH-2F version in May 1973. The SH¬2F “Super Seasprite” has “up-rated” engines and the LAMPS system (light airborne multi¬purpose system). Fifty-two new SH-2Fs were delivered from 1981. Deliveries of the SH-2F version began in May 1973 after completion of 190 early-model UH-2A/B SAR helicopters. Before manufacture was suspended 88 SH-2Fs were built. Deliveries from resumed production began in 1983, and Seasprites delivered after October 1985 have an increased gross weight of 6,124kg, compared with the 5,805kg of earlier SH-2Fs.
With a crew comprising pilot, co pilot and sensor operator, the SH 2F can carry MASW gear including Canadian Marconi LN 66HP surveillance radar, towed ‘bird’ for the AN/ASQ 18 MAD, AN/ALR 64 passive detection receiver, Difar passive and Dicass active sonobuoys, and comprehensive nav/com and display systems. The 4,000 1b (1814 kg) cargo ability remains, and a 600 1b (272 kg) rescue hoist is standard.
Production of the twin-turbine SH-2F Seasprite Mk.1 light airborne multipurpose system (Lamps I) restarted in 1982, to meet a US Navy requirement for up to 60 helicopters to equip vessels too small for the SH-60B Seahawk. Up to FY1986 54 new-build SH-2Fs had been authorised, and six more were requested in FY1987. These will join some 79 SH-2Fs from earlier production which were still in service at the beginning of 1986, some of which were upgraded SH-2Ds. Ten new SH-2Fs were delivered in 1986.
A re-engined version of the Seasprite, the YSH-2G, flew on April 2, 1985, powered by two General Electric T700 turboshafts similar to those used in the SH-60B and giving improved range, reliability, and maintainability. Evaluation of the prototype YSH-2G was completed in 1985. In general terms, the SH-2G is a retrofit of the SH-2F model.
The heart of the SH-2G(NZ)’s weapons platform is its Litton ASN-150/1553B tactical data system, APS-143 (V) 3 radar, Doppler APN-217 (V) 6 radar, FUR Systems AAQ-22 forward-looking infrared system, and Litton Amecon LR-100 electronic support measures ESM sensor system. These systems are operated from the two pilot analogue cockpit, with the observer (air¬borne warfare officer) occupying the left-hand seat. The helicopter’s missions are primarily surface sur¬veillance and anti-surface warfare, where the helicopter will conduct surveillance tracking and targeting and, if necessary, engage surface targets, but it is also capable of sub-surface weapon delivery and utility support, including search and rescue, replenishment, medical evacuation, naval gunfire spotting and troop transport for boarding operations.

SH-2G(A) Super Seasprite

In May 2006 the Royal Australian Navy’s fleet of 11 SH-2G(A) Super Seasprite was grounded with problems with their avionics and electronics systems. Service entry had been delayed by five years due to serious systems integration and software problems.

H-2 experiments included stub wings serving as sponsons and gunship version with Minigun chin turret among other weapons.

Kaman Aerosystems, are powered by two General Electric T700 turbines rated at 1,600 hp each. Measuring 16 meters in overall length with a 13.5-meter rotor diameter, they have a maximum take-off weight of 6,441 kg, a range of approximately 275 nautical miles, and a maximum endurance of around two hours and 45 minutes. Capable of reaching airspeeds near 130 KCAS, they feature a standard crew of three: a pilot, an observer responsible for warfare and mission coordination, and a helicopter loadmaster managing utility operations. Armament options include Penguin anti-ship missiles, Mk 46 torpedoes, and a door-mounted MAG 58 machine gun.

The SH-2G lineage traces its origins to the United States, where the type was developed in the 1980s as a modernized version of the SH-2F for use on naval vessels unable to accommodate larger helicopters like the SH-60B Seahawk. The SH-2G introduced more powerful engines, a reinforced upper fuselage, and improved avionics, including an Integrated Tactical Avionics System (ITAS) and digital automatic flight controls. Despite its eventual phaseout in the U.S. by 2001, the type continued to serve internationally, including with the Egyptian, Polish, and Peruvian navies.

The SH-2G(I)’s design emphasizes multi-role capability, supporting missions such as over-the-horizon surveillance using radar and FLIR systems, anti-ship strike with guided missiles, underwater warfare with torpedoes, as well as disaster response, medevac, and transport operations.

SH-2G(I)

Gallery

UH-2A
Engine: 1 x GE T58-GE-8B, 1250-hp.

UH-2C
Engine: 2 x T58-GE-8B.

HH-2D
Engines: 2 x General Electric T58 GE 8F turboshafts, 1,350 hp each.
Length: 38 ft 4 in.
Rotor dia: 44 ft.
Speed: 168 mph.
Ceiling: 22,500 ft.
Range: 445 miles.

SH-2F Seasprite
Engine: 2 x GE T58 8F turboshafts, 1,350 shp (1007 kW).
Installed pwr: 2041 kW.
Rotor dia: 13.4 m (44 ft 0 in).
Main rotor disc area 141.25 sq.m (1,521.0 sq ft).
Fuselage length: 12.3 m (40 ft 6 in), (folded): 11.7 m.
Height: 4.72 m (15 ft 6 in).
No. Blades: 4.
Empty wt: 3193 kg (7,040 lb).
MTOW: 6033 kg (13,300 lb).
Max speed: 265 km/h (165 mph).
ROC: 744 m/min.
Ceiling: 6860 m.
HIGE: 5670 m.
HOGE: 4695 m.
Fuel cap (+aux): 1500 lt ( 455 lt ).
Range max¬ internal fuel: 680 km (422 miles).
Crew: 3.
Armament: one or two AS torpedoes (usually Mk 46).

SH-2G Super Seasprite
Engine: 2 x GE T700-401.
Instant pwr: 1259 kW.
Rotor dia: 13.41 m.
MTOW: 6124 kg.
Payload: 2107 kg.
Useful load: 987 kg.
Max speed: 141 kts.
Max cruise: 136 kts.
Max range: 869 km.
HIGE: 17,600 ft.
HOGE: 14,600 ft.
Service ceiling: 20,400 ft.
Crew: 3.
Pax: 8.

SH-2G(NZ)
Engines: 2 x T700 GE-401 gas turbines of up to 1723 shp each, plus one Garret GTCP36-150 APU.

Kaman H-43 Huskie

The engine of the HH-43F Huskie drives twin inter-meshing rotors that cross above the fuselage. It has a tail and large, rear-facing fuselage door.

Kaman H-43 Huskie Article

The H-43 was designed extremely compact because it’s inter-meshing rotors. Between 1958 and 1965 some 365 were built.

By late 1960s well over 200 H-43 Huskie turbine-powered rescue helicopters were serving with the USAF.

Kaman HH 43 B Husky
Engine: Lycoming T53-L-1B, 848 shp
Length: 25.164 ft / 7.67 m
Height: 12.598 ft / 3.84 m
Rotor diameter: 47.014 ft / 14.33 m
Max take off weight: 9161.8 lb / 4155.0 kg
Max. speed: 104 kts / 193 kph
Service ceiling: 25000 ft / 7620 m
Range: 240 nm / 445 km
Crew: 1+8

HH-43F
Engine: Lycoming T53-L-11A turboshaft, 1150 hp.
Crew. 2.

Kaman HTK-1

Ordered into production for the U.S. Navy at the same time as the HOK-1“off the drawing board “, the HTK-1 also uses the Kaman system of inter-meshing rotors, controlled through servo flaps.

The HTK-1 was delivered to the U.S. Navy as trainer/ambulance, and also adopted as remote-controlled drone. For ambulance work it can carry a stretcher and medical attendant in its cabin, and two casualties on Stokes litters externally, one on each side.

One HTK-1 has been fitted experimentally with two Boeing T50 gas turbines.

Boeing YT-50-BO-1 powered

During 1958, Kaman completed a research project in which this HTK-1 was flown on electric power. The 240 hp Lycoming engine was replaced by an electric motor of equivalent power, connected to a ground power source by cable.

HTK-1 electric
HTK-1 Huskie BuNo. 129313 C/N 422

Twenty-nine HTK-1s were built between 1951 and 1953. Powered by a 240 hp Lycoming O-435-4 piston engine, they served with the Navy at Pensacola until 1957.

HTK-1 Huskie BuNo. 129313 C/N 422

Engine: 235 h.p. Lycoming O-435-4
Rotor dia.: 40 ft
Fuselage length: 23 ft
Max Weight: 2,750 lb
Max. Speed: 75 mph
Ceiling: 10,000 ft
Typical range: 194 miles at 70 mph with full load
Seats: 3