Do you remember another so called stealth helicopter which ended up in somebody`s backyard? (Ed.)
How the UK had a stealth attack helicopter design proposal almost a decade before the US RAH-66 Comanche. Former Leonardo Helicopters Chief Engineer on the Merlin Mk3 and Apache, JEREMY GRAHAM FRAeS reveals archive details of this never-before publicised Westland Helicopters low observable chopper proposal from the 1980s that have just come to light.
How the UK had a stealth attack helicopter design proposal almost a decade before the US RAH-66 Comanche. Former Leonardo Helicopters Chief Engineer on the Merlin Mk3 and Apache, JEREMY GRAHAM FRAeS reveals archive details of this never-before publicised Westland Helicopters low observable chopper proposal from the 1980s that have just come to light.
Image of one
configuration of the WG 47 stealth attack helicopter that was studied by
Westland as a private confidential proposal for the UK MoD requirements. Note
that this is not the final WG 47 configuration described in the text below
(Leonardo MW).
In 1984 the Westland Future Projects
team proposed a solution to GST 3971, the “Light Attack Helicopter”, based on
the Lynx/W30 dynamics family and identified as WG 44. This was the first of
several AH proposals that incorporated low observable technologies across the
broad spectrum of detectable signatures. These technologies in themselves
derived from company experience with unmanned aircraft system design completed
for projects SUPERVISOR and PHOENIX in the period 1977 to 1983.
The definitive development of the
low observable AH project, by then identified as WG 47, was completed in 1987,
as a confidential private venture activity running in parallel with the
multi-national A129 LAH study led by Agusta but supported by Westland, Fokker,
MBB and CASA. The WG 47 configuration defined an aircraft having a faceted
fuselage with internal weapons, twin canted tail rotors and the pilot in the
front seat of a tandem cockpit. Engine, environmental and cooling systems
exhausts were integrated into a side-exiting infra-red suppressor and the
cockpit transparencies were angled outward to eliminate optical glint to the
horizon.
The
Boeing-Sikorsky RAH-66 Comanche was cancelled in 2004. (Boeing)
Many of these design solutions
presaged the US Army RAH-66 Comanche helicopter which was first shown in public
at its roll-out in 1995. Some of the fuselage shaping principles developed for
the AH studies were proposed by Westland for NH90 during the multi-national
Feasibility and Cost Definition Study involving France, Germany, the UK and
Holland: the production aircraft retains these features to this day.
The current NH90 helicopter
incorporates fuselage shaping to reduce detectability. (Airbus)
An exclusive full
article on this previously confidential Westlands helicopter project, only now
unearthed in the company archives, by Jeremy Graham FRAeS will appear in a
forthcoming edition of AEROSPACE magazine.
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