Russia has come ever closer to churning out of the world’s first modular helicopter entirely created by digital 3D technologies, the much expected Ka-226T. The aircraft is poised to add new kudos and global recognition to the renowned family of the Kamov bureau’s unsurpassed multipurpose “trusty beasts.”
“We are creating a vehicle capable
of responding to the most demanding requirements of the customer,” JSC
Kamov General Designer Sergei Mikheev said about the vehicle,
underscoring that the aircraft “inherits the tried-and-true functional
platform created for many years to come,” so efficiently embodied in the
earlier Ka-26, Ka-126 and Ka-226 machines.
Imagine you could turn your car into a powerful off-roader or a fancy
Formula-1 racer or even a presidential limousine by replacing a couple
of details within 40 minutes. Sounds cool? That’s the way the Ka-226T is
designed.
Its modular construction principle means that the basic “flying
chassis” vehicle is adjusted for specific needs by adding special
components, which make it a strong player in the following fields:• personnel and cargo transportation by means of an internal or external sling;
• rescue and search operations;
• medical aid and evacuation;
• police and patrol missions;
• training.
By default, the helicopter is augmented with a medical module, allowing it to be used for transportation and administering aid to persons in need. But within some 30 or 40 minutes it can be replaced with equipment for cargo delivery, Kamov’s Denis Kalinin said while demonstrating one of the helicopters to journalists.
“The modular construction provides great
commercial savings for the customer who purchases the platform. The
single platform provides the opportunity to engage in businesses and
make more money. It is actually one platform and several helicopters,”
explained Dmitry Shvets, the Ka-226T program director.
He specified that the helicopter could be weaponized but such an
option would require the approval of Russia’s state arms trader,
Rosoboronexport.Why Hardly Any Chopper Can Hold a Candle to the Ka-226T
The multi-functionality feature of the chopper does not in any way adversely affect quality and performance when they are combined by Kamov, and this principle works well beyond the unparalleled Ka-52 scout and attack aircraft. The Ka-226T boasts Kamov’s signature coaxial system of rotor blades made from composite materials, which are “a unique know-how in the world and provide the best aerodynamic characteristics,” Mikheev emphasized.
The coaxial scheme enables easy piloting and advanced maneuvering, scraps the tail rotor as unnecessary and therefore increases safety, and also makes the helicopter more compact in comparison with analogues that possess a tail rotor. In addition, the rotor blades are foldable, which also saves space, adds to maintenance, and gives the vehicle a shipborne option.
“Imagine 18 meter-per-second gusts of wind.
While single-rotor helicopters cannot operate in such conditions, they
pose absolutely no obstacle for the Ka-226T, which has been proven
by numerous tests and competitions,” Kalinin said adding that “all
pilots from single-rotor machines can easily fly the new Russian
chopper.”
He echoed Mikheev who had pointed out that “the cockpit with wide
windows provides an excellent view and the helicopter can handle
critical mistakes in piloting” – that is why such machines are used
to train Ka-52 pilots.
So the helicopter’s controllability, combined with its outstanding
maximum rate of climb (11m/s), service ceiling (6,500 meters), the skill
of operating in temperatures ranging from —50°C to 50°C and a host
of other features make it “indispensable for tackling the outcomes
of natural and technogenic disasters,” Shvets outlined. The durable and
compact Ka-226T is ready for missions in adverse weather conditions,
densely built-up urban areas, mountainous terrain and does not require
hangar storage.Pioneer of Helicopters’ New Era
The Ka-226T was designed and manufactured from scratch without the use of any documents on paper. All calculations before actual physical assembly were conducted via digital 3D modelling.
According to Dmitry Shvets, this approach considerably saves the designers’ time, while Oleg Zheltov, the Head of the Kamov Development Design Bureau, paid attention to the fact that “at the very early stages of design we are able to identify faults, mistakes and inconsistencies that, if we didn’t follow the digital path, would appear only at the final stages of production. It concerns aerodynamics, durability. The digital principle cuts down technical risks which could affect the dateline of the contract implementation.”
Kamov’s digital working sphere is encrypted and protected from external influence.
Zheltov told Sputnik that the Ka-226T “signals a new stage” in Russian helicopter development because from this vehicle forward, all choppers will be completely designed in the digital universe from A to Z.
For better coordination, all parties involved in the development process are connected by a videolink. This was demonstrated by watching the office of the Ulan-Ude Aviation Plant, where the Ka-226Ts are to be assembled, from the Kamov factory in the Moscow Region.
“The digitalization has reduced the machine
development time, and, through the creation of 3D models, has improved
accuracy of the component parts and units of the helicopter
development,” Russian Helicopters
CEO Andrei Boginsky said. That has helped to create a modern and high
quality machine, whose performance is substantially superior to Western
counterparts."
Aside from this, the customers of the Ka-226T helicopters, including
India, China, Iran, Mexico, Egypt and others, are expected to join the
newly established 24/7 technical support and customer service program
TeMPo, launched in October and currently working with the owners of the
Ansat and Ka-32 choppers.The Russian Helicopters’ Strategy: Tenders, Civilian Market, Supercomputers
Within the framework of intergovernmental agreements, Moscow takes upon itself the responsibility of localizing helicopter production in the customers’ countries. Within the next five years, India is set to receive 200 Ka-226T machines, with 40 coming from Russia. A corresponding contract is to be signed during the first quarter of 2018, according to Boginsky.
The Russian Helicopters CEO added that Moscow is also going to participate in the Indian Defense Ministry’s new separate tender for 100 helicopters for the Navy, and the “competitive” Ka-226T has good chances to win, as from the technological point of view “there is no alternative” to it.
The production of the Ka-226T corresponds to the Russian Helicopters’ strategy, which CEO Boginsky categorized as following:
• increasing the export share of choppers for the civilian market;
• development of after-sales maintenance and service;
• creation of new aircraft.
The holding aspires to equalize the ratio between the sales of military and civilian vehicles, which currently stands at 7 to 3.
In the near future, the Russian Helicopters is planning to invest into the development of the Ka-62 and Mi-38 helicopters, which reflects the company’s principle of fairly supporting and promoting both the Kamov and the Mil.
Smart Home for Ka-226T: 'One Day – One Helicopter'
In addition to the Kumertau Aviation Production Plant in the Republic of Bashkortostan, the Ka-226T will be assembled in the Ulan-Ude Aviation Plant (UUAP) in the Republic of Buryatia, the Buddhist heart of Russia (to the east of Lake Baikal).
The plant was established in 1939 in the Soviet Union’s Siberian hinterland as a strategic asset which had to be kept away from the reach of an enemy. The factory was Russia’s first to manufacture both planes and helicopters simultaneously.
“We had the following principle in the Soviet
Union: one day – one helicopter, and one week – one plane,” Chief
Engineer Sergei Solomin told Sputnik, adding that now “the plant is
capable of keeping up to the pattern but in reality its work is based
on customers’ orders.”
The plant’s workshops are equipped with domestic and foreign machines, such as STAN and SIGAS, and DMG MORI respectively.
“We are in the constant process of upgrading
[the plant]. We are investing billions [into it],” Solomin said, noting
that environmentally-friendly methods are taken into account.
The plant has received the digital technology for the Ka-226T
production. The assembly equipment for the helicopter will be
manufactured and installed with the help of a laser tracker. Using
modern machines with digital program management will allow for the
minimization of manual labor connected with the adjustment of details.“The factory is operating at full capacity,” its CEO Leonid Belykh said underscoring that the digitalization has not led to workers’ layoff: a human is indispensable in the creation of helicopters.
The plant features a modern pilot training center.
The factory is toiling over 12 modifications of helicopters, with the Mi-171A2 (a deeply modernized Mi-8 transport vehicle) as its priority, which is also being created with the intensive use of digital modelling. The production of the Ka-226Tis to kick off soon.
Sputnik was fortunate to capture the gracious snow-defying flight of a Mi-171E, an export version, whose "equipment including a new carrier system allowing it to increase maximum speed, increase flight range and external sling payload, and to make flights in the thin air of high altitudes and in high temperatures more reliable. Also, the new form of tail and main rotor blades makes it possible to significantly reduce the noise level. We hope that the modernized helicopter will appeal to both traditional buyers and new clients," according to Belykh.
The UUAP is a good example of the innovative approach cherished by the Russian Helicopters.
Apart from introducing the 3Dmodelling manifested in the plant, the holding cooperates with the country’s best higher educational institutions and seeks solutions in different spheres.
“We have a program to use supercomputer
calculations to cut down the time of experiments. Bionic design
optimizes our solutions, cuts down the weight, increases the reliability
and durability of details,” Boginsky specified in response to Sputnik’s
question.
Sputnik
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