On Saturday in Bengaluru, Defence Minister
Arun Jaitley underlined the growing capabilities of Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd
(HAL) by inaugurating the production of the indigenous design Light Combat
Helicopter (LCH), which HAL has designed, developed and will now manufacture.
On November 7, 2016, the defence ministry had
cleared a Rs 2,911 procurement of 15 LCHs as a “limited series production”
(LSP) order – a little under Rs 200 crore per helicopter. But top HAL sources
tell Business Standard the final cost would work out to Rs 231 crore per LCH at
2017-18 prices.
This is less than half the cost of the
AH-64E Apache attack helicopters the Indian Air Force (IAF) has bought from
Boeing, USA. The Apache is more heavily armed and armoured and has the
sophisticated Longbow fire control radar. The LCH does not yet have radar, but
HAL intends to develops one before mass production begins.
HAL is building the 15 LSP choppers at its
Bengaluru helicopter complex. However, the army has committed to ordering 114
LCHs, and the air force another 65, which could be built at an upcoming
helicopter production facility in Tumkur.
HAL has custom-designed the 5.8 tonne LCH
to provide fire support to the army at mountainous deployment areas on the
northern borders, which can be as high as 6,000 metres (almost 20,000 feet).
“The LCH has demonstrated capability to
land and take off from Siachen Range (sic) with considerable load, fuel and
weapons that are beyond any other combat helicopter”, stated HAL on Saturday.
Highlighting the LCH’s versatility, HAL
stated: “The helicopter can carry out operational roles under extreme weather
conditions at different altitudes from sea level, hot weather desert, cold
weather and Himalayan altitudes.”
The superb high-altitude performance of the
LCH, like that of its precursor in service, the Dhruv advanced light helicopter
(ALH), stems from twin Shakti engines, designed for HAL by French helicopter
engine maker Turbomeca (now Safran Helicopter Engines), and built in Bengaluru.
While the Shakti’s performance at low altitudes is comparable to other engines
of its size, it outperforms them significantly at altitudes above 5,000 feet.
The LCH has a narrow fuselage, in which two
pilots sit one-behind-the-other in an armoured cockpit that can protect them
from small arms firing. Like the Dhruv ALH, on which many of the LCH’s flying
technologies were tested, the new attack helicopter has a hinge-less main rotor,
a bearing-less tail rotor, integrated dynamic system, crashworthy landing gear
and a smart all-glass cockpit.
The LCH’s weapons and sensors were
developed and tested on an armed variant of the Dhruv, called the Rudra. HAL’s
chairman, T Suvarna Raju, says this evolutionary approach drastically cut down
on the LCH’s development time.
The current order does not include a
provision for “performance based logistics” (PBL), which constitute an HAL
guarantee that a specified percentage of the fleet is available at all times.
As Business Standard reported on March 30 (In a first, HAL assures 75% availability of
Dhruv fleet) HAL signed its first PBL contract for the Dhruv, requiring it
to position maintenance teams in up to 40 army aviation bases and two maintenance,
repair and overhaul (MRO) hubs in the north and east, from where repair teams
could respond to maintenance requests from aviation bases.
Hawk
trainer upgrade
Jaitley also inaugurated an HAL-BAE Systems
development programme that aims to enhance the Hawk trainer aircraft from an advanced
jet trainer (AJT) into a combat-capable platform that “is capable of delivering
precise munitions, including air to ground and close combat weapons”, according
to HAL.
Unlike most fighter aircraft, including the
Tejas, the Hawk cannot fly at supersonic speeds. Yet, there is a need for
lower-performance combat aircraft that can fly and manoeuvre in valleys to
support army soldiers in an environment where there is no major enemy air
threat.
While the IAF has not yet committed to
buying the so-called “combatised Hawk”, the presence of Jaitley at the
dedication ceremony is significant.
ajaishukla
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