Kamov Ka-50
Kamov Ka-50
Kamov Ka-50
The Ka-50 is a Russian single-seat attack helicopter, designed as a gunship. It was designed by the
Kamov company starting in the 1980s and adopted for service in the Russian army in 1995. It is
manufactured by the Progress company of Arseniev. Its NATO reporting name is Hokum A; the first
prototype was nicknamed "Werewolf", however Kamov's official name for the type is "Black Shark". As
the Soviet Union's collapse vastly reduced military spending before Ka-50 could go into full-scale
production, a relatively small number of these aircraft have been built, even though it beat Mil's rival
Mi-28 "Havoc" in virtually all the tests in the contest for the Red Army's next attack helicopter.
Reportedly Ka-50's development took place in record time, as Kamov had the forethought of placing
liaison engineers at major component suppliers and systems subcontractors. Finally, Ka-50 and its
modifications have been chosen as the special forces support helicopter while Mi-28 has become main
army's gunship. The production of Ka-50 has been recommenced in 2006.
Design
The Hokum was designed to be small, fast, and agile to improve survivability and lethality. In common
with many other Soviet aircraft of the era, it is believed to have superior flight characteristics but inferior
avionics to its Western counterparts -- the AH-64 Apache and Eurocopter Tiger in particular. While its
avionics are not as sophisticated as in typical Western helicopters, they work efficiently and are simple
to maintain in field conditions. For minimal weight and size (thus maximal speed and agility) it was --
uniquely among gunships -- to be operated by a single pilot only. Kamov concluded after thorough
research of helicopter combat in Afghanistan and other war zones that the typical attack mission phases
of low-level approach, pop-up target acquisition, and weapon launch don't simultaneously demand
navigation, maneuvering, and weapons operation of the pilot; and thus with well-designed support
automation a single pilot can indeed carry out the entire mission alone. However, it is still an
unanswered question whether in practice the rank and file of Black Shark pilots would nevertheless
suffer from excess fatigue from this combined workload.
Like other Kamov's helicopters, it features Kamov's characteristic contra-rotating co-axial rotor system,
which removes the need for the entire tail-rotor assembly and improves the aircraft's aerobatic qualities -
- it can perform loops, rolls, and “the funnel” where the aircraft maintains a line-of-sight to target while
flying circles of varying altitude, elevation, and airspeed around it. The elimination of the tail rotor is a
qualitative advantage because the torque-countering tail rotor can waste up to 30% of engine power. (To
begin with, Black Shark's Klimovs offer more shaft horsepower, some 2200 shp apiece, than e.g.
Apache's General Electric turbofans, at 1890 shp, which contributes to the superb performance.)
Furthermore, the vulnerable boom and rear gearbox are fairly common causes of helicopter losses in
combat (as proven in Vietnam); the Black Shark's entire transmission presents a comparatively small
target to ground fire. Kamov maintains that the co-axial drive assembly is built to survive hits from
23mm ammunition like the other vital parts of the helicopter. The zero native torque also allows the
aircraft to be fairly immune to wind strength and direction, and to have an unsurpassed turn rate in all
travel speed envelopes.
In January 2001, the Ka-50 saw its first combat operation, as it fired on enemy positions in Chechnya.
Later, it would undertake several missions inside that war zone, although not as much as the more
numerous Mil Mi-24 perhaps better suited to the more guerrilla-type warfare there.
The Ka-50 was the first helicopter fitted with an ejector seat for improved pilot survivability; this was
also seen as a psychological factor enhancing the pilot's combat courage. Before the rocket in the K-37-
800 ejection seat kicks in, rotor blades are blown away by explosive charges in the rotor disc and the
canopy is similarly jettisoned.
There is also a twin seat version designated Kamov Ka-52 or "Alligator" . Rumour has it this was partly
designed for special operations and airborne command use, but partly as a consequence of buyer
suspicion toward Kamov's single-pilot concept.
Weapons
The machine carries a handsome load of weapons in four external hardpoints under the stub wings plus
two on the wingtips, a total of some 2,300 kg depending on the mix.
The main armament are the twelve laser-guided VIKhR anti-tank missiles with a maximum range of
some 8 km (5 miles). The laser guidance is reported to be virtually jam-proof and the system features
automatic guidance to target enabling evasive movement immediately after missile launch. The fire
control system automatically shares all target information among the four Black Sharks of a typical
flight in real time, allowing one helicopter to engage a target spotted by another, and the system also can
input target information from ground-based forward scouts with man-portable target designation gear.
The integrated 30mm cannon is semi-rigidly fixed on the helicopter's side, movable only slightly in
elevation and azimuth. The aircraft's agility allows the weapon control system to turn (the entire
helicopter and) the cannon at the target acquired in the pilot's helmet sight about as fast as the cannon
turret of the Apache or the Mil-28 turns. The semi-rigid mounting improves the cannon's accuracy,
giving the 30mm a longer practical range and better hit ratio at medium ranges than with a free-turning
turret mount.
Ka-50-2 Erdogan
In 1997, Israeli Air Industries (IAI) in cooperation with the Kamov bureau entered a Turkish design
competition for a $4 billion contract for 145 (later changed to 50) combat helicopters. The helicopter
designed for the competition became the Ka-50-2 Erdogan , a tandem cockpit twin-seater variant of the
Ka-50 that featured a modern, Israeli-made "glass cockpit" avionics and a turret-mounted side-folding
(for landing clearance) 30mm cannon as opposed to the fixed cannon of the Ka-50. (A similar Italian
turret is also offered as a modification to the Ka-50.) The Erdogan beat out the Eurocopter and Apache
helicopters, but lost to the venerable AH-1 Cobra, which would suggest that the Cobra was picked for
cost and reliability reasons as well as political reasons being partially Israeli made and in a Turkish
competition. The combination of a Russian combat helicopter with Western avionics would have been a
formidable foe. Kamov is still looking for a buyer, since the Russian military doesn't have the funding.
Specifications (Ka-50)
General characteristics
Crew: One
Length: 13.50 m (44 ft 3 in)
Rotor diameter: 2x 14.50 m (2x 47 ft 7 in)
Height: 5.4 m (17 ft 9 in)
Disc area: 330.3 m² (3,555 ft²)
Empty weight: 7,800 kg (17,200 lb)
Loaded weight: 9,800 kg (21,600 lb)
Max takeoff weight: 10,400 kg (22,930 lb)
Powerplant: 2× Klimov TV3-117VK turboshafts, 1,660 kW (2,226 hp) each
Performance
Maximum speed: 350 km/h (217 mph)
Range: 1,160 km (720 miles)
Service ceiling: 5,500 m (18,000 ft)
Rate of climb: 10 m/s (1,970 ft/min)
Disc loading: 30 kg/m² (6 lb/ft²)
Power/mass: 0.33 kW/kg (0.20 hp/lb)
Armament
1x 30 mm Shipunov 2A42 cannon
A variety of payloads including 2x twin 23-mm gun pods (940 rounds each), 12x
AT-16 VIKhR ATGM, 2x Vympel R-73 (NATO: AA-11 Archer), 40x 80 mm
(3.2 in) rockets in 2 pods, 4x 500 kg (1,100 lb) bombs, 500 l (130 US gal)
external fuel tanks
Operators
Russia