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Improved Advanced Light Helo Ready for Indian Army

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BANGALORE, India — The weaponized version of the Indian-made Advanced Light Helicopter (ALH) will be inducted into the Indian Army beginning this week, an Army official said.

An active vibration control device and updated avionics have been added to the Mark-IV version of the ALH, which was cleared here Feb. 3 for initial operation, the official said. The earlier Mark-I and Mark-II had problems with excessive vibration, the Army official said.

Developed by state-owned Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd. (HAL), the Mark-IV ALH, also called Rudra, has 350 hours of prototype test flying in various terrains and climates, including the deserts of Rajasthan and the mountains of Sikkim state, a HAL executive said.

Powered by the Shakti engine, jointly developed with French company Safran Turbomeca, the ALH Mark-IV can fly at altitudes above 20,000 feet. The Shakti engine will also power the Light Combat Helicopter being developed by HAL.

The weapons onboard the ALH include a 20mm gun supplied by France’s Nexter, air-to-air and air-to-ground missiles supplied by European company MBDA, and a Belgian-made 70mm rocket system.

The Indian Army has a requirement for 150 Mark-IV ALHs, and the program is worth $3 billion.

“The integration of multiple weapon systems simultaneously on the helicopter is a complex assignment,” said Soundara Rajan, managing director of HAL’s helicopter division. “In this particular case, it involved four major groups of systems and weapons, involving eight countries: Israel, France, Belgium, South Africa, Germany, Italy, USA and India. Nearly 23 kilometers of cables had to be laid, and hundreds of hours of flight and ground tests were carried out.”

Improved Advanced Light Helo Ready for Indian Army | Defense News | defensenews.com
 
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150 of these!!

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I hope so!
 
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^^^
Looks like now IA wants fit this beast to it every infantry division.
That will give some serious fire power to its older fashion/outdated infantry divisions.
 
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We can export it too. :D

@Abingdonboy Kindly tell us about this helicopter wrt to other similar type of helis from around the world.
 
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150 of these!!

No, it says ALH, while Rudra versions will be part of the 150, but the normal Dhruv will of course be the bulk version.

We can export it too. :D

@Abingdonboy Kindly tell us about this helicopter wrt to other similar type of helis from around the world.

Export countries will definitely show interest in it now, even more possibly in LCH, but it generally could be a boost for Dhruv, because it is likely that export customers will buy a mix of both versions.
There are several armed versions, of light helicopters, but Rudra is the only one I know that offers a fully fledged chin mounted gun. Most other similar helicopters have fixed guns at one of their hardpoints, now depending on how you look at it, one can say Rudra is over armed, or that it is the most powerful combat helicopter in it's class.
 
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We can export it too. :D

@Abingdonboy Kindly tell us about this helicopter wrt to other similar type of helis from around the world.
@KRAIT

Comparable helos (as stated by HAL themselves) would be the IAR-330 SOCAT:

IAR-330_Puma_SOCAT_antitank_gunship_2.jpg



and the AH-60L "BATTLEHAWK":

AIR_S-70_Battlehawk_Lvl-3_Demonstrator_Israel_lg.jpg



Of these 3 helos the ALH-WSI is arguably the most complete,capable and cost-effective platform. The IAR-330 SOCAT is a good system but it is pretty outdated now wrt tech, weapons suite and EW systems and the IAR-330 base (Puma) being a larger helo is inherently less manoeuvrable. The AH-60L is a very capable concept but it has been less than successful in getting firm orders and thus the system is far from as developed as the ALH-WSI (which already has sizable orders from Indian forces and a bright future wrt potential orders further down the road).
 
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No, it says ALH, while Rudra versions will be part of the 150, but the normal Dhruv will of course be the bulk version.

What I read was it.
150 mark-4 ALH.
Thats mean 150 Rudra.
 
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No, it says ALH, while Rudra versions will be part of the 150, but the normal Dhruv will of course be the bulk version.

To be fair @sancho the article says:
The Indian Army has a requirement for 150 Mark-IV ALHs, (RUDRAS)and the program is worth $3 billion.

But anyway, there is a high possibility of future follow-on orders by the IA and (to a lesser extent) the IAF.

Export countries will definitely show interest in it now, even more possibly in LCH, but it generally could be a boost for Dhruv, because it is likely that export customers will buy a mix of both versions.
There are several armed versions, of light helicopters, but Rudra is the only one I know that offers a fully fledged chin mounted gun. Most other similar helicopters have fixed guns at one of their hardpoints, now depending on how you look at it, one can say Rudra is over armed, or that it is the most powerful combat helicopter in it's class.

Very much agree with this point in its entiriry. For cost-effectiveness the ALH-WSI is more of an attractive offer than the LCH for the cash-strapped militaries of the world. In fact, this is exaclty the market that Sikorsky aimed their AH-60L at.

For example when you compare the ALH-WSI to, say, the MIL-17 V5 with weapons attached the ALH-WSI wins hands down in the firepower available to you. The likes of the armed Mil-17 has a VERY crude weapons system.
 
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What I read was it.
150 mark-4 ALH.
Thats mean 150 Rudra.

No, mark 4 is the designation of the most modern ALH, be it in form of the Dhruv or Rudra. So both versions will have the latest engine and avionic systems, but will be different versions. Even if IN would go for a naval Dhruv now, it would be based on the Mark 4.

To be fair @sancho the article says:


See above


In fact, this is exaclty the market that Sikorsky aimed their AH-60L at.

No, first of all because both are different class of helicopters, secondly, because the US counterpart to Rudra are little Bird combat helicopter.
 
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No, mark 4 is the designation of the most modern ALH, be it in form of the Dhruv or Rudra. So both versions will have the latest engine and avionic systems, but will be different versions. Even if IN would go for a naval Dhruv now, it would be based on the Mark 4.
Sir, AFAIK the very latest variant (for unarmed ALHs) is the MK.III and the armed variant is MK.IV this is what all news outlets and even HAL themselves are saying. It has been stated that MK.IV=Rudra/ALH WSI.



No, first of all because both are different class of helicopters, secondly, because the US counterpart to Rudra are little Bird combat helicopter.


What I meant was that the AH-60L was marketed for its combat-effectiveness wrt it is multi-role functionality and the fact that you effectivley get a utility helo and attack helo in one package.
 
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