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Bin Laden Raid May Have Exposed Stealth Helo

bhagat

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A previously undisclosed, classified stealth helicopter apparently was part of the U.S. task force that killed Osama bin Laden in Pakistan on May 1.

The exact type of helicopter is unknown but it appears to be a highly modified version of an H-60 Blackhawk. Photos disseminated via the European PressPhoto agency and attributed to an anonymous stringer show that the helicopter’s tail features stealth-configured shapes on the boom and the tail rotor hub fairings, swept stabilizers and a “dishpan” cover over a five-or-six-blade tail rotor. It has a silver-loaded infrared suppression finish similar to that seen on V-22s.

See AviationWeek.com/ares for some photographs.

The aircraft was damaged during the mission and abandoned. The mission team destroyed most of the airframe but its tail section landed outside the wall of the target compound and escaped demolition.

Stealth helicopter technology is not new and was applied extensively to the Boeing/Sikorsky RAH-66 Comanche, cancelled in 2004. Compared with fixed-wing stealth, more emphasis is usually placed on noise and infrared signatures.

Noise can be reduced and made less conspicuous by adding blades to the main and tail rotors. It can also be reduced by aerodynamic modifications and flight control changes that make it possible to reduce rotor rpm, particularly in forward flight below maximum speed. Infrared reduction measures are crucial - the Comanche had an elaborate system of exhaust ducts and fresh-air ejectors in its tailboom.

Radar cross-section (RCS) reduction measures include flattened and canted body sides, making landing gear and other features retractable, and adding fairings over the rotor hubs. It usually is not possible to achieve the same - you can’t make a helo as radar-stealthy as a fixed-wing airplane, but helicopters generally operate at low altitude in ground clutter. Reducing RCS also makes jamming more effective, whether from the aircraft itself or from a standoff jammer.
Bin Laden Raid May Have Exposed Stealth Helo | AVIATION WEEK
 
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There is nothing "stealthy" about Blackhawks. I think it was more of the case of Pakistan having sub-par IADS.
 
it was flying low...so that may be the reason it was not detected....and the person is from 599 EME...same as my fathers unit!!
 
it was flying low...so that may be the reason it was not detected....and the person is from 599 EME...same as my fathers unit!!

Guys seriously please get your info about NOE straight. Read a little on it. Its not the holly grail of avoiding detection and there are countless countermeasures to it. Are you actually proposing that the Pakistani military is so unaware and helpless when it comes to such a basic concept of avoiding detection that it had not taken any of the very basic and very well known measures to counter it? That too in a place which is this sensitive, let alone a no-fly zone? How could people have forgotten Mogadishu so easily?
 
Guys seriously please get your info about NOE straight. Read a little on it. Its not the holly grail of avoiding detection and there are countless countermeasures to it. Are you actually proposing that the Pakistani military is so unaware and helpless when it comes to such a basic concept of avoiding detection that it had not taken any of the very basic and very well known measures to counter it? That too in a place which is this sensitive, let alone a no-fly zone? How could people have forgotten Mogadishu so easily?
The 'Holy Grail' of radar detection avoidance is not to be inside a radar beam in the first place, so nape-of-the-earth flying is very much that 'Holy Grail'. That said, if it is not possible to avoid the radar beam, then the next best thing is to influence or perhaps even control how reflections behave, hence we have body shaping in fixed wings aircrafts. For a helo, because of the rotor creating the 'radam' effect...

http://www.defence.pk/forums/china-defence/90506-china-wz-10-pics.html#post1594871

...For now we rely upon nape-of-the-earth flying to avoid radar detection. The fact that the entire force flew for so long and low enough to avoid Pakistani air defense radar is testament to the efforts prior to said mission in laying out the flight route: from locations of air defense radars to terrain mapping for masking those helos. It is far easier to say how 'easy' it is to detect these low flying aircrafts than to actually do it.
 

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