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KAMOV KA-31 HELIX-B
Type: AEW
helicopter.
Known
Serial Numbers:
IN-561
...............................IN-562
...............................IN-563
...............................IN-564
...............................IN-565
...............................IN-566
...............................IN-567
...............................IN-568
...............................IN-569
Powerplant: Two
Klimov TV3-117VMAR turboshafts each rated at
1633 kW (2200 hp).
Maximum
Speed: 135
knots
(155 mph; 250 km/h).
Service Ceiling:
3500 meters (11,483 feet).
Range:
324 nautical miles
(600 km).
Patrol Endurance:
2.5 hours.
Comments:
In August 1999, the Indian Navy
placed a firm order for four Ka-31 helicopters and
a contract for an
additional five was signed in February 2001.
Total value of all nine helicopters is estimated at US $207 million.
The first Ka-31 for the
Indian Navy made its debut flight on 16 May 2001 and the first two
of nine Ka-31 helicopters completed tests at the Kamov's Chkalovsky airfield
near Moscow. The first batch of four aircraft was
officially inducted into
the Indian Naval Air Arm in April 2003 and the second batch arrived by the end of 2004. In Indian Navy
service,
these helicopters operate not only from aircraft carriers, destroyers and frigates but also from
shore bases as well. Due to its limitations in terms of endurance, the
helicopter will be fitted with a helicopter-to-helicopter in-flight refuelling
capability. Also known as the Ka-29 RLD, the Ka-31
is a further development of the Ka-27 anti-submarine warfare
helicopter. The Ka-31's
wider fuselage - when compared to the cramped interior
of the Ka-27/28 - offers greater accommodation space.
The Ka-31 is fitted with the E-801M Oko (Eye)
airborne electronic warfare radar which features a 6x1 meter planar array
mounted beneath the fuselage.
The radar is folded and
stowed beneath the aircraft's fuselage before being lowered into a vertical
position, to allow 360º mechanical scanning
of the radar once every ten seconds. The
radar can simultaneously track up to 40 airborne or surface threats, and can
detect fighter-sized aircraft from a range of 100 - 200 km (depending on the
size of the target) and surface ships at
a horizon of 200 km from an altitude of 9840 feet.
Developed by the NIIRT (Nauchno-Issledovatelskiy Institut Radiotekhniki) Radio
Scientific-Research Institute in Nizhny Novgorod, the radar antenna weighs 200
kg (441 lbs). The co-ordinates, speed and heading of a target gathered by the
radar are transmitted via an encoded
radio data-link channel to a ship-borne or shore-based command post.
This
encoded
radio data-link channel
will introduce airborne
network centric warfare to the Indian Navy, due to its advanced real-time
capability. The secure data-link and onboard communication systems have a range
of 150 km, at altitudes between 4950 and 11,000 feet. The Indian
Navy's Ka-31s
are also being fitted out with the Abris GPS featuring a 12-channel receiver.
The GPS is designed & developed by Kronstadt - a firm in St.
Petersburg, Russia. Abris will provide all satellite navigation data.
Other Kronstadt systems featured in the Ka-31 helicopter will include
navigational equipment for digital terrain maps, ground-proximity warning,
obstacle approach
warning,
auto-navigation of
pre-programmed routes, flight stabilization and auto homing onto and landing at
the parent carrier/base and information
concerning the helicopter's tactical situation.
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