11 April 2022
by Akhil Kadidal
The Helina‘s successful flight trials at high altitudes pave the way for its integration on the Advanced Light Helicopter. (Janes/Jayesh Dhingra)
India's Helina fire-and-forget anti-tank guided missile (ATGM) has been successfully flight tested at high altitude.
According to the Indian government's Press Information Bureau (PIB), an Advanced Light Helicopter (ALH) fired the missile on 11 April at a high-altitude range. The missile is said to have successfully engaged a simulated tank target.
The “proof of efficacy at high altitudes paves the way for its integration on [the] ALH”, the PIB said.
High-altitude tests involving the ALH are carried out at altitudes of 6 km or higher.
According to the bureau, the latest testing is part of “user validation trials”. The tests were jointly conducted by teams of scientists from the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO), along with members of the Indian Army and the Indian Air Force (IAF).
The latest test comes a year after state-owned media announced in February 2021 that the ATGM system was ready to enter service with the Indian Army and the IAF.
02 May 2024
by Olivia Savage
The Ariane 6 launcher will launch the first batch of G2G satellites in 2026 and 2027. Pictured is a successful long-duration hot-fire test of the rocket on its launch pad at Europe's Spaceport in French Guiana in September 2023. The rocket is in its final stages of testing before its inaugural flight in June 2024. (Arianegroup)
The new Ariane 6 rocket will launch the initial batch of Galileo Second Generation (G2G) navigation satellites into orbit in 2026 and 2027, Arianespace announced on 29 April.
A total of four G2G satellites will be sent into orbit on Ariane 6 over two separate launches in 2026 and 2027. Airbus Defence and Space and Thales Alenia Space are each building six satellites, which together form the first fleet of G2G satellites, the company detailed.
The G2G satellites will use electric propulsion and host a more powerful navigation antenna as well as improved atomic clocks and fully digital payloads compared with the first-generation Galileo satellites. Each spacecraft will weigh 2,000 kg, orbiting at an altitude of 23,222 km (medium Earth orbit).
02 May 2024
by Gareth Jennings
Seen at the ILA 2024 Berlin Air Show, the Heron TP has now been cleared for global operations by the Luftwaffe. (Janes/Gareth Jennings)
The Luftwaffe has declared its leased Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI) Heron TP unmanned aircraft systems (UASs) to be ready for Germany-based operations worldwide, with flights to commence in mid-May.
The Luftwaffe announced the milestone on 2 May, saying that the airworthiness certificate for the UAS had been signed by the German Federal Aviation Office in Cologne on the same day. “The approval of our new reconnaissance drone is valid worldwide,” the service said, adding that flights will soon commence out of Jagel (also known as Schleswig Air Base) in the far north of the country.
The announcement follows the Heron TP being awarded a type certificate by the German Military Aviation Authority in late 2022, at which time it was operated out of an undisclosed location in Israel.
The Heron TP is intended to bridge the gap between the retirement of the earlier Heron 1 UAS and the introduction of the new European medium-altitude long-endurance UAS known as Eurodrone, with Airbus Defence and Space operating five air vehicles out to 2027.
01 May 2024
by Zach Rosenberg
The first Kaman Kargo in flight-testing at an undisclosed Pennsylvania site. (Kaman)
Kaman's Kargo medium-lift unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) has been in flight-testing since December 2023, the company's general manager, Romin Dasmalchi, told Janes in advance of Modern Day Marine on 24 April.
The UAV first flew while tethered to the ground for safety reasons. The tether has since been removed, Dasmalchi said, and the first Kargo is free-flying at an undisclosed UAV testing site in Pennsylvania.
Following a flight, Dasmalchi said, “You would make an adjustment – call it a tuning adjustment – and then you fly it for a short period. You give it some inputs manually to see how it handles, then you land and you make adjustments. We probably did hundreds of those evolutions.” The Kargo might undergo 20 to 30 flights per day.
As of 26 April the first Kargo craft had accrued around 50 hours of flight time, Dasmalchi said, and hundreds of ignitions of its Rolls-Royce RR300 engine. Aside from changes to antenna placement, Dasmalchi anticipated no major changes to Kargos in production based on the results of flight-testing to date.
India's Helina fire-and-forget anti-tank guided missile (ATGM) has been successfully flight tested a...
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