The biggest downside is mechanical reliability right? I think that’s the only answer.Interesting the Chinese did not tempt to develop a coax rotor helicopter for shipboard use even though they have had kamov helicopters in service for some time. Coax helicopters have significant advances for use on ships, being more compact, no dangerous tail anti-torque rotor, and more efficient because all engine power is devote to lift and forward thrust, with no power wasted in the anti-torque rotor.
Reliability is fine, kamovs have found service much beyond typical "Russian equipment habitat".The biggest downside is mechanical reliability right? I think that’s the only answer.
For Kamov, yes, that is their specialty.Reliability is fine, kamovs have found service much beyond typical "Russian equipment habitat".
Their biggest tradeoff is they're more compact in one dimension and less - in other.
You can almost reliably non-Russian combatants intended for Russian helicopters - their hangers are really tall.
Basically, technically it doesn't matter all that much, both do their job. Kamov has a wealth of experience in that it is doing - it only makes sense to continue doing just that.
Reliability is fine, kamovs have found service much beyond typical "Russian equipment habitat".
Their biggest tradeoff is they're more compact in one dimension and less - in other.
You can almost reliably non-Russian combatants intended for Russian helicopters - their hangers are really tall.
Basically, technically it doesn't matter all that much, both do their job. Kamov has a wealth of experience in that it is doing - it only makes sense to continue doing just that.
For Kamov, yes, that is their specialty.
If we are talking about why there are no Chinese attempts to create such a design (in the context of Z-20 thread), then there are zero Chinese companies with experience.
Plus considering Z-20 as a high-priority project, probably not the place to experiment with “exotic” designs.