Given the current drone threat the helicopter launched AAM seems like a good idea to me.
AAMs are major overkill for threats like that. Guided rockets are a better choice, and commonly carried by helicopters already.
Given the current drone threat the helicopter launched AAM seems like a good idea to me.
Maybe if you add IR sensors and proximity fuses to the rockets like the US did. Otherwise you won't hit jack shit.AAMs are major overkill for threats like that. Guided rockets are a better choice, and commonly carried by helicopters already.
Maybe if you add IR sensors and proximity fuses to the rockets like the US did. Otherwise you won't hit jack shit.
At which point you just made a micro AAM.
For a transport helicopter, having to defend against an air threat means a huge tactical error... Other assets are way more adapted to use aam against such threats. For a transport helicopter it would be better to drop your payload (troops) asap than chasing squirrels.
Well it’s seems pretty obvious the AAMs are not meant for self defence. Rather it’s to test and validate using them as an additional defence layer against saturation attacks by cheap Shahed like attack drones and potentially even against higher end cruise missiles like Tomahawks.
Using transport helicopters for such a mission adds significant benefits over other more conventional assets, including lower costs (both fuel and missile); potentially significantly greater endurance and on-station time (especially if you set up FoBs for quick refuel and rearming, maybe even have extra pilots for shift work); significantly greater flexibility in deployment locations (you could potentially forward deploy helicopters to a FoB near or even at the site they are meant to defend).