Hi all!
Znamenany Eitiliocht H9Z-1 Snathaid / Airbus Helicopters EC-690 Libellule
In 2015, there were two kinds of western attack helicopters: Crappy ones, and the Apache. Mangusta, Rooivalk and AH-1 were at the end of their growth potential, and Tiger was a non-flyable farce. Boeing, therefore, had secured a virtual monopoly on the western attack helicopter market. The Thiarian army flew the Rooivalk since 2001 and quite liked it, but was acutely aware of its shortcomings. The electronics, sensors and avionics suite in particular dated back to the 1980s, making it equal to an early AH-64A, which seemed anachronistic in the 21st century. Those issues could be fixed, but only at a cost the airframe was not worth. The German army flew – or rather, didn’t fly, because they were grounded all the time – the Tiger since 1998 and hated it, because there was no realistic way its cascading reliability and serviceability issues could be fixed at all. For the Thiarians, a replacement would be nice to have; for the Germans, it was indispensible. This revelation marked the birth of the H9Z Snathaid attack helicopter project. The Thiarian and German aero industry already had a history of working together; in most cases, Thiarian companies had cheaply bought expensive German projects which had been abandoned on grounds of cost, developed them to series maturity at little additional expense, and sold them, in some cases back to Germany, for truckloads of money. The pattern was: Germany invested, Thiaria reaped the profits. To Thiaria’s largest fully private aviation company, the helicopter manufacturer Znamenany Eitiliocht, this scheme was obviously attractive for a scratch design as well; the demi-national SCI had successfully operated that way with the Asarlai fighter (of which Thiaria would purchase 250 and Germany only 120, but pay 55% of development expenses), after all. Their lobbyists made Thiaria’s defence ministry contact Airbus Helicopters late in 2015 and ask for a viable Rooivalk replacement, which surely must be under development due to Tiger’s complete and utter failure. The answer was enthusiastic; they were indeed working on something they didn’t quite know how it would look yet, but would be able to mop the ground with a SHIELD quinjet, and were confident to present a prototype in 2030, with series production to commence in 2040, if the Germans kept paying the bills. Very content with this reply, Znamenany contacted the German government a few weeks later and offered them a world-beating combat helicopter, series deliveries to commence in ten years, guaranteed. All they need to do was fund € 5bn development cost and guarantee to buy – or sell to third parties – at least 200 of them. Thiaria would take a hundred. Less than 300 would render the project economically non-viable. Take it or leave it. Five years before, such an offer would have been haughtily rebuffed, but with ISIS on the ascendancy, Libya at war with itself and Russia having just invaded the Crimea – never mind every major domestic arms project of the last ten years a major clusterf*** – the Germans had realized two things: They could not afford to keep their armed forces at their current minimum strength, and their domestic arms industry needed way too long to deliver solutions. Co-operation with Thiaria had worked out well in the past; the Znamenany H3Z Foiche heavy transport helicopter delivered sterling service to the Luftwaffe since 2009, and the SCI T8S Asarlai 5th generation fighter project was proceeding in time and in budget. These Thiarians, very much unlike the Germans themselves, seemed to know what they were doing. So, in a move whose decisiveness surprised themselves more than anyone else, the Germans accepted Znamenany’s offer. The first € 2bn were included in the German 2016 budget; Thiaria’s budget for that year mirrored the commitment. At that point, Airbus sounded red alert. With their annoying way of making such projects work, the Thiarians threatened to push Airbus out of the gunship market for good, and in 2017, Airbus offered to enter the project and cover another € 2bn development expenses, backed by letters of intent from the French and Spanish armies to purchase a total of 200 attack helicopters as soon as the Tiger reached the end of its 25-year lifetime in 2023. Znamenany at that point had already secured two potential export customers of its own; the Mexican air force was interested in 40 machines mainly for anti-gang operations (subsidized by Thiaria to an extent of 50%), and South Africa placed an option on 32 units to replace its Rooivalks after 2025. In 2018, Znamenany tried to team up with an US aviation manufacturer to enter the US Army’s FARA competition, but failed to find one whose interest went beyond looting Znamenany’s trade secrets, and withdrew two years later. By that time, the program had progressed on schedule to produce a first prototype, which was rolled out in April 2020. Znamenany had chosen a high-risk approach by adopting contra-rotating four-blade rotors, combined with an Y-tail with control surfaces and wing stubs forward. The helicopter was designed to attain the kind of speed demanded by FARA specifications, considerably exceeding the requirements of Znamenany’s Thiarian and European customers. With two Safran Aneto 1K engines (2.500 shp each), the machine was hilariously overpowered for its weight; design speed was a whopping 350 kph. The high-powered engines allowed the H9Z to cruise at a very efficient power setting, resulting in a radius of action of 500km with internal weapons only at a maximum cruise speed of 295 kph. Ferry range with additional internal bubble tanks was 1.500 kilometers; with external drop tanks, over 2.000 kilometers could be attained. The two-nan cockpit section bore distinct resemblance to Bell’s contemporary Invictus; there are only so many ways to design an attack helicopter cockpit, after all. The running gear was fully retractable, with the stern wheel stowed in a capsule under the vertical stabilizer. A stealthy hull shape was adopted, and the traversing Nexter 30M-781 cannon mount as well as two 500kg hard points were mounted fully retractable. Another two wet 500kg hard points were provided under the wings – impairing both stealth and speed if used, however – and the wingtips were strengthened for a payload of 100kg each. The first prototype commenced flight testing in February, 2021, and was joined by a second one in October that year. The type was named Snathaid (Dragonfly) immediately after its first flight; the other employers translate the name into their own languages. According to Znamenany’s head designer, both prototypes were already close to planned series standard.
The test program will involve four prototypes, plus two for static crush tests, and is scheduled to last till mid-2023. Barring major problems, series production will be set up from early 2024, and the first production helicopters can be delivered to customers from mid-2026. The Thiarian Army and the Germans will arm their Snathaids (called Libelle in German) with TRIGAT anti-tank missiles (normally eight, up to sixteen maximum); the stealthy wingtip pods will contain Mistral missiles in Thiarian service and an unspecified system in Germany. Germany will also introduce the Polyphem II missile, which exchanges the Polyphem I’s wire guidance with a mix of GPS and passive radar, has a 25-minute loiter capability and can double as a surveillance drone.
Most other operators have not yet disclosed which armament their Snathaids will carry; Mexico however has already ordered Mistral AAMs and Brimstone multipurpose missiles and is currently updating part of its inventory of 70mm Zuni rockets with GPS guidance. They call the type Zayolatl, which is Nahuatl for Dragonfly. Their machines differ from the Thiarian and European version by their prominent sand filters in front of the engine intakes, sacrificing stealthiness for hot-weather reliability.
According to current plans, Thiaria and Mexico will receive the first batch of series machines from 2026, all built in Thiaria; the second batch (delivery from 2029) will be divided between Thiaria and South Africa. France, Spain and Germany will receive Thiarian-built airframe kits without engines, weapons and avionics for local assembly; deliveries will start in 2027. Total orders include 104 helicopters for Thiaria, 120 for Germany, 140 for France, 60 for Spain, 40 for Mexico and 32 for South Africa, totaling 496. The type is currently under review by another six nations: Argentina, Canada, Peru, Poland, South Korea and Sweden.
Greetings
GD