Moderators: richierich, ua900, PanAm_DC10, hOMSaR
RJMAZ wrote:What I find interesting is that the original Apache AH1s for the British Army were made by Westland in Yeovil.The only advantage the AH-1Z has is availability.
Qatar is currently receiving 24 AH-64E
The UK is then getting 50 AH-64E
Australia is then getting 29 AH-64E
Morroco is negotiating for 24 AH-64E with an option for another 12.
Apache production is filled until 2035.
Bahrain, Nigeria and Czech Republic have a fairly urgent need for an attack helicopter. They would be crazy to buy a Eurocopter Tiger for the only option is a Viper.
texl1649 wrote:The AH-1Z is I believe substantially lighter and needs a lot less maintenance than the latest Apache’s. It’s available, can be integrated with a lot of weapons similarly, and depending on the need for things like taxiing (vs hovering) still does a lot of things really, really well for many customers. I don’t think the UH-1 commonality matters to many at this point, but realistically Bell does sell a lot of gear to a lot of militaries/governments and can probably offer service agreements that make it very competitive. Some of this stuff comes down to vendor service agreements, and I can believe Bell has some more flexibility not just in delivery timelines but also such things for military helo operators.
Chaostheory wrote:Hot and High performance far better for the AH-1Z according to a Bell rep I spoke to.
That's why the Pakistanis wanted it too.
RJMAZ wrote:The only advantage the AH-1Z has is availability.
Qatar is currently receiving 24 AH-64E
The UK is then getting 50 AH-64E
Australia is then getting 29 AH-64E
Morroco is negotiating for 24 AH-64E with an option for another 12.
Apache production is filled until 2035.
Bahrain, Nigeria and Czech Republic have a fairly urgent need for an attack helicopter. They would be crazy to buy a Eurocopter Tiger for the only option is a Viper.
kitplane01 wrote:My uninformed impression is that a Tiger is twice the cost for 80% of the performance????? Is there any advantage at all (besides politics) for buying a Tiger.
kitplane01 wrote:Chaostheory wrote:Hot and High performance far better for the AH-1Z according to a Bell rep I spoke to.
That's why the Pakistanis wanted it too.
I'd be interested.
The AH-64 weighs slightly less, has slightly more horsepower, and a slightly larger disk area. Even so, the AH-1Z might have more hot-and-high performance. Weird.
They both have identical service ceilings of 20,000 ft. I wonder if that's some regulatory or bureaucratic thing. Seems unlikely they'd be identical, and also a round number.
TangoandCash wrote:AH-64 has a lighter empty weight, but comparing the max takeoff weights (i.e. loaded up for combat) tells a different story
AH-64: 23,000 lbs
AH-1Z: 18,500 lbs
RJMAZ wrote:TangoandCash wrote:AH-64 has a lighter empty weight, but comparing the max takeoff weights (i.e. loaded up for combat) tells a different story
AH-64: 23,000 lbs
AH-1Z: 18,500 lbs
Put the same number of weapons with fuel to fly the same mission and the AH-64E has better hot/high performance. The AH-64E simply has been certified for what I describe as an "overload MTOW". This is driven by mission demand by the US Army. Thanks to this overload MTOW the Apache can fly much further with the same payload compared to the Viper.
A helicopter operating from a ship most likely needs extra headroom in terms of lift.
kitplane01 wrote:RJMAZ wrote:TangoandCash wrote:AH-64 has a lighter empty weight, but comparing the max takeoff weights (i.e. loaded up for combat) tells a different story
AH-64: 23,000 lbs
AH-1Z: 18,500 lbs
Put the same number of weapons with fuel to fly the same mission and the AH-64E has better hot/high performance. The AH-64E simply has been certified for what I describe as an "overload MTOW". This is driven by mission demand by the US Army. Thanks to this overload MTOW the Apache can fly much further with the same payload compared to the Viper.
A helicopter operating from a ship most likely needs extra headroom in terms of lift.
A helicopter flying from a ship probably is operating in cooler air and lower altitude than the mountains of Afghanistan.
kitplane01 wrote:RJMAZ wrote:The only advantage the AH-1Z has is availability.
Qatar is currently receiving 24 AH-64E
The UK is then getting 50 AH-64E
Australia is then getting 29 AH-64E
Morroco is negotiating for 24 AH-64E with an option for another 12.
Apache production is filled until 2035.
Bahrain, Nigeria and Czech Republic have a fairly urgent need for an attack helicopter. They would be crazy to buy a Eurocopter Tiger for the only option is a Viper.
My uninformed impression is that a Tiger is twice the cost for 80% of the performance????? Is there any advantage at all (besides politics) for buying a Tiger. Australia is spending a ton of money to lose their Tigers and buy AH-64s.
Also, I bet no one wants to buy and operate the Australian Tigers, even at a low price.
Woodreau wrote:Lower altitude is true…. cooler air not so much.
I don’t think the UH-1 commonality matters to many at this point, but realistically Bell does sell a lot of gear to a lot of militaries/governments and can probably offer service agreements that make it very competitive. Some of this stuff comes down to vendor service agreements, and I can believe Bell has some more flexibility not just in delivery timelines but also such things for military helo operators.