Everything about Ah-56 Cheyenne totally explained
The
Lockheed AH-56 Cheyenne was a two-seat, single-engine,
rigid-rotor,
compound helicopter with low-mounted, fixed wings and retractable main landing gear. The AH-56A was the design winner of the
United States Army's Advanced Aerial Fire Support System program in 1965 to establish a technologically advanced, dedicated
attack helicopter. It was armed with a 30 mm cannon in a belly turret and either a 7.62 mm minigun or a 40 mm grenade launcher in a nose turret. It was also capable of being armed with
2.75 inch rockets and TOW missiles. The Cheyenne's compound helicopter design was intended to provide a 212 knot dash capability in order to serve as an armed escort to the Army's transport helicopters.
Lockheed was awarded a production contract in 1967 but was unable to deliver production aircraft by 1968, and the production contract was subsequently canceled in 1969. Development continued in the hopes that eventually the Army would be able to field the Cheyenne. A 1972 congressional report from the Senate which recommended funding of the
United States Air Force's
A-10 and the
United States Navy's
Harrier programs sounded the end for the AH-56, and the program was canceled by the Secretary of the Army in August 1972.
Development
In the mid-1960s the U.S. Army concluded that a purpose-built gunship with more speed and firepower was required in the face of increasingly intense ground fire (often using heavy machine guns and anti-tank rockets) from Viet Cong and NVA troops. Based on this realization, and with the growing involvement in Vietnam, the U.S. Army developed the requirements for a dedicated attack helicopter, the "Advanced Aerial Fire Support System" (AAFSS). The aircraft would be able to cruise at 195 knots with dash speed of 220 kt. It would be able hover-out-of-
ground effect (OGE) at 6,000 feet (PA) and 95 °
F (35 °C), and carry a much larger payload of weapons.
In August 1964, the Army released its request for proposals for the AAFSS. In February 1965, Lockheed and Sikorsky were selected as finalists. In the end, Lockheed's design was announced the winner in November 1965 on the basis of the design being less expensive, available earlier, and having less technical risk. The quantitative requirements for the AAFSS were finally released by the Army on
17 December 1965, which included several changes including adding an aerial rocket subsystem. In all, fourteen requirements were added to what was in Lockheed's proposal. along with heavy campaigning by the Air Force which was in the midst of trying to get the A-10 authorized, led to the Cheyenne's demise in favor of the
AH-64 Apache, and continued production of
AH-1 Cobra, which was quite successful in Vietnam, and would serve in USMC use beyond 2000. The Army would trade speed for survivability in the specification which would lead to the
AH-64 Apache.
Design
The AH-56 Cheyenne was a compound helicopter with a two-seat tandem cockpit, fixed low wings and retractable landing gear.
The Cheyenne had a short but substantial wing on each side of the airframe and a rigid main rotor. Thrust was provided by a
pusher-prop at the rear of the aircraft. Since the main rotor isn't relied on for the full amount of lift (provided by the wings) or thrust (from the pusher prop), the Cheyenne was able to reach high speeds - in excess of 200 kts. The design is classed as a compound helicopter, or
gyrodyne, and was unable to qualify for speed records in helicopter categories. The Cheyenne also featured an advanced navigation and fire control suite which became the basis for the fire control suite in the AH-64 Apache.
An unusual feature of the AH-56 was the gunner's station. Like the AH-1 Cobra, the AH-56 has two crew members, seated in tandem—a pilot and a gunner. A turret with a 360° firing arc is located in the middle of aircraft underbelly, in contrast to the limited forward arc of the AH-1's chin turret. The AH-56 gunner's station, seat and consoles rotate along with the turret to keep the gunner facing the same direction as the guns, although the aircraft's design obscures approximately 120° of the gunner's rear view. The gun-sight afforded the gunner direct viewing from the turret.
Specifications (AH-56A)
Further Information
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