Kamov Ka-60 Explained

Ka-60 Kasatka
Type:Transport/utility helicopter
National Origin:Russia
Manufacturer:Kamov
First Flight:24 December 1998
Number Built:2[1]

The Kamov Ka-60 Kasatka (ru|"[[:ru:Касатка|Касатка]]", "Killer Whale"[2]) is a Russian medium twin-turbine military transport helicopter under development by Kamov. It performed its first flight on 24 December 1998.

The civil version is known as Kamov Ka-62.

Design

The Ka-60 has an estimated local military market of 200 units (Army aviation units, Border Police and the Ministry of Internal Affairs). The Ka-60 is to be used for aerial reconnaissance, for transporting air-assault forces, radio-electronic jamming, for special-operations missions and for various light-transport missions. Variations for foreign sale are expected. Manufacture is to take place at Ulan-Ude.

The civil version, the Ka-62, can carry up to 15 passengers or of cargo (internally or externally), has a top speed of 167 kn (310 km/h) and a range of 380 nmi (700 km). It features a five-blade main rotor and shrouded tail rotor, and is powered by a pair of Safran Ardiden 3Gs, and later by in-development Klimov VK-1600s.[3] It has a 30-minute run-dry gearbox by Zoerkler, and can operate on one engine up to 9,500 ft (2,900m).[4]

Development

The development of the helicopter was long. The program started in 1984, but the first prototype Ka-60-01 flew in December 1998, and the second in 2007.[5]

A civil version, the Ka-62, was initially proposed when the Ka-60 programme was launched, but no production followed owing to development problems with the Ka-60's Saturn RD-600V 1500 hp engines. Instead, an agreement was signed in April 2011 to use the 1306kW Turbomeca Ardiden 3G turboshaft for a revised Ka-62. The main rotor will be driven via a new transmission, while the helicopter will have a revised cabin with larger windows and new avionics. First flight of the Ka-62 was planned for May 2013, with certification in 2014. Four prototypes and an initial batch of 16 Ka-62s for the Russian Ministry of Defence were planned,[6] with another 12 ordered by South American civilian customers. Russian certification was expected in 2018, with European EASA certification following in 2020.[7]

The Ka-62 was unveiled in 2012 and flight tests began in 2017.[3] After 434 test flights with three prototypes during 700h, it was certified on 30 November 2021 by Russian regulator Rosaviatsia.[3] Deliveries should begin in 2022, planned production is six units in 2022, eight in 2023 and 10 in 2024.[3] A cargo hook, a winch, a medical module and an anti-icing system should be certified until 2024.[3]

The development and certification of the Ka-62 was stopped in late 2022 due to Western sanctions and the large number of foreign-made components (including the French-manufactured engine).[8]

Variants

Ka-60: Basic multi-role model.
  • Ka-60U: Training version.
  • Ka-60K: Naval version.
  • Ka-60R: Reconnaissance version.
  • Ka-62: New version for the civilian market. It has a redesigned fuselage with a high degree of composites, a larger cabin than the earlier demonstrators and will be equipped with Turbomeca Ardiden 3G engines.[9]
  • Ka-64 Sky Horse: Western certified export version equipped with two General Electric T700/CT7 turboshaft engines and five-blade main rotor.
  • Operators

    Sources

    External links

    Notes and References

    1. Web site: Новинки HeliRussia 2012 . Андрей Фомин . 2012-05-17 . Журнал «Взлёт» . 2013-01-29 . https://web.archive.org/web/20121203031840/http://www.take-off.ru/blogaf/652-helirussia-2012-news-05-12 . 2012-12-03 . ru . dead .
    2. https://web.archive.org/web/20101107181719/http://www.kamov.ru/en/production/ka60/ Kamov Ka-60 archived webpage
    3. News: Ka-62 helicopter gains Russian certification . Dominic Perry . 1 December 2021 . Flightglobal.
    4. Mladenov Air International January 2014, p. 74.
    5. Butowski, Piotr. Rosyjskie śmigłowce: kryzys nie mija. Helirussia, Moskwa, 25–27 maja 2017 r., "Lotnictwo Aviation International" Nr. 7/2017, p. 36-37
    6. Butowski Air International September 2012, pp. 66–67.
    7. Mladneov Air International June 2016, pp. 6–7.
    8. Web site: 2022-11-11 . Russia puts Ka-62, its newest civilian helicopter project, on ice - AeroTime . 2024-05-21 . en-US.
    9. Web site: Russian Helicopters. 31 December 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20160312231518/http://www.russianhelicopters.aero/en/helicopters/civil/ka-62/features.html. 12 March 2016. live. dmy-all.
    10. http://warfare.be/?lang=&catid=260&linkid=1633 Kamov Ka-60
    11. Web site: World Air Forces 2013 . flightglobal.com . 10 March 2013 . https://web.archive.org/web/20121216005935/http://www.flightglobal.com/airspace/media/reports_pdf/emptys/101015/world-air-forces-2013.pdf . 16 December 2012 . live . dmy-all .
    12. Web site: Brazil's Atlas Taxi Aereo becomes first export customer for the Ka-62. Flightglobal. 2012-12-19. 22 March 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20130319071323/http://www.flightglobal.com/news/articles/brazils-atlas-taxi-aereo-becomes-first-export-customer-for-the-ka-62-380291/. 19 March 2013. live. dmy-all.
    13. Web site: MAKS: Russian Helicopters grows backlog for Kamov Ka-62. Flightglobal. 2013-08-29. 2013-08-29. https://web.archive.org/web/20140808052602/http://www.flightglobal.com/news/articles/maks-russian-helicopters-grows-backlog-for-kamov-ka-62-389921/. 2014-08-08. live.