Fully
Armed Chinese Z-10 Helicopter With Extra Fuel Tanks On 'Combat
Status'
25
January, 2013
Alert
5
posts
Chinese military hardware pictures straight from the ground, but they
can lack context as PLA troops or brave civilians snap photos of
classified military manuevers and post
to Weibo
Today's
featured photo is a Chinese Z-10 attack helicopter saddled with
"Ferry Tanks" to fly extra distance and return without
refueling. While we can't say where the photo was taken or pinpoint
the choppers destination, we did report
the PLA earlier this week announced its
army aviation unit of attack helicopters were shifting from logistics
missions to combat status.
The
PLA Daily,
China's official military newspaper:
The
[helicopter] unit will work on major missions such as long-distance
tasks, large scale offshore operations, attack coordination with
other units and large scale airborne operations, it
said, adding that the unit will also aim to improve its operation
capability based on IT technologies.
The English
PLA Daily army section has
several announcements related to its
helicopter units, their
accelerated training,
and even troops psychological readiness for "military
transportation in high-tech wars".
The
Ferry Tanks seen in the picture would be particularly useful
in long-distance
tasks, large scale offshore operations, attack coordination with
other units and large scale airborne operations.
Google
Naha,
Okinawa with bar scale and regional map inset (Click to expand)
If
engaged in the Diaoyu/Senkaku
island dispute,
the Z-10s could be stationed at Air Base Shuimen to the east. Round
trip to the islands is out of reach of the Z-10s, without support
ships like the Haixun 21 deployed to the South.
But
it's possible China's fleet of 48
Z-10s, spread
across four attack squadrons of a dozen birds each, could act in some
localized support.
Satellite
imagery of the base came to light in 2009, and experts believe it was
completed late last year.
The
Taipei Times reported
in May 2012 that J-10
combat aircraft, Su-30
fighters,
and various unmanned drones were arriving at the base.
The
Shuimen airbase compliments China's
nearby East Fleet that maintains 35 ships in
the region, including its newest warship the Type
054,
seven submarines, and eight additional landing craft.In addition
to aircraft, experts believe Russian made S-300 long-range
surface-to-air missiles ring the airbase, providing some of the
best missile protection in the world. TheS-300
is comparable to the
U.S. made Patriot missile system sent recently to Turkey for its
first line of missile defense against Syria.
Among
the subs are four Kilo-class
diesel-electric Russian
made boats capable of the most advanced underwater warfare.
The
Z-10 would provide a fine air support element to the fleet with its
prototype powered by Canada's Pratt & Whitney engines and
software. That's the deal which put that company in hot water
for violating
the Arms Export Control Act last
year and incurred a $75 million fine against it.
The
Z-10 is an attack helicopter designed for air-to-ground assaults with
limited air-to-air abilities, very similar to the U.S. Apache
AH-64.
AH-64D
over Baghdad (Click to expand)
The
Z-10 helicopter has a standard gunship configuration with a narrow
fuselage and stepped tandem cockpits. Gunner is seated at the front
and the pilot is at the rear. The fuselage has sloped sides to reduce
radar cross section. All vital areas are believed to be protected by
armor plates.
Weapons
of the Z-10 may consist of 30-mm cannon, HJ-9 anti-tank guided
missiles (comparable to the TOW-2A), newly developed HJ-10 anti-tank
missiles (comparable to the AGM-114 Hellfire) and TY-90 air-to-air
missiles. It can also carry un-operated rocket pods.
The
prototype of the Z-10 is powered by two Canadian Pratt & Whitney
PT6C-67C turboshaft engines, delivering 1,531 hp each. However
indigenous engines might be used on production helicopters. It might
use the same engine of the WZ-9 helicopter, but it is less powerful
than Canadian design.
A
satellite view of the Shuimen air base
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