 The Perfect Soldier: Special Operations, Commandos, and the Future of Us Warfare by James F. Dunnigan
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Dirty Little Secrets
Longbow Dies In the Mountains
by James Dunnigan September 3, 2006
Discussion Board on this DLS topic
The U.S. Army is stripping its helicopter gunships
of some high-tech electronics, in order to save weight, and the hassle
of maintenance. The AH-64D Apache Longbow has a radar based fire
control system that enables it to spot armored vehicles, or stationary
targets, in any weather, and up to ten kilometers away, and destroy
them with Hellfire missiles (max range, eight kilometers). Introduced
in the late 1990s, this was a late Cold War development, the perfect
weapon to destroying enemy tanks at long range. The AH-64D got some use
during the 2003 Iraq invasion, but since then, the Longbow radar has
been more of a liability. The radar system has not been much use for
firing Hellfires at targets in residential areas, where you usually
want to get a visual, not radar, picture of the target. Moreover, the
radar system weighs 500 pounds (about three percent of the weight of a
fully loaded AH-64D). In Afghanistan, where the AH-64s fly at high
altitudes, where the thin air means less lift, losing three percent of
your weight is appreciated. In Iraq, the high heat, and abundant dust,
makes the Longbow electronics more prone to breakdown.
So the army is taking the Longbow gear (two black boxes and the
radar dome) off many of their AH-64Ds. This enables aircraft in
Afghanistan to stay out a little longer, and be a bit more maneuverable
at higher altitudes. In Iraq (and Afghanistan), it's one less
maintenance headache for the support crews.
The next version of the Longbow will weigh only 400 pounds, and
have more reliable, and easier to maintain, electronics. Against an
enemy using lots of armored vehicles, the AH-64D, with its radar and a
full load of 16 Hellfire missiles, is one of the more lethal anti-tank
systems around. The current plan is to eventually upgrade all AH-64s to
AH-64Ds.
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