Gyundoan-Han GH-26 Agŏ

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GH-24 "Agŏ"
GH-26 major variants.png
The four main variants of the GH-26; refits are excluded.
Role Attack helicopter with transport capabilities
National origin Reberiya/Menghe
Manufacturer Gyundoan-Han Helicopter Factory
Introduction 1976
Status In service
Primary user Menghean Army
Produced 1976–present
Developed from ShGv-5

The Gyundoan-Han GH-26 (Formal designation: 균도안-한 26호 직승기 / 균도안-恨 二六號 直升機, Gyundoan-Han iryuk-ho Jiksŭnggi, "Gyundoan-Han No.26 Helicopter;" Short designation 균한-26 Gyuhan-iryuk "GH-26") is a Menghean attack helicopter with a secondary troop transport capability in certain models. Originally a licensed copy of the Reberiyan ShGv-5 with downgraded electronics, through a separate, parallel series of improvements and modernizations it has developed a number of major differences, most notably in the distinct location of the flexible 30mm cannon on the "R" variant. It is sometimes marketed under the nickname Agŏ (Menghean: 악어 / 鰐魚), or "Crocodile," a name which first emerged among crews in reference to its angular nose and green-white color scheme.

Licensing Agreement

A GH-26H training model, converted from an early-production GH-26G, at a military museum in Songgang Province.

In the late 1960s and early 1970s, the Democratic People's Republic of Menghe procured licenses for a number of military helicopters, mainly from Letnia. By 1973, the Menghean People's Army was expressing interest in a heavily armed helicopter gunship, motivated in large part by the ongoing proxy war in Dzhungestan.

Sim Jin-hwan initially favored a domestic design, in line with the Daesŭngri DS-5 and Songrim SR-7, but the Gyundoan-Han helicopter design bureau was apparently struggling to move beyond small, lightweight aircraft. After Letnia offered a gunship modification of the Mi-8, which the MPA found inadequate, Reberiya became an unlikely entrant into the competition by offering its ShGv-5. Six airframes were shipped to the DPRM for testing and evaluation in 1975, and after these impressed their operators, Menghe negotiated a production license in 1976. Mass production of the domestic Menghean variant, designated GH-26G, began the following year. Changes for Menghean production included the installation of new radio equipment and the redesign of the missile rails for the YDCh-10, a copy of the Letnian 9M14 Malyutka.

Minor upgrades and refits to the GH-26 appeared in the 1970s and 1980s, most of them adding compatibility with newer anti-tank guided missiles: the beam-riding YDCh-12 and YDCh-13. The IFF antennas were also replaced with domestic ones. A larger change came in 1998, with the GH-26D variant; in addition to support for the YDCh-17 missile, this added improved radio and ECM systems, and other electronics which had become available after Menghe's detente with the capitalist powers.

GH-26R

The result of design work undertaken in the early 2000s, the GH-26R was a comprehensive revision of the basic ShGv-5 airframe. Some regard it as the most unique of the ShGv-5's descendants. The changes were motivated by combat experience in the Polvokian Civil War, which revealed that the combined gunship-transport role was inferior to a pairing of dedicated transports and gunships. Shortly before introduction, the Ummayan Civil War brought additional lessons, and a licensing agreement allowed Menghe to produce the Glasic Brimstone missile as the YGJ-48, resulting in last-minute changes to the design.

The most distinct feature of the GH-26R, unique among Septentrion's helicopter gunships, was the placement of a 30mm 2A42 autocannon in a rotating turret centered under the fuselage. This required the installation of new landing gear to keep the fuselage higher off the ground when landed or taxiing. The ammunition feed, which had selectable high-explosive and armor-piercing belts, sat above the cannon in the rear of the troop compartment, along with expanded fuel tanks for greater range. About half of the original troop compartment remained, with four smaller fold-down seats relocated to the forward area. Standard doctrine held that these would be used to recover downed airmen, and otherwise left empty. On ferry flights the internal storage space could be used to carry personal belongings and supplies.

With a heavier autocannon now installed, the 23mm nose cannon was deleted, replaced by a larger electro-optical sight. The removal of the ammunition feed sections around the nose gave the gunner better downward visibility. The cockpit was given an armor-plated "dish" around its lower structure, protecting the crew from 23mm anti-aircraft fire over the frontal arc and complementing the armored glass of the canopy. The electronics, avionics, and ECM equipment were again upgraded, as were the cockpit displays, and a millimeter-wave doppler radar was installed on top of the rotor mast to improve ground-search capabilities.

A four-blade staggered tail rotor was installed in place of the three-blade one, and large air-mixing suppressors were installed over the turbine exhausts to reduce infrared signature and vent exhaust air into the rotor downwash and away from the skin of the airframe. The turbines themselves were replaced by newer models with higher peak output and greater reliability, mainly to compensate for the added fuel and ammunition weight.

Variant "R" was well-received by crews, though it came with its own problems. Even with new turbines, it lagged behind the GH-32 in speed and maneuverability. The relocated cannon caused less instability when firing at high off-center angles, as it was located almost directly under the rotor hub, but it could not fire ahead while the helicopter was moving forward due to poor upward traverse. Operational experience also revealed that on particularly rough landings the base of the autocannon could impact the ground, damaging the internal structure of the airframe.

Variants

Early variants of the GH-26.
GH-26G
Original license-production variant, which entered service in 1977. Its ATGM armament consisted of manually guided YDCh-10 missiles.
GH-26N
Variant with a laser guidance system to support more accurate YDCh-12 ATGMs. Also had minor changes to the IFF system. Introduced in 1981.
GH-26N1
Upgrade kit for GH-26Ns, for compatibility with the newer YDCh-13. Introduced in 1985.
GH-26G1
Upgrade kit for the GH-26G, to bring it to GH-26N1 standard.
GH-26N2
Post-revolution upgrade of the GH-26N with improved electronics and avionics.
GH-26D
The first major post-revolution variant, first seen in 1997. Avionics and electronics, including the gunner's camera, were substantially improved, and compatibility with early-model helmet-mounted sights was added. The wing hardpoints were updated to the new Army Aviation modular standard, and wired to carry the YDCh-17 ATGM or the YGG-5 air-to-air missile. Also introduced armored glass panels around the cockpit, though not around its lower section.
GN-26N3
Upgrade kit for the GH-26N with most of the D model's features: new avionics, improved ECM, bulletproof glass, and compatibility with the YDCh-17.
GH-26SP
A single GH-26G airframe rebuilt with a fenestron tail in the late 1990s, as a testbed for the GH-32 program.
Variants produced after 1987, including refit kits for earlier variants.
GH-26R
A major variant introduced in 2010. The nose-mounted 23mm cannon was replaced by a large electro-optical sight, and the ammunition storage around it was replaced by an armored tub around the cockpit. Instead, a 30mm 2A72 cannon is fitted on the right side of the fuselage in a flexible mount with limited left/right traverse. The rear half of the passenger compartment contains 400 rounds of high-explosive ammunition and 130 rounds of armor-piercing ammunition in two selectable feeds, while the forward half, with a door on the left side only, has seating space for two passengers. This space is primarily meant to evacuate downed pilots. To compensate for the added weight, the GH-26R also has more powerful Taesan-made engines with dust filters over the intakes and air mixing units over the exhaust ports.
GH-26D1
Upgrade kit for the GH-26D, introduced in 2011. Added compatibility with the YGJ-48 (Brimstone) missile and other new GH-26R armaments, as well as the -R's exhaust air mixers and defensive EW suite. The position of the cannon was not changed.
GH-26H
Dedicated training airframe with the gun removed. All are conversions of "G" or "N" airframes, usually early-production ones. The external hardpoints are retained.
GH-26Jj
Special upgrade package for service in Dzhungestan. Prominent dust filters are added ahead of the turbine intakes, and dust filtration elsewhere in the airframe is improved. Also carries all modifications up to -D1 standard.
GH-26R1
Refit of "R" models for compatibility with a more advanced helmet-mounted sight capable of targeting air-to-air and certain air-to-ground missiles. Introduced in 2013. Externally identical to the GH-26R.
GH-26D2
Refit of "D" and "D1" models to support the same helmet-mounted sight. Also introduced in 2013.

Operational service

Dzhungestan

The DPRM dispatched many of its early-production GH-26 airframes to the People's Republic of Dzhungestan, a Communist-aligned government which controlled the southern portion of the country during the 1970s and 1980s. Though Dzhungestan's civil war had already reached a tentative ceasefire by 1977, with a line of control drawn across the center of the steppe, GH-26 helicopters flown by Menghean pilots actively patrolled the border zone throughout the late 1970s and into the early 1980s. On several occasions Themiclesian forces accused them of crossing into Khanate of Dzhungestan airspace, and one GH-26 was grounded on the western side of the ceasefire line after suffering engine problems; both crew members fled on foot, but died of dehydration before reaching the border.

Decembrist Revolution

During the Menghean famine of 1985-87, the DPRM used GH-26 helicopters to suppress agrarian uprisings over the southern plain, contributing to unrest among top Army officers over whether the Communist Party was violating its power-sharing agreement with the armed forces.

Several months later, in December 1987, GH-26 helicopters attached to Choe Sŭng-min's command took part in the Decembrist Revolution, patrolling the skies over Donggyŏng as Army forces seized Party and Government buildings. In the immediate aftermath of the coup, Choe's helicopter crews painted light blue stripes on either side of the Menghean People's Army roundel to clarify their alignment with the uprising. No airframes were lost during the fighting with loyalist forces.

Polvokian Civil War

The GH-26's first major combat debut came at the end of 1997, when Menghean forces crossed the border into Polvokia to suppress rebel forces under the command of Tukchin supremacist Tsangmargi Argun. Menghean commanders gave a favorable evaluation to the performance of the new "D" variant helicopters, which saw extensive action in the first months of the war, helping to stop Argun's armored forces from advancing southward into majority-Meng areas.

Nevertheless, experience in Polvokia revealed some problems with the GH-26. The combined gunship-transport capability proved difficult to exploit effectively, as rockets and missiles were hard to fire from directly over the landing zone, and by 1999 Army commanders were mainly using GH-26s as gunships to support dedicated GH-24 transports. At the outset, most GH-26s in the attack force were also "N" variants not wired to support the new YDCh-17 ATGM, and these were mainly relegated to rocket-attack duties.

Ummayan Civil War

The GH-26 saw intense combat again in the Ummayan Civil War, both against Naseristan-aligned militias and conventional Tyrannian and Sieuxerrian forces. By this time, all service airframes taking part in the Menghean intervention were of "D" variant, but the newer "R" variant had not yet been introduced to service. High losses to anti-air fire, including to older-model MANPADS systems, led the Menghean Army to invest in improved defensive ECM for new-production models and refits for existing ones.

Innominadan Crisis

The Menghean invasion of Innominada, which began in September 2014, saw extensive use of GH-26R1 and -D2 models, this time equipped with advanced YGJ-48 anti-tank missiles, improved targeting systems, and improved ECM. The updated versions showed a relatively good ability to return to base with small-arms damage and return to combat-ready status after factory repairs. Twelve GH-26s of all types were lost during the conflict, three of them to mortar fire while on the ground. In two airborne shootdown incidents, another GH-26 operating as wingman was able to pick up the surviving crewmembers and transport them back to the base of operations; in a separate incident, four GH-26D2s were used to pick up a special forces unit that had been encircled behind enemy lines.

Menghean crackdown in Innominada

GH-26s saw action again during the Innominadan Uprising of January 2018, when Menghean forces moved into the Republic of Innominada to suppress anti-Menghean rioters and return the country to the control of its proxy government. In press statements, the Menghean Ministry of National Defense asserted that attack helicopters were used in overhead reconnaissance patrols because their cockpits had armored bases and were protected from small-arms fire, and denied accusations that they were used against civilians on the ground. Dissident-aligned social media accounts, including those affiliated with the Menghean Government in Exile, have denied these claims, accusing the Menghean Army of firing on crowds of protesters from the air.

Operators

Specifications (GH-26R)

General characteristics

  • Crew: 2 (pilot and weapon systems operator)
  • Length: 16.54 m (54 ft 3 in)
  • Rotor diameter: 7.4 m (24 ft 3 in)
  • Height: 5.48 m (18 ft)
  • Disc area: 201 m2 (2,163 ft2)
  • Empty weight: 8,250 kg (18,200 lb)
  • Max. takeoff weight: 12,450 kg (27,500 lb)
  • Powerplant: 2 × GH Type 03 turboshaft, 1,800 kW (2,400 hp) each

Performance

Armament

  • Guns: 1× belly-mounted 30 mm GP-30 cannon with 300 rounds (±150° horizontal fire)
  • Hardpoints: Three pylons under each stub wing. Armament options for each hardpoint include:
    • 4 YGJ-48 anti-tank missiles
    • 8 YDCh-17 anti-tank missiles
    • 4 YDCh-72 anti-tank missiles
    • 1 YGG-5 Dando air-to-air missile
    • 1 GHB-8-20 J rocket pod with twenty 80mm rockets
    • 1 GHB-14-4 J rocket pod with four 140mm rockets
    • 1 H-26 260mm rocket on launch rail
    • 1 P-500 series unguided bomb