Pesawat
ringan berkipas turboprop adalah sesuai digunakan untuk peperangan melawan
gerila kerana ianya jauh lebih murah dari jet pejuang, boleh berperanan sebagai
pesawat peninjau, pesawat pejuang, pesawat pengiring disamping mudah dan murah
untuk disenggara dan tidak memerlukan landasan terbang yang panjang dan cantik.
Kajian mendapati harga untuk 1 jet pejuang boleh membeli 40 pesawat ringan
turboprop. Negara maju seperti Amerika Syarikat pun sekarang ini sedang
mengkaji untuk mengguna kembali teknologi lama ini dalam era perang gerila dan
pencegahan penyeludun serta pengawalan pantai.
 
Indonesian
Air Force Welcomes Anti-Guerrilla Fighter Planes
2
September 2012
 
Four
A-29 Super Tucano fighter planes arrived at East Jakarta’s Halim Perdanakusuma
Base on Saturday in the first wave of new “counter-insurgency” turboprop
fighters purchased as part of the Indonesian Military’s (TNI) push to modernize
its fleet.
 
The
Super Tucano, a reliable fighter known for its counter-insurgency abilities and
low price, will replace the Indonesian Air Force’s grounded fleet of ageing
OV-10 Broncos. The Indonesian government bought two packages of eight planes
each from Brazilian planemaker Embraer for $143 million per package, Air Force
deputy chief of staff Air Marshall Dede Rusamsi said.
 
A
second delivery of four Super Tucanos are expected to arrive early next year. A
second group of eight more planes will arrive some time after January 2013, he
said.
 
The
“anti-guerrilla” Super Tucano can be used for a broad range of missions,
including surveillance, air-to-air combat and counter-insurgency actions, Dede
said. The Air Force plans to use the planes for pilot training, he added.
 
The
four planes left Embraer’s factory in Brazil on Aug. 6 were co-piloted by eight
Brazilian pilots. The pilots passed over Spain, Morocco, Italy, Greece, Egypt,
Qatar, Oman, India and Thailand before they entered Indonesia and landed in
Medan. The entire trip took 54 hours and 35 minutes spread across 14 days, Dede
said.
 
“Before
being flown to Indonesia, the four airplanes had undergone [safety] checks,
including document clarification, checks of plane components and interiors, as
well as test flights involving expert personnel and test pilots from the
Indonesian Air Force,” Dede said.
 
Military
officials welcomed the planes in a ceremony in East Jakarta on Saturday. They
will then be flown to the Air Force’s Abdulrachman Saleh base in Malang, where
they will be based.
 
Each
of Super Tucano weighs 5.4 tons and can carry up to 1,550 kilograms of
weaponry.
 
Embraer
is the world’s third largest commercial aircraft manufacturer, behind America’s
Boeing and Europe’s Airbus. In 2010, it sold 101 commercial aircraft and 145
executive jets.
 
http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/WO1209/S00011/indonesian-air-force-welcomes-anti-guerrilla-fighter-planes.htm
 
 
Air
power on the cheap
Small,
slow and inexpensive propeller-driven planes are starting to displace fighter
jets
Sep
20th 2010
 
JET
fighters may be sexy in a Tom Cruise-ish sort of way, but for guerilla
warfare—in which the enemy rarely has an air force of his own with which to
dogfight—they are often not the tool for the job. 
 
Pilotless
drones can help fill the gap. Sometimes there is no substitute for having a
pilot on the scene, however, so modern air forces are starting to turn to a
technology from the yesteryear of flying: the turboprop.
 
So-called
light-attack turboprops are cheap both to build and to fly. A fighter jet can
cost $80m. By contrast the 208B Caravan, a light-attack turboprop made by
Cessna, costs barely $2m. It also costs as little as $500 a hour to run when it
is in the air, compared with $10,000 or more for a fighter jet. And, unlike
jets, turboprops can use roads and fields for takeoff and landing.
 
Nor
is it only jets that light-attack turboprops can outperform. Armed drones have
drawbacks, too. The Reaper, made by General Atomics, can cost $10m or more,
depending on its bells and whistles. On top of that, a single drone can require
a team of more than 20 people on the ground to support it, plus satellite
communications. A manned turboprop can bomb an insurgent for a third of the
cost of using a drone, according to Pat Sullivan, the head of government sales
at Cessna. And there are strategic considerations, too. Many countries' armed
forces rely on allies such as America for the expertise and satellite networks
needed to run drones. Such allies can let you down in a pinch. Piloted
light-attack planes offer complete operational independence—and, being
lower-tech than many drones, are less subject to restrictions on exports in the
first place.
 
They
are also better, in many ways, than helicopters. To land a chopper safely in
the dirt requires sophisticated laser scanners to detect obstacles hidden by
dust thrown up by the downdraught of the rotors. On top of this, such dust
makes helicopter maintenance even more difficult than it is already.
Maintaining turboprops, by contrast, is easy. According to Robyn Read, an
air-power strategist at the Air Force Research Institute near Montgomery,
Alabama, they can be “flown and maintained by plumbers”. Thrush Aircraft, a
firm based in Albany, Georgia, is even more expansive. It claims that the
Vigilante, an armed version of its cropdusting plane that costs $1m, can be
disassembled in the field with little more than a pocket screwdriver.
 
Turboprops
are also hard to shoot down. Air Tractor, another firm that makes cropdusters,
branched out into warplanes last year. One reason was that a fleet of 16
unarmed versions of its aircraft had been used by America's State Department to
dust South American drug plantations with herbicide—an activity that tends to
provoke a hostile response from the ground. Despite the planes' having been hit
by more than 200 rounds, though, neither an aircraft nor a pilot has been lost.
 
In
part, this is because of the robust mechanics of turboprops and in part because
Air Tractor's fuel tanks have rubber membranes which close around bullet holes
to slow leaks. Add extra fuel tanks, which let the plane stay aloft for ten
hours, six 225kg precision-guided bombs and more than 2,000kg of missiles,
rockets and ammunition for two 50-calibre machineguns, and you have the
AT-802U, a formidable yet reasonably cheap (at $5m) warplane.
 
Light-attack
aircraft also now sport much of the electronics used by fighter jets. The
MX-15, an imaging device made by L-3 WESCAM, a Canadian company, allows a pilot
to read a vehicle's license plate from a distance of 10km. It is carried by
both the AT-802U and the AT-6, a top-of-the-range light-attack plane made by
Hawker Beechcraft.
 
Not
surprisingly, then, many countries with small defence budgets are investing in
turboprops. Places that now fly them, or are expected to do so, include Brazil,
Chile, Colombia, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Indonesia, Iraq, Lebanon,
Morocco and Venezuela. And the United States. For the biggest military
establishment in the world, too, recognises the value of this new old
technology. The American air force plans to buy more than 100 turboprops and
the navy is now evaluating the Super Tucano, made by Embraer, a Brazilian firm.
 
In
aerial combat, then, low tech may be the new high tech. And there is one other
advantage that the turboprop has over the jet, at least according to Mr
Read—who flew turboprops on combat missions in Cambodia during the 1970s. It is
that you can use a loudspeaker to talk to potential targets before deciding
whether to attack them. As Winston Churchill so memorably put it: “When you
have to kill a man, it costs nothing to be polite.”
 
http://www.economist.com/node/17079443 

Kirim email ke