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Indian Apache attack helicopter makes emergency landing in Punjab

Helicopter is safe and undamaged despite emergency landing.
It was only possible due to high skills of IAF aviators.

Exactly... not even 1 year experience and skilled pilot saved it from damage..... whatever minor technical snag will be cured soon and beast will be ready to hunt down enemy tanks if they dare to cross the border....
 
And you speak as if only Pakistan has tech faults and Indian pilots are taught to crash jets. Neither you nor us are the OEMs. So before you try to take a jibe, look at your record too.
Indian Air Force (*ahem*) has lost 12 Su-30MKIs since '97. Just putting it out there.
 
Exactly... not even 1 year experience and skilled pilot saved it from damage..... whatever minor technical snag will be cured soon and beast will be ready to hunt down enemy tanks if they dare to cross the border....

Agreed!

Good job pilots to bring down safley even technical problem occurred.
 
AF's Brand New Apache Chopper Makes Emergency Landing In Punjab Field
The American-made Apaches, also informally known as "tank busters", were bought by India in a recent deal worth $1.1 billion
All India Edited by Debanish Achom
Updated : April 17, 2020 03:41 pm IST
853riblg_apache-emergency-landing_625x300_17_April_20.jpg

Apaches are widely considered the most advanced attack helicopters in the world

New Delhi:
A brand new Apache attack helicopter of the Indian Air Force (IAF) made an emergency landing in a field in Punjab's Hoshiarpur today. The two pilots are safe and the district police are in touch with the IAF's base in Pathankot.

Reports said there was no damage to the helicopter.

"An Apache helicopter of the IAF got airborne from Pathankot airbase. The helicopter, after approximately one hour of flying had indications of a critical failure and carried out a safe landing west of Indora, Punjab," the IAF said in a statement.



"The captain of the aircraft took correct and prompt actions to recover the helicopter safely. All crew on board the helicopter are safe and there has been no damage to any property. The aircraft will be recovered after necessary rectification," it said.

The American-made Apaches, also informally known as "tank busters", were bought by India in a recent deal worth $1.1 billion.

Twenty-two brand new Apache attack helicopters were ordered by India. The first batch was inducted in September last year.

The Apaches are widely considered the most advanced attack helicopters in the world and have seen action with the US Air Force in multiple wars
 
I'm sure their pilot tried their best to crash that thing but may it's got a stable landing on its own with AI computer.
 
IAF’s brand new & expensive Apache chopper makes emergency landing due to technical glitch
In a span of 24 hours, one of IAF's oldest and the newest choppers have made emergency landings.
Snehesh Alex Philip 17 April, 2020 3:32 pm IST


Apache-Punjab-landing-696x392.jpg

The Apache helicopter which made an emergency landing after take off from Pathankot base in Punjab on 17 April 2020 | Photo by special arrangement
Text Size:

New Delhi: A brand new Apache attack helicopter of the Indian Air Force (IAF) Thursday made an emergency landing in a field an hour after taking off from its base in Punjab’s Pathankot.

This is the first such incident involving the choppers that were procured in an approximately $2-billion-deal from the US.

The IAF in a statement said all crew onboard the helicopter are safe and there had been no damage to any property.


It added that the helicopter, after approximately one hour of flying, had indications of a critical failure and carried out a safe landing west of Indora, Punjab. The captain of the aircraft took correct and prompt actions to recover the helicopter safely. The aircraft will be recovered after necessary rectification, the IAF said.

The IAF is likely to order a Court of Inquiry into the incident.

The Apache landing comes within 24 hours of a Cheetah helicopter, the IAF”s oldest helicopter, also making an emergency landing.


Also read: Army and IAF fought over Apache choppers, costing us Rs 2,500 crore more. Blame their silos

The Apache deal
The Apache AH 64E, an out-and-out attack helicopter, was inducted into the IAF in September last year following a deal signed by the Narendra Modi government in 2015.


India had ordered for 22 Apaches in a contract valued at Rs 14,910 crore and the deliveries were completed this year. Earlier this year, the Army ordered for six more Apache helicopters.

Equipped with an AN/APG-78 Longbow fire control radar system, the iconic choppers have a deadly reputation for being able to sneak up on targets, carry out devastating precision attacks at stand-off ranges and to operate in hostile airspace with threats from the ground.

India has been operating the Russian Mi-35s, which are on the verge of retirement. However, these are classified as ‘assault’ choppers and not pure attack choppers.

This is because the Mi-35s were designed to carry troops into heavily-defended territories. But the Apache is an attack helicopter with both air-to-ground and air-to-air capability.

The Apaches come with a 30mm cannon under the nose, which can fire 1,200 rounds in less than two minutes. Also equipped with 70mm guided or unguided rockets, the Apache can carry 80 of them in one go, besides Hellfire missiles.

The Indian Apaches also carry air-to-air Stinger missiles, which the IAF had specifically sought. Together with the avionics on board, these missiles can identify, track and hunt targets in the dead of night.
https://theprint.in/defence/iafs-br...gency-landing-due-to-technical-glitch/403697/


:smitten::smitten::smitten::smitten:

Now Indians wanna say that US provided them faulty and crappy Apache, Oh God someone share it with the old white bi*ch Christine fair pleaseeee.....:pakistan::pakistan::pakistan:
 
This is what happens when a sophisticated piece of machinery is at the hands of a nalaek Military.

Hope the Americans have braced themselves for some bad publicity of their state of the art equipment.

"You can cut the ears off a mule don't make him a horse."
-Ethan Hawke (Magnificent Seven)
 
IAF’s brand new & expensive Apache chopper makes emergency landing due to technical glitch
In a span of 24 hours, one of IAF's oldest and the newest choppers have made emergency landings.
Snehesh Alex Philip 17 April, 2020 3:32 pm IST

Apache-Punjab-landing-696x392.jpg

The Apache helicopter which made an emergency landing after take off from Pathankot base in Punjab on 17 April 2020 | Photo by special arrangement
Text Size:

New Delhi: A brand new Apache attack helicopter of the Indian Air Force (IAF) Thursday made an emergency landing in a field an hour after taking off from its base in Punjab’s Pathankot.

This is the first such incident involving the choppers that were procured in an approximately $2-billion-deal from the US.

The IAF in a statement said all crew onboard the helicopter are safe and there had been no damage to any property.


It added that the helicopter, after approximately one hour of flying, had indications of a critical failure and carried out a safe landing west of Indora, Punjab. The captain of the aircraft took correct and prompt actions to recover the helicopter safely. The aircraft will be recovered after necessary rectification, the IAF said.

The IAF is likely to order a Court of Inquiry into the incident.

The Apache landing comes within 24 hours of a Cheetah helicopter, the IAF”s oldest helicopter, also making an emergency landing.


Also read: Army and IAF fought over Apache choppers, costing us Rs 2,500 crore more. Blame their silos

The Apache deal
The Apache AH 64E, an out-and-out attack helicopter, was inducted into the IAF in September last year following a deal signed by the Narendra Modi government in 2015.


India had ordered for 22 Apaches in a contract valued at Rs 14,910 crore and the deliveries were completed this year. Earlier this year, the Army ordered for six more Apache helicopters.

Equipped with an AN/APG-78 Longbow fire control radar system, the iconic choppers have a deadly reputation for being able to sneak up on targets, carry out devastating precision attacks at stand-off ranges and to operate in hostile airspace with threats from the ground.

India has been operating the Russian Mi-35s, which are on the verge of retirement. However, these are classified as ‘assault’ choppers and not pure attack choppers.

This is because the Mi-35s were designed to carry troops into heavily-defended territories. But the Apache is an attack helicopter with both air-to-ground and air-to-air capability.

The Apaches come with a 30mm cannon under the nose, which can fire 1,200 rounds in less than two minutes. Also equipped with 70mm guided or unguided rockets, the Apache can carry 80 of them in one go, besides Hellfire missiles.

The Indian Apaches also carry air-to-air Stinger missiles, which the IAF had specifically sought. Together with the avionics on board, these missiles can identify, track and hunt targets in the dead of night.
https://theprint.in/defence/iafs-br...gency-landing-due-to-technical-glitch/403697/


:smitten::smitten::smitten::smitten:

Now Indians wanna say that US provided them faulty and crappy Apache, Oh God someone share it with the old white bi*ch Christine fair pleaseeee.....:pakistan::pakistan::pakistan:

muslim-coronavirus hit the apache.
 

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