fbpx
Wikipedia

Airwolf (helicopter)

Airwolf is the helicopter from the 1980s American television series of the same name. Its fictional features included stratospheric ceiling, stealth noise signature, a wide range of weapons and supersonic speed. The Airwolf helicopter was a conventional Bell 222 helicopter modified by attaching some film props.

Airwolf
(fictional info)
Full-size replica of Airwolf at the Tennessee Museum of Aviation in Sevierville, Tennessee
Role Disguised military helicopter
Manufacturer "The Firm"
Designer Dr. Charles Henry Moffet
First flight 1983[citation needed]
Primary user Stringfellow Hawke
Number built 1
Developed from Bell 222

Bell 222 example edit

 
A Bell 222

The flying Airwolf was derived from a Bell 222, a twin-turboshaft helicopter produced for the civilian market and typically employed for corporate, emergency medical or utility transport missions, with seating for up to ten, including the pilot.

The airframe used for Airwolf was serial number 47085 (registration number N3176S), of the initial production version, sometimes unofficially called a Bell 222A.[1] During filming of the series the helicopter was owned by JetCopters Inc. in Van Nuys, California.[2]

After the show was canceled, the modifications were removed from the aircraft and are now owned by a private collector. The helicopter was repainted and eventually sold to the German helicopter charter company, Hubschrauber-Sonder-Dienst (aka HSD Luftrettung and Blue Helicopter Alliance), and given the registration number D-HHSD.[3] While operating as an air ambulance, the helicopter crashed into a mountain in fog on June 6, 1992, killing all three occupants onboard.[4]

A new, full-size replica of the Airwolf helicopter was created by Steven W. Stull for display in the short-lived Helicopter Headquarters museum in Pigeon Forge, Tennessee that opened in August 2006, using a non-flying Bell 222 with molds taken directly from the originals used in the show.[5][6] The museum was unsuccessful, and offered the replica for sale through eBay.[7] The replica was housed between 2007 and 2015 in the Tennessee Museum of Aviation in Sevierville, Tennessee.[8] It was then sold to a private collector in California, having been further modified at West Coast Customs during September 2015.[9] The replica was then placed on top of a mansion in Bel Air, California.[10][11]

The Airwolf helicopter edit

Airwolf was painted "Phantom Gray Metallic" (DuPont Imron 5031X)[12] on top, and a custom pearl-gray (almost white) on the bottom, in a countershaded pattern. The craft was also fitted with various prop modifications, such as "turbojet" engines and intakes, an in-air refueling nozzle and blister cowling on the nose, retractable machine guns at the wingtips, and a retractable rocket launcher, known as the "ADF Pod" (ADF standing for All Directional Firing, as the pod could rotate 180 degrees to fire at targets at the sides—90 degrees to the left, forward, or 90 degrees to the right)[citation needed] on its belly.

The look of the modifications was designed by Andrew Probert,[13] and they were first applied to the non-flying mock-up (built from the body of the very first Bell 222, serial number 47001).[14] From this mock-up molds were made so that parts could be made to FAA specifications before they were added to the flying helicopter. After the maiden flight with the modifications, primary pilot David Jones told the producer that "It flies better now than before!"[15]

The machine guns mounted on the side of the landing gear sponsons were mock-ups that used spark plugs and fuel to simulate gun firing. Other modifications were implied with Foley and sets; the interior sets were of a fantastical high-tech nature, and there were implied "stealth" noise-reducing capabilities with creative use of sound effects. On the show, the deployment of the weapons systems were usually shown via close-ups of the action; in reality, these close-ups were produced on props off-site, while the non-moving prop components were attached to the aircraft by a technician in the field or at the JetCopters hangar.

The concept behind Airwolf was a super-fast and armed helicopter that could "blend in" by appearing to be civilian and non-military in origin, a "wolf in sheep's clothing". Airwolf's insignia patch (also designed by Probert)[16] as worn by the flight-crew was a snarling wolf's head with gossamer wings that appears to be wearing a sheepskin complete with the head of a lamb over the wolf's forehead. Airwolf is sometimes referred to in-show as "The Lady" by Santini and Hawke.

In the show, Airwolf was an armored, stealthy aircraft. It could perform impossible maneuvers and stunts, including traveling at Mach speeds (the theoretical maximum speed of a helicopter is significantly below Mach 0.5, or half the speed of sound), and flying into the stratosphere. Some of these impossible capabilities are explained in the show by such features as auxiliary jet engines (visible at the roots of the landing gear sponsons), rotor blades that can be disengaged for supersonic flight and a lifting body fuselage.

Sound effects were also associated with many of the aircraft's abilities. When Airwolf bolted across the sky in "turbo boost" mode, one would hear it "howl like a wolf" as it made a glass-shattering sound effect. When sitting idle, the aircraft made a mechanical trilling sound, and while hovering the rotor blades made a ghostly wind drone.

The weapons were state-of-the-art, with machine guns that could rip apart tanks and bunkers. The belly missile pod could fire a variety of rockets, including air-to-surface Mavericks, Hellfires, and heat-seeking air-to-air Sidewinders. When fired, these rockets usually glowed like a laser bolt or "photon torpedo" from Star Trek. Airwolf was also equipped with an advanced computer system which could identify and track aircraft and ground vehicles. It could display 3D wireframe models and schematics of its targets. The communications system could eavesdrop on radio and telephone conversations, tap into and foul up computer systems, jam enemy transmission frequencies and disrupt ground-based electrical systems. The stealth systems were capable of rendering Airwolf invisible to radar, as well as producing multiple radar returns. The weapons system could be tied in with the communications system to lock the missiles onto any monitored electronic system. In the first episode, a Bullpup missile was launched from Airwolf against an American destroyer while the helicopter was being used by its in-story inventor, Doctor Charles Henry Moffet.

In the second episode of Season 3 ("Airwolf II"), Airwolf had a twin, Airwolf II, also known as Redwolf. Redwolf was secretly built by The Firm to replace Airwolf, but was subsequently stolen and flown by Harlan Jenkins, its egotistical creator and test-pilot rival of Stringfellow Hawke. Redwolf differed from Airwolf in that its underbelly was painted red (where Airwolf was painted pearl-grey). It was also equipped with a powerful laser weapon coupled with a quick-firing, single-tube rocket pod (although in reality it had no external modifications to the Bell 222). Season 4 also featured a similar copter to Redwolf, known as the Scorpion, though the footage of the dogfighting was recycled from the "Airwolf II" episode.

Specifications edit

Airwolf's "Design Specifications"
Range 950 miles (armed crew of 3)[17]
Midair refuel capable[17]
1,450 miles long range (crew of 2)[17]
Flight
Ceiling
11,000 feet (3,400 m) unpressurized[17]
89,000 feet (27,127 m) pressurized[17]

Third season:
100,000 feet (30,480 m) pressurized[18]

Speed 300 kn (560 km/h; 350 mph) (conventional)
Mach 1+ (turbo thrusters)[17]
Mach 2 Maximum speed
Wing
guns
30 mm cannon (×2)[19]
.50 BMG Chain guns (×4)[17]
Firing up to 40 rounds per sec.
Missiles
and
'Heavy weapons'
First season:
AGM-12 Bullpup missiles
AIM-9 Sidewinder missiles
AIM-95 Agile missiles
AGM-45 Nuclear Shrike missiles
AGM-114 Hellfire missiles
Paveway bombs
Second and Third seasons:
(ADF Pod launched)
M712 Copperhead shells (×6)
FIM-43 Redeye missiles (×12)
AGM-114 Hellfire missiles (×6)
(Auxiliary bay launched)
AIM-4 Falcon missiles (x4)
Fourth season:
Red Laser
Defensive systems Sunburst anti-missile Flares
Chaff (radar countermeasure) anti-missile decoys
Bullet-proof armored fuselage[19]
Learning flight/combat computer[20]
Radar/Radio Jammer[19]
90% Radar absorbent skin[19]
IR suppressor (IRCM)
Airwolf vs. Bell 222
Bell 222 Airwolf
Crew 2 (pilot & copilot) 2–3 (pilot(s) & weapons technician)
Passengers 5–6 1–2 (non-crew may use the copilot seat and/or a seat behind the technician's seat)
Length 49.54 ft (15.10 m)
Height 11.68 ft (3.56 m)
Weight 4,555 lb (2,066 kg) unspecified
Speed 149 mph (240 km/h) 345 mph (555 km/h) conventional, Mach 1+ with turbo thrusters
Range 373 mi (600 km) 950–1,450 mi (1,530–2,330 km)
Ceiling 12,800 ft (3,900 m) 11,000 ft (3,400 m) unpressurized
100,000 ft (30,000 m) pressurized
Power (×2) 618 hp (461 kW) 45,000 lb-ft (turbo thrusters)[21]

Models edit

Static-display models edit

Over the years a number of licensed Airwolf models have been available.

  • Ertl 5" (~1:100 scale) die-cast toy model (1984) – available carded (alone) and boxed (with a Santini Air helicopter and jeep)
  • Ertl 14" (~1:36 scale) die-cast toy model (1984) – available boxed
  • AMT/Ertl 1:48 scale plastic model kit (1984) – many knock-offs are also available
  • Charawheels (Hot Wheels in Japan) 94 mm (1:160) scale die-cast toy model (2004)
  • Aoshima 1:48 scale die-cast collector's model (2005–2007) – available in cobalt blue ("normal"), black ("Limited"), weathered (2006), and matte black (2007)
  • Aoshima 1:48 scale plastic kit (2009) – superior in moulding and detail to earlier ERTL/AMT models.

Flyable models edit

  • Airwolf 1:19 scale Fuselage kit (unknown) – designed to fit the T-Rex RC helicopter
  • Cox gas-engined Airwolf (1988). Non-RC. Engine powered a small rotor which lifted the model up; a larger free-wheeling rotor auto-rotated the model down when the fuel ran out. Location of touchdown at the mercy of prevailing winds.
  • Different fuselage kits by German RC helicopters manufacturer Vario[22] with optional functional retractable machine guns (firing blanks).

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Van Hoten, C: "The Wolf's Lair, Issue 3, p. 6" 2008-01-03 at the Wayback Machine. Veritas Fan Publishing, 2005.
  2. ^ Credits at the end of the episodes state "Helicopters provided by Jetcopters, Inc."
  3. ^ . archive.org. 29 September 2007. Archived from the original on September 29, 2007. Retrieved 22 June 2016.
  4. ^ ""Airwolf" Crash". aviation-safety.net. Retrieved 11 November 2023.
  5. ^ . Archived from the original on 2007-09-28. Retrieved 2007-05-16.
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on 2007-03-13. Retrieved 2007-03-09.
  7. ^ "Airwolf for Sale on eBay". wired.com. Retrieved 22 June 2016.
  8. ^ Tennessee Museum of Aviation aircraft list, Archived at: September 30, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  9. ^ Twitter https://twitter.com/officialwcc/status/644919305335762945?lang=en-GB. Retrieved 2022-09-06. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  10. ^ Visiting the Airwolf Replica in Compton, CA!, retrieved 2022-09-06
  11. ^ "$250 Million Bel-Air Mansion Is Priciest Home for Sale in US; Cost Includes Helicopter, $30-Million Car Collection". 18 January 2017. from the original on 25 August 2018. Retrieved 18 January 2017.
  12. ^ Van Hoten, C: "The Wolf's Lair" 2007-10-12 at the Wayback Machine, Issue 3, page 7. Veritas Fan Publishing, 2005
  13. ^ "Andrew Probert's website, with pictures of Airwolf's construction". Archived from the original on 2007-06-28. Retrieved 2007-03-08.
  14. ^ Van Hoten, C: "The Wolf's Lair 2007-10-12 at the Wayback Machine", Issue 2, page 6. Veritas Fan Publishing, 2005
  15. ^ "Q&A with Andrew Probert 2011-07-17 at the Wayback Machine". airwolf.org
  16. ^ . probertdesigns.com. Archived from the original on 11 June 2016. Retrieved 22 June 2016.
  17. ^ a b c d e f g "File A56-7W". Airwolf. Season 1. Episode 6–9 (opening credits). 1984. CBS.
  18. ^ "Where Have all the Children Gone". Airwolf. Season 3. Episode 11. 1985-12-14. CBS.
  19. ^ a b c d "Shadow of the Hawke". Airwolf. Season 1. Episode 1. 1984-01-22. CBS.
  20. ^ "Mind of the Machine". Airwolf. Season 1. Episode 10. 1984-04-07. CBS.
  21. ^ mentioned by Archangel in Season 1 episode "Bite of the Jackal"
  22. ^ Vario

External links edit

  • Airwolf Themes—reator of soundtrack, builder of the full-size Airwolf museum replica, and replica helmets.

airwolf, helicopter, this, article, about, featured, helicopter, from, airwolf, series, television, series, airwolf, airwolf, helicopter, from, 1980s, american, television, series, same, name, fictional, features, included, stratospheric, ceiling, stealth, noi. This article is about the featured helicopter from the Airwolf TV series For the television series see Airwolf Airwolf is the helicopter from the 1980s American television series of the same name Its fictional features included stratospheric ceiling stealth noise signature a wide range of weapons and supersonic speed The Airwolf helicopter was a conventional Bell 222 helicopter modified by attaching some film props Airwolf fictional info Full size replica of Airwolf at the Tennessee Museum of Aviation in Sevierville Tennessee Role Disguised military helicopter Manufacturer The Firm Designer Dr Charles Henry Moffet First flight 1983 citation needed Primary user Stringfellow Hawke Number built 1 Developed from Bell 222 Contents 1 Bell 222 example 2 The Airwolf helicopter 3 Specifications 4 Models 4 1 Static display models 4 2 Flyable models 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksBell 222 example edit nbsp A Bell 222 The flying Airwolf was derived from a Bell 222 a twin turboshaft helicopter produced for the civilian market and typically employed for corporate emergency medical or utility transport missions with seating for up to ten including the pilot The airframe used for Airwolf was serial number 47085 registration number N3176S of the initial production version sometimes unofficially called a Bell 222A 1 During filming of the series the helicopter was owned by JetCopters Inc in Van Nuys California 2 After the show was canceled the modifications were removed from the aircraft and are now owned by a private collector The helicopter was repainted and eventually sold to the German helicopter charter company Hubschrauber Sonder Dienst aka HSD Luftrettung and Blue Helicopter Alliance and given the registration number D HHSD 3 While operating as an air ambulance the helicopter crashed into a mountain in fog on June 6 1992 killing all three occupants onboard 4 A new full size replica of the Airwolf helicopter was created by Steven W Stull for display in the short lived Helicopter Headquarters museum in Pigeon Forge Tennessee that opened in August 2006 using a non flying Bell 222 with molds taken directly from the originals used in the show 5 6 The museum was unsuccessful and offered the replica for sale through eBay 7 The replica was housed between 2007 and 2015 in the Tennessee Museum of Aviation in Sevierville Tennessee 8 It was then sold to a private collector in California having been further modified at West Coast Customs during September 2015 9 The replica was then placed on top of a mansion in Bel Air California 10 11 The Airwolf helicopter editAirwolf was painted Phantom Gray Metallic DuPont Imron 5031X 12 on top and a custom pearl gray almost white on the bottom in a countershaded pattern The craft was also fitted with various prop modifications such as turbojet engines and intakes an in air refueling nozzle and blister cowling on the nose retractable machine guns at the wingtips and a retractable rocket launcher known as the ADF Pod ADF standing for All Directional Firing as the pod could rotate 180 degrees to fire at targets at the sides 90 degrees to the left forward or 90 degrees to the right citation needed on its belly The look of the modifications was designed by Andrew Probert 13 and they were first applied to the non flying mock up built from the body of the very first Bell 222 serial number 47001 14 From this mock up molds were made so that parts could be made to FAA specifications before they were added to the flying helicopter After the maiden flight with the modifications primary pilot David Jones told the producer that It flies better now than before 15 The machine guns mounted on the side of the landing gear sponsons were mock ups that used spark plugs and fuel to simulate gun firing Other modifications were implied with Foley and sets the interior sets were of a fantastical high tech nature and there were implied stealth noise reducing capabilities with creative use of sound effects On the show the deployment of the weapons systems were usually shown via close ups of the action in reality these close ups were produced on props off site while the non moving prop components were attached to the aircraft by a technician in the field or at the JetCopters hangar The concept behind Airwolf was a super fast and armed helicopter that could blend in by appearing to be civilian and non military in origin a wolf in sheep s clothing Airwolf s insignia patch also designed by Probert 16 as worn by the flight crew was a snarling wolf s head with gossamer wings that appears to be wearing a sheepskin complete with the head of a lamb over the wolf s forehead Airwolf is sometimes referred to in show as The Lady by Santini and Hawke In the show Airwolf was an armored stealthy aircraft It could perform impossible maneuvers and stunts including traveling at Mach speeds the theoretical maximum speed of a helicopter is significantly below Mach 0 5 or half the speed of sound and flying into the stratosphere Some of these impossible capabilities are explained in the show by such features as auxiliary jet engines visible at the roots of the landing gear sponsons rotor blades that can be disengaged for supersonic flight and a lifting body fuselage Sound effects were also associated with many of the aircraft s abilities When Airwolf bolted across the sky in turbo boost mode one would hear it howl like a wolf as it made a glass shattering sound effect When sitting idle the aircraft made a mechanical trilling sound and while hovering the rotor blades made a ghostly wind drone The weapons were state of the art with machine guns that could rip apart tanks and bunkers The belly missile pod could fire a variety of rockets including air to surface Mavericks Hellfires and heat seeking air to air Sidewinders When fired these rockets usually glowed like a laser bolt or photon torpedo from Star Trek Airwolf was also equipped with an advanced computer system which could identify and track aircraft and ground vehicles It could display 3D wireframe models and schematics of its targets The communications system could eavesdrop on radio and telephone conversations tap into and foul up computer systems jam enemy transmission frequencies and disrupt ground based electrical systems The stealth systems were capable of rendering Airwolf invisible to radar as well as producing multiple radar returns The weapons system could be tied in with the communications system to lock the missiles onto any monitored electronic system In the first episode a Bullpup missile was launched from Airwolf against an American destroyer while the helicopter was being used by its in story inventor Doctor Charles Henry Moffet In the second episode of Season 3 Airwolf II Airwolf had a twin Airwolf II also known as Redwolf Redwolf was secretly built by The Firm to replace Airwolf but was subsequently stolen and flown by Harlan Jenkins its egotistical creator and test pilot rival of Stringfellow Hawke Redwolf differed from Airwolf in that its underbelly was painted red where Airwolf was painted pearl grey It was also equipped with a powerful laser weapon coupled with a quick firing single tube rocket pod although in reality it had no external modifications to the Bell 222 Season 4 also featured a similar copter to Redwolf known as the Scorpion though the footage of the dogfighting was recycled from the Airwolf II episode Specifications editAirwolf s Design Specifications Range 950 miles armed crew of 3 17 Midair refuel capable 17 1 450 miles long range crew of 2 17 Flight Ceiling 11 000 feet 3 400 m unpressurized 17 89 000 feet 27 127 m pressurized 17 Third season 100 000 feet 30 480 m pressurized 18 Speed 300 kn 560 km h 350 mph conventional Mach 1 turbo thrusters 17 Mach 2 Maximum speed Wing guns 30 mm cannon 2 19 50 BMG Chain guns 4 17 Firing up to 40 rounds per sec Missiles and Heavy weapons First season AGM 12 Bullpup missiles AIM 9 Sidewinder missiles AIM 95 Agile missiles AGM 45 Nuclear Shrike missiles AGM 114 Hellfire missiles Paveway bombs Second and Third seasons ADF Pod launched M712 Copperhead shells 6 FIM 43 Redeye missiles 12 AGM 114 Hellfire missiles 6 Auxiliary bay launched AIM 4 Falcon missiles x4 Fourth season Red Laser Defensive systems Sunburst anti missile Flares Chaff radar countermeasure anti missile decoys Bullet proof armored fuselage 19 Learning flight combat computer 20 Radar Radio Jammer 19 90 Radar absorbent skin 19 IR suppressor IRCM Airwolf vs Bell 222 Bell 222 Airwolf Crew 2 pilot amp copilot 2 3 pilot s amp weapons technician Passengers 5 6 1 2 non crew may use the copilot seat and or a seat behind the technician s seat Length 49 54 ft 15 10 m Height 11 68 ft 3 56 m Weight 4 555 lb 2 066 kg unspecified Speed 149 mph 240 km h 345 mph 555 km h conventional Mach 1 with turbo thrusters Range 373 mi 600 km 950 1 450 mi 1 530 2 330 km Ceiling 12 800 ft 3 900 m 11 000 ft 3 400 m unpressurized 100 000 ft 30 000 m pressurized Power 2 618 hp 461 kW 45 000 lb ft turbo thrusters 21 Models editStatic display models edit Over the years a number of licensed Airwolf models have been available Ertl 5 1 100 scale die cast toy model 1984 available carded alone and boxed with a Santini Air helicopter and jeep Ertl 14 1 36 scale die cast toy model 1984 available boxed AMT Ertl 1 48 scale plastic model kit 1984 many knock offs are also available Charawheels Hot Wheels in Japan 94 mm 1 160 scale die cast toy model 2004 Aoshima 1 48 scale die cast collector s model 2005 2007 available in cobalt blue normal black Limited weathered 2006 and matte black 2007 Aoshima 1 48 scale plastic kit 2009 superior in moulding and detail to earlier ERTL AMT models Flyable models edit Airwolf 1 19 scale Fuselage kit unknown designed to fit the T Rex RC helicopter Cox gas engined Airwolf 1988 Non RC Engine powered a small rotor which lifted the model up a larger free wheeling rotor auto rotated the model down when the fuel ran out Location of touchdown at the mercy of prevailing winds Different fuselage kits by German RC helicopters manufacturer Vario 22 with optional functional retractable machine guns firing blanks See also edit nbsp 1980s portal Blue Thunder helicopter References edit Van Hoten C The Wolf s Lair Issue 3 p 6 Archived 2008 01 03 at the Wayback Machine Veritas Fan Publishing 2005 Credits at the end of the episodes state Helicopters provided by Jetcopters Inc Helionline de D HHSD archive org 29 September 2007 Archived from the original on September 29 2007 Retrieved 22 June 2016 Airwolf Crash aviation safety net Retrieved 11 November 2023 Vertical Magazine article on the Museum Archived from the original on 2007 09 28 Retrieved 2007 05 16 Airwolf mock up build site Archived from the original on 2007 03 13 Retrieved 2007 03 09 Airwolf for Sale on eBay wired com Retrieved 22 June 2016 Tennessee Museum of Aviation aircraft list Archived at Archived September 30 2011 at the Wayback Machine Twitter https twitter com officialwcc status 644919305335762945 lang en GB Retrieved 2022 09 06 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help Visiting the Airwolf Replica in Compton CA retrieved 2022 09 06 250 Million Bel Air Mansion Is Priciest Home for Sale in US Cost Includes Helicopter 30 Million Car Collection 18 January 2017 Archived from the original on 25 August 2018 Retrieved 18 January 2017 Van Hoten C The Wolf s Lair Archived 2007 10 12 at the Wayback Machine Issue 3 page 7 Veritas Fan Publishing 2005 Andrew Probert s website with pictures of Airwolf s construction Archived from the original on 2007 06 28 Retrieved 2007 03 08 Van Hoten C The Wolf s Lair Archived 2007 10 12 at the Wayback Machine Issue 2 page 6 Veritas Fan Publishing 2005 Q amp A with Andrew Probert Archived 2011 07 17 at the Wayback Machine airwolf org Probert Designs probertdesigns com Archived from the original on 11 June 2016 Retrieved 22 June 2016 a b c d e f g File A56 7W Airwolf Season 1 Episode 6 9 opening credits 1984 CBS Where Have all the Children Gone Airwolf Season 3 Episode 11 1985 12 14 CBS a b c d Shadow of the Hawke Airwolf Season 1 Episode 1 1984 01 22 CBS Mind of the Machine Airwolf Season 1 Episode 10 1984 04 07 CBS mentioned by Archangel in Season 1 episode Bite of the Jackal VarioExternal links editAirwolf Themes reator of soundtrack builder of the full size Airwolf museum replica and replica helmets Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Airwolf helicopter amp oldid 1216362637, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.