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Bell AH-1 Cobra

The Bell AH-1 Cobra is a single-engined attack helicopter developed and manufactured by the American rotorcraft manufacturer Bell Helicopter. A member of the prolific Huey family, the AH-1 is also referred to as the HueyCobra or Snake.

AH-1 HueyCobra / Cobra
A Bell AH-1G in flight
Role Attack helicopter
National origin United States
Manufacturer Bell Helicopter
First flight 7 September 1965
Introduction 1967
Retired 2001 (US Army)
Status In service
Primary users United States Army (historical)
Japan Ground Self-Defense Force
Republic of Korea Army
Royal Jordanian Air Force
Produced 1967–2019
Number built 1,116
Developed from Bell UH-1 Iroquois
Variants Bell AH-1 SeaCobra/SuperCobra
Bell 309 KingCobra

The AH-1 was rapidly developed as an interim gunship in response to the United States Army's needs in the Vietnam War. It used the same engine, transmission and rotor system of the Bell UH-1 Iroquois, which had already proven itself to be a capable platform during the conflict, but paired it with a redesigned narrow fuselage among other features. The original AH-1, being a dedicated attack helicopter, came equipped with stub wings for various weapons, a chin-mounted gun turret, and an armored tandem cockpit, from which it was operated by a pilot and gunner. Its design was shaped to fulfil a need for a dedicated armed escort for transport helicopter, giving the latter greater survivability in contested environments. On 7 September 1965, the Model 209 prototype performed its maiden flight; after rapidly gaining the support of various senior officials, quantity production of the type proceeded rapidly with little revision.

During June 1967, the first examples of the AH-1 entered service with the US Army and was promptly deployed to the Vietnam theatre. It commonly provided fire support to friendly ground forces, escorted transport helicopters, and flew in "hunter killer" teams by pairing with Hughes OH-6A Cayuse scout helicopters. In the Vietnam War alone, the Cobra fleet cumulatively chalked up in excess of one million operational hours; roughly 300 AH-1s were also lost in combat. In addition to the US Army, various other branches of the US military also opted to acquire the type, particularly the United States Marine Corps. Furthermore, numerous export sales were completed with several overseas countries, including Israel, Japan, and Turkey.

For several decades, the AH-1 formed the core of the US Army's attack helicopter fleet, seeing combat in Vietnam, Grenada, Panama, and the Gulf War. In US Army service, the Cobra was progressively replaced by the newer and more capable Boeing AH-64 Apache during the 1990s, with the final examples being withdrawn during 2001. The Israeli Air Force (IAF) operated the Cobra most prolifically along its land border with Lebanon, using its fleet intensively during the 1982 Lebanon War. Turkish AH-1s have seen regular combat with Kurdish insurgents near Turkey's southern borders. Upgraded versions of the Cobra have been developed, such as the twin engined AH-1 SeaCobra/SuperCobra and the experimental Bell 309 KingCobra. Furthermore, surplus AH-1 helicopters have been reused for other purposes, including civilian ones; numerous examples have been converted to perform aerial firefighting operations.

Development

Background

Closely related to the development of the Bell AH-1 is the story of the Bell UH-1 Iroquois transport helicopter—an icon of the Vietnam War and one of the most numerous helicopter types built. The UH-1 made the theory of air cavalry practical, as the new tactics called for US forces to be highly mobile across a wide area. Unlike before, they would not stand and fight long battles, and they would not stay and hold positions. Instead, the plan was that the troops carried by fleets of UH-1 "Hueys" would range across the country, to fight the enemy at times and places of their own choice.[1]

The massive expansion of American military presence in Vietnam opened a new era of war from the air. The linchpin of US Army tactics was the helicopters, and the protection of those helicopters became a vital role.[2] It became clear that unarmed troop helicopters were vulnerable against ground fire from Viet Cong and North Vietnamese troops, particularly as they approached landing zones to disembark or embark troops. Without friendly support from artillery or ground forces, the only way to pacify a landing zone was from the air, preferably with an aircraft that could closely escort the transport helicopters, and loiter over the landing zone as the battle progressed. By 1962, a small number of armed UH-1As were used as escorts, armed with multiple machine guns and rocket mounts.[3] However, these makeshift gunships came with considerable tradeoffs, particularly being barely able to keep up with the troop transports they were intended to protect.[4]

While some officials within the Pentagon, particularly those within the US Army, had recognised the potential value of purpose-built armed rotary aircraft as early as 1962 and were keen to see such a vehicle developed promptly, the issue was complicated in part due to inter-service politics.[4] The United States Air Force (USAF) largely held the opinion that most forms of US military aircraft should be operated only by their service, and that the US Army would be intruding into their domain by developing a complex armed aerial combatant, and ought to be largely restricted to transport aircraft. Meanwhile, some Army officials were concerned that the USAF did not take the close air support (CAS) mission as seriously as it ought to be, and that response times of 30 minutes or more for fixed-wing aircraft would be unacceptable.[4]

Iroquois Warrior, Sioux Scout and AAFSS

 
Bell Model 207 Sioux Scout

Bell had been investigating helicopter gunships since the late 1950s, paying particular attention to the Algerian War, in which French forces mounted weapons onto helicopters to fight the growing insurgency.[4] The company created a mockup of its D-255 helicopter gunship concept, named "Iroquois Warrior". The Iroquois Warrior was planned to be a purpose-built attack aircraft based on UH-1B components with a new, slender airframe and a two-seat, tandem cockpit. It featured a grenade launcher in a ball turret on the nose, a 20 mm belly-mounted gun pod, and stub wings for mounting rockets or SS.10 anti-tank missiles.[5]

In June 1962, Bell displayed the mockup to US Army officials, hoping to solicit funding for further development; rival manufacturers issued protests to this approach, alleging that it was an attempt by Bell to circumvent the competitive process.[5][4] Nevertheless, the Army was interested and awarded Bell a proof-of-concept contract in December 1962. Bell modified a Model 47 into the Model 207 Sioux Scout which first flew in July 1963. The Sioux Scout had all the key features of a modern attack helicopter: a tandem cockpit, stub wings for weapons, and a chin-mounted gun turret. After evaluating the Sioux Scout in early 1964, the Army was impressed but also felt that it was undersized, underpowered, and that the Sioux Scout was generally not suited for practical operations.[6]

The Army's solution to the shortcomings of the Sioux Scout was to launch the Advanced Aerial Fire Support System (AAFSS) competition.[6] This called for a heavily armed helicopter capable of at least 200 MPH. A total of seven companies, including Bell, opted to respond to the requirement.[4] It was out of the AAFSS program that the Lockheed AH-56 Cheyenne emerged, a heavy attack helicopter with high speed capability. During testing, it proved to be too sophisticated and costly, and was ultimately canceled in 1972 after ten years of development. In its place, the Advanced Attack Helicopter program was launched. Under this initiative, the Army sought a conventional attack helicopter with a greater level of survivability.[6]

Model 209

Despite the Army's preference for the AAFSS program —for which Bell Helicopter was not selected to compete— the company persisted with their own idea of a smaller and lighter gunship, noting that Lockheed had little experience in developing rotorcraft and correctly predicted that it would encounter considerable difficulties.[6][4] Bell employee Mike Folse played a key role in developing this new gunship, which he intentionally based around the existing UH-1 on the rationale that, while the Army could not purchase a completely original helicopter without a formal design competition, the service was able to procure a modification of an aircraft that was already in its inventory without invoking such hurdles. This initiative quickly caught the approval of Bell's senior management team.[4]

In January 1965, Bell elected to invest $1 million to proceed with the concept's detailed design. Mating the proven transmission, the "540" rotor system of the UH-1C augmented by a Stability Control Augmentation System (SCAS), and the T53 turboshaft engine of the UH-1 with the design philosophy of the Sioux Scout, Bell produced the Model 209.[6] It largely resembled the "Iroquois Warrior" mockup,[7] particularly in its cockpit and tail book; in broad visual terms, there was relatively little shared between the proposed design and the UH-1. Despite appearance, much of the Model 209's major elements, such as the tail rotor and much of the dynamic systems, were identical. Roughly 80 percent of its components already had existing Huey part numbers.[4]

 
Bell 209 prototype of the AH-1 Cobra series, with skids retracted (FAA no. N209J)

On 3 September 1965, Bell rolled out its Model 209 prototype, and four days later it made its maiden flight, only eight months after the project's go-ahead and slightly under budget.[4] This first flight was witnessed by around 20 US Army officials, the service having had no awareness of the project's existence prior to this, and rapidly drew the government's attention. One early test flight was met with a reportedly enthusiastic visit by US secretary of defense Robert McNamara. Bell claimed at this phase of the project that production units could be ready for service within one year[4]

As the Vietnam War proceeded, pressure accumulated in favor of the Model 209. Attacks on US forces were increasing and, by the end of June 1965, there were already 50,000 US ground troops in Vietnam.[6] 1965 was also the deadline for AAFSS selection, but the program would become stuck in technical difficulties and political bickering. The US Army needed an interim gunship for Vietnam and it approached five separate companies with its request to provide a quick solution. Submissions came in for armed variants of the Boeing-Vertol ACH-47A, Kaman HH-2C Tomahawk, Piasecki 16H Pathfinder, Sikorsky S-61, and the Bell 209.[6][4]

During April 1966, Bell's submission emerged victorious in an evaluation against the other rival helicopters. The US Army promptly signed the first production contract, ordering an initial batch of 110 aircraft.[6][8] By the end of the year, rapid follow-on orders had increased this to 500 Cobras.[4] Bell added "Cobra" to the UH-1's Huey nickname to produce its HueyCobra name for the 209. The Army applied the Cobra name to its AH-1G designation for the helicopter.[9] The Bell 209 demonstrator was used for the next six years to test weapons and fit of equipment. An additional use for the demonstrator was participating in marketing initiatives.[4] It was also modified to match the AH-1 production standard by the early 1970s. The demonstrator was retired to the Patton Museum at Fort Knox, Kentucky and converted to approximately its original appearance.[7]

Into production

The Bell 209 design was modified in several respects for production. The retractable skids were replaced by simpler fixed skids; this was not due to any recorded design flaw or serviceably, but it was feared that the landing gear bay could become inundated with mud.[4] Furthermore, a new wide-chord rotor blade was adopted. It was also decided that a plexiglass canopy should replace the Model 209's armored glass canopy, which was heavy enough to negatively impact performance.[7][10] The umbrella-shaped dive brake was deleted, having reportedly self-destructed during its first test flight.[4]

Numerous changes of the design were incorporated after the Cobra had entered service. The principal amongst these changes was the repositioning of the tail rotor from the helicopter's left side to the right, which facilitated an increase in the effectiveness of the tail rotor.[11] The AH-1 was the first U.S. Army helicopter not named for a Native American people since the practice began with the H-13 Sioux and continued with the UH-1 Iroquois, AH-56 Cheyenne, OH-58 Kiowa, and later helicopters.[12]

Within its first decade of service, the US Army had put the original Cobra model through various exercises and operations, which highlighted both the attack helicopter's promise and areas in which it could be improved.[13] By 1972, the US Army openly sought an improved anti-armor capability. Under the Improved Cobra Armament Program (ICAP), trials of eight AH-1s fitted with TOW missiles were conducted in October 1973. After passing qualification tests the following year, Bell was contracted with upgrading 101 AH-1Gs to the TOW-capable AH-1Q configuration.[14] While early-production examples were not compatible with night vision goggles, the cockpit instrumentation of later Cobras was altered to facilitate their use.[4]

Further variants of the Cobra were promptly developed, with both new-build models and early production examples being modified to incorporate the improvements. During March 1978, the US Army opted to procure a batch of 100 new-build Cobras that featured a new T-shaped instrument panel, improved composite rotor blades, revised transmission and gearboxes, the M128 helmet-mounted sight, and the M28A3 armament system.[15] A major feature was the adoption of the more powerful T53 engine. Designated AH-1S, the Cobra was upgraded in three stages, culminating with the AH-1F.[6][16][17] The AH-1F integrated numerous countermeasures, including an infrared jammer, a radar jammer, and a hot plume exhaust suppressor.[4]

The U.S. Marine Corps (USMC) quickly became interested in the Cobra, opting to order an improved twin-engine version in 1968 under the designation AH-1J.[18] During the early 1970s, the USMC proceeded to order an upgraded model, the AH-1T, which featured dynamic elements derived from the abortive Bell 309 KingCobra; as such, it featured a longer fuselage and tailboom. These dynamic changes were combined with the adoption of heavier armaments, which provided the USMC with an effective anti-armour capacity, unlike the preceding model.[19] The USMC's interest in the Cobra would lead to the production of more twin-engine variants of the helicopter.[20]

Design

 
An AH-1S Cobra, 1986

The Bell AH-1 Cobra is a dedicated attack helicopter, built to provide close air support and to escort friendly troop transports.[8][4] The visual design of the Cobra was intentionally made to be sleek and be akin to that of a jet fighter.[4] Aviation author Stanley McGowen observed that its appearance differed radically from any prior rotorcraft designed by Bell, possessing a relatively narrow fuselage and a then-unusual cockpit arrangement. This cockpit was covered by a large fighter-like canopy and its occupants protected by armor, such included tempered-steel seats and personal body armor.[4][8] It was operated by both a pilot and gunner, who were seated in a stepped tandem arrangement in which the commander was placed in the rear seat while the gunner occupied the forward position.[8] This forward position provided a higher level of visibility to that of the rear seat. Both positions were provided with flying controls while both crew would typically be certified pilots, enabling control of the Cobra to be exchanged quickly through the course of the mission.[4]

Much of the Cobra's armaments could be installed upon the multiple hardpoints that were attached to the stub wings set on either side of the fuselage.[4][8] In comparison to armed UH-1s, the Cobra would typically carried twice as much ammunition and arrive on station in half the time, it also had three times the loiter time, which enabled the type to arrive in a designated landing zone ahead of transport helicopters to clear it, provide support fire while they are present, and to continue fighting as they withdraw.[4] The slim profile of the helicopter allegedly provided defensive benefits by making it harder for opponents to accurately hit it with small arms fire, although man-portable air-defense system (MANPADS) did prove to be effective against the Cobra. Particularly vulnerable areas included the tail rotor drive shaft and to the main transmission.[4]

Typically, the Cobra would avoid hovering at any point in an active engagement; instead, emphasis was placed on maintaining speed and mobility.[4] The gunner often fired the chin-mounted cannon with the intention of suppressing hostile targets in between barrages of 2.75-inch rockets, held in pods upon the stub wings, which were fired by the back-seater. It was unusual for Cobras to operate alone; instead, two or more would be dispatched and teamwork encouraged, leading to hunter-killer tactics being used to flush out and eliminate ground targets.[4] Pairings with other helicopters, such as the Bell OH-58 Kiowa scout helicopter, were also common occurrences. Radio communications were handled by the gunner. Regardless of mission profile, low altitude flying was commonplace.[4][21]

Operational history

 
Bell AH-1G over Vietnam

United States

By June 1967, the first AH-1G HueyCobras had been delivered. Originally designated as UH-1H, the "A" for attack designation was soon adopted and when the improved UH-1D became the UH-1H, the HueyCobra became the AH-1G. The AH-1 was initially considered a variant of the H-1 line, resulting in the G series letter.[22]

The first six AH-1s arrived at Bien Hoa Air Base, South Vietnam on 30 August 1967 for combat testing by the U.S. Army Cobra New Equipment Training Team.[23]: 11  On 4 September, the type scored its first combat kill by sinking a sampan boat, killing four Viet Cong.[23]: 11  The first AH-1 unit, the 334th Assault Helicopter Company, was declared operational on 6 October 1967. The Army operated the Cobra continuously up to the U.S. withdrawal from South Vietnam in 1973. Typically, the AH-1 provided fire support for ground forces and escorted transport helicopters, in addition to other roles, including aerial rocket artillery (ARA) battalions in the two Airmobile divisions. They also formed "hunter killer" teams by pairing with OH-6A Cayuse scout helicopters; a team normally comprised a single OH-6 flying slow and low to find enemy forces. If the OH-6 drew fire, the Cobra could strike at the then revealed enemy.[7][24]

On 12 September 1968, Capt. Ronald Fogleman was flying an F-100 Super Sabre when the aircraft was shot down and he ejected 200 miles (320 km) north of Bien Hoa. Fogleman became the only pilot to be rescued by holding on to an Army AH-1G's deployed gun-panel door.[25] Bell built 1,116 AH-1Gs for the U.S. Army between 1967 and 1973, and the Cobras chalked up over a million operational hours in Vietnam;[6] the number of Cobras in service peaked at 1,081.[26] Out of nearly 1,110 AH-1s that were delivered between 1967 and 1973, approximately 300 were lost to a combination of combat and accidents during the conflict.[7][27] During Operation Lam Son 719 in Southeastern Laos, 26 U.S Army AH-1Gs were destroyed while a further 158 sustained some level of damage.[28][29]

The U.S. Marine Corps also operated the AH-1G Cobra in Vietnam for a short time before acquiring the twin-engine AH-1J Cobras.[22] The AH-1Gs had been adopted by the Marines as an interim measure, a total of 38 helicopters having been transferred from the U.S. Army to the Marines in 1969.[30][31]

During Operation Urgent Fury, the invasion of Grenada in 1983, several AH-1T Cobras were deployed to fly close air support and helicopter escort missions. On the first day of the invasion, two of the four Cobras involved were lost to anti-aircraft fire in the attack on Fort Frederick.[32][19]

During 1989, Army Cobras participated in Operation Just Cause, the U.S. invasion of Panama.[7] It operated alongside its eventual successor in US Army service, the Boeing AH-64 Apache, for the first time during the combat in Panama.[33][34]

During Operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm in the Gulf War (1990–91), both the Cobras and SuperCobras deployed in a support role. The USMC deployed 91 AH-1W SuperCobras while the US Army operated 140 AH-1 Cobras of various models in the theatre; these were typically operated from dispersed forward operating bases in close proximity to Saudi Arabia's border with Iraq. Three AH-1s were lost in accidents during fighting and afterward. Cobras successfully destroyed large numbers of Iraqi armored vehicles and various other targets during the intense fighting of the conflict.[7][35]

US Cobras were deployed in further operations across the 1990s. Army Cobras provided support for the US humanitarian intervention during Operation Restore Hope in Somalia in 1993. They were also employed during the US invasion of Haiti in 1994.[7]

During the 1990s, the US Army gradually phased out its Cobra fleet, completely retiring the type from active service in March 1999.[36] The service, which had long sought a more capable successor to the Cobra, had procured a large fleet of AH-64 Apaches since receiving the first example of the type during early 1984.[37][38] The withdrawn AH-1s were typically offered to other potential operators, usually NATO allies.[6][36] The Army retired the AH-1 from its reserves in September 2001. The retired AH-1s were then disposed of, often through sales to overseas customers; the final portion of the fleet was liquidated in 2010.[39][40] Some were also given to the USDA's Forest Service.[6] The US Marine Corps retired the AH-1W SuperCobra in 2020, and continues to operate the AH-1Z Viper.

Israel

 
Israeli Air Force Tzefa helicopters

Israel was an early export customer for the Cobra, purchasing six AH-1Gs from the US Army.[41] The government was keen to procure a capable attack helicopter as recent combat in the Yom-Kippur War had shown a need for a capable platform for countering enemy armour. The type was operated by the Israeli Air Force (IAF), with the First Attack Helicopter Squadron formally commencing on 1 December 1977.[41] The service named the type as the "Tzefa" (Hebrew: צפע, for Viper).[42][43]

On 9 May 1979, the IAF's Cobras performed their first attack, firing four Orev missiles at a house near Tyre, Lebanon, that was occupied by militants.[41] Israel's fleet of Cobras was particularly active on the Lebanon front, having participated in the fighting there for in excess of 20 years. They were intensively used during the 1982 Lebanon War to destroy Syrian armor and fortifications alike, being reportedly responsible for the destruction of dozens of Syrian ground vehicles. In one operation alone, a pair of IAF Cobras destroyed three enemy tanks and one truck.[41] Based upon its performance in the conflict, it was decided to remove the rocket pods and increase the amount of ammunition carried for the cannon instead. Other operational changes included a greater emphasis on cooperation with ground units to avoid friendly fire incidents.[41]

Largely due to a US embargo that prevented the purchase of further Cobras, Israel procured alternative platforms instead, including around 20 McDonnell Douglas MD 500 Defenders in late 1979.[41] Between 1983 and 1985, by which time the embargo had been lifted, 24 new Cobras were purchased; the expanded fleet enabled the creation of a second squadron, known as the Fighting Family Squadron, on 1 June 1985.[41] During 1990, the IAF received its first Boeing AH-64 Apache attack helicopters,[44] having acquired a fleet of 42 by 2000.[45] At the time of the Apache's procurement, there was considerable political controversy over the IAF's decision to overlook upgrades to its existing Cobra fleet in favour of acquiring an entirely separate model of attack helicopter.[46]

Throughout the 1980s and 1990s, the Cobras continued to play a role in major operations against groups such as Hezbollah, including Operations "Accountability" and "Grapes of Wrath", in southern Lebanon.[41] During August 1996, the IAF's Cobra fleet was expanded yet again via 14 surplus US Army AH-1F Cobras being acquired, some of which were used by the front line squadrons while others were operated exclusively for flight training purposes. During the 2000s, the Cobra's precision strike capability was bolstered by the adoption of the Spike missile.[41]

During late 2013, Israel opted to retire the last of its 33 AH-1 Cobras from front line service, largely due to budget cuts. Its role was taken up entirely by the IAI's squadrons of AH-64 attack helicopters, while an extensive fleet of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) took over the role of patrolling combat zones. The Cobra fleet was considerably older than the Apaches, which contributed to several fatal crashes of the type. The Cobras were also more expensive to maintain than UAVs and their use exposed pilots to attacks from man-portable air-defense systems operated by guerrilla groups.[47] Around the same time frame, the IAF also pursued upgrades to its AH-64 fleet.[48][49] In late 2014, Israel transferred 16 of the recently-withdrawn Cobras to the Royal Jordanian Air Force to bolster the numbers of their existing fleet.[50]

Japan

 
Japan Ground Self-Defense Force AH-1S Cobra, April 2014

Japan manufactured 89 AH-1S Cobras under license by Fuji Heavy Industries from 1984 to 2000.[51] The type is used by the Japan Ground Self-Defense Force, and are Step 3 models, which are roughly the equivalent to the U.S. Army's AH-1Fs. The engine is the T53-K-703 turboshaft, which Kawasaki Heavy Industries produced under license.[7] During the 2010s, Japan was examining options for procuring a fleet of new rotorcraft to replace its aging Cobras; it has been specified that the replacement helicopter would need to be optimized for marine use and able to operate from expeditionary airstrips or sea bases, and that between 30 and 50 such craft would be purchased.[52]

In December 2022, the Japanese government decided to replace 47 AH-1S, 12 AH-64D, 33 OH-1, and 26 U-125A with unmanned aerial vehicles. Japan plans to increase its defense budget from 1.24% of GDP in fiscal 2021 to around 2.0% within 10 years, and has decided to retire these helicopters and aircraft as part of an effort to spend its defense budget efficiently.[53]

Jordan

 
USMC and Royal Jordanian Air Force Cobras, May 2012

Jordan obtained an initial batch of 24 AH-1Fs during the late 1980s. In 2001, nine additional ex-US Army Cobras were acquired to supplement the fleet. During 2010, Jordan transferred 16 AH-1F helicopters to Pakistan under a US-sponsored support program that provided Islamabad with 40 AH-1 refurbished helicopters.[54]

In late 2014, Israel and Jordan came to an agreement under which the former transferred 16 ex-IAF Cobras to the Royal Jordanian Air Force. The deal was publicly stated to be for the purpose of increasing border security, which was viewed as a pressing concern of both nations due to the threats posed by Islamic State (IS) militants, as well as by other insurgent groups, at that time.[50]

The Royal Jordanian Air Force has at least one squadron of Cobras in service, and is supposed to have used them in combat in Iraq and Syria.[55]

Turkey

Turkey bought ten AH-1Ws in the early 1990s, and supplemented them with 32 ex-US Army Cobras. These additional units included several TAH-1P trainers while the majority were brought up to the AH-1F standard.[54] During the 2010s, Turkish Cobras have repeatedly seen combat in operations against Kurdish insurgents around Turkey's borders with both Syria and Iraq. Two Cobras were reportedly lost to enemy fire during these operations.[56][57] Amid the 2016 Turkish coup d'état attempt, Turkish Cobras were alleged to have fired upon several police vehicles.[58]

Pakistan

Between 1984 and 1986, Pakistan was supplied with an initial batch of 20 AH-1S gunships by the US;[59] these were later upgraded with the C-NITE thermal imaging package.[60] Operated by Pakistan Army Aviation, the service first used Cobra overseas in Somalia during the United Nations Operation in Somalia II, where a single squadron was deployed in 1994.[61] Pakistani Cobras subsequently saw action in Sierra Leone.[62][63]

By 2013, Pakistan reportedly operated a fleet of 35 AH-1F helicopters.[64] Maintaining these aircraft has been difficult, but possible through commercial channels. Additionally, the US government provided $750,000 through 2013 to update the existing AH-1F/S Cobra fleet.[65] However, controversy over how much of this funding has actually been spent on Pakistan's Cobras has also been present throughout the 2010s.[66] Turkey has also become a key supplier of spare parts for the Cobra, often free of cost, to Pakistan.[67] During the 2010s, Pakistan lost a total of three aircraft in separate incidents.[68][69]

Pakistan repeatedly sought the Bell AH-1 SuperCobra from the US to supplement and replace its current AH-1 Cobras.[60] Attempts to acquire the AH-1Z Viper or AH-64 Apache from the US were rejected, so Pakistan turned to buying other foreign attack helicopters. Possible candidates have included the Turkish T129, the Chinese CAIC Z-10, and the Russian Mi-35 Hind.[70] In November 2014, Russia approved the sale of Mi-35M helicopters to Pakistan.[71] In April 2015, China delivered three Z-10s to Pakistan.[72] During the same month, the US Department of State approved the sale of 15 AH-1Zs and associated equipment to Pakistan.[73] During October 2017, the T129 was also reported to be a contender for further orders.[74]

Philippines

 

The Jordanian government offered to provide up to four surplus AH-1F Cobras to the Philippines for counter terrorism operations. The offer was later reduced to two units, which the Philippine government accepted.[75][76] On 26 November 2019, an Antonov An-124 airlifter carried the two Bell AH-1F Cobras from Jordan to Clark International Airport/Clark Air Base. The helicopters are reportedly painted in a light grey livery similar to the paint scheme of the PAF's AgustaWestland AW109E armed helicopters.[75]

Civilian operators

In 2003, the US Forest Service acquired 25 retired AH-1Fs from the US Army.[6] These have been designated Bell 209 and are being converted into Firewatch Cobras with infrared and low light sensors and systems for real time fire monitoring.[77][78] The last two Firewatch Cobras were retired in October 2021.[79]

The Florida Division of Forestry also acquired three AH-1Ps from the US Army. These are called Bell 209 "Firesnakes" and are equipped to carry a water/fire retardant system.[6][80]

Variants

 
U.S. Forest Service Bell 209 on the Bar Complex Fire in California
 
AH-1P front cockpit (restoration)
 
AH-1P rear cockpit (restoration)

Single-engine

Bell 209
Original AH-1G prototype with retractable skid landing gear. This model number is also used by the FAA for the civilian registration of former U.S. Army AH-1s used in firefighting service.
AH-1G HueyCobra
Initial 1966 production model gunship for the US Army, with one 1,400 shp (1,000 kW) Avco Lycoming T53-13 turboshaft.
JAH-1G HueyCobra
One helicopter for armament testing including Hellfire missiles and multi-barrel cannon.[81]
TH-1G HueyCobra
Two-seat dual-control trainer.[81]
Z.14 HueyCobra
The Spanish Navy purchased eight new-build AH-1Gs, designating the type the "Z-14". These were equipped with the M35 20 mm cannon system, and were used to support coastal patrol boats. Four of these were lost in accidents. The remaining helicopters were retired in 1985 with three sent back to the US, and one kept in storage in Spain.[81][82]
YAH-1Q
Eight AH-1Gs with XM26 Telescopic Sight Unit (TSU) and two M56 TOW 4-pack launchers.[7]
AH-1Q HueyCobra
Equipped with the M65 TOW/Cobra missile subsystem, M65 Telescopic Sight Unit (TSU), and M73 Reflex sight. All future versions will be equipped with the TSU and be equipped to fire the TOW missile subsystem.
YAH-1R
AH-1G powered by a T53-L-703 engine without TOW system.[7]
YAH-1S
AH-1Q upgrade and TOW system.[7]
AH-1S
The baseline AH-1S is an AH-1Q upgraded with a 1,800 shp (1,300 kW) T53-L-703 turboshaft engine. The AH-1S is also referred to as the "Improved AH-1S", "AH-1S Modified", or "AH-1S(MOD)" prior to 1988. (Prior to 1988, all upgraded aircraft were referred to as variants of the AH-1S.)[7]
QAH-1S
A target drone conversion of the AH-1S by Bell-Bristol Aerospace under a joint US and Canada development program started in 1994. Honeywell further modified the QAH-1S into the Hokum-X by installing systems and hardware to allow it to simulate the Russian Kamov Ka-50 attack helicopter. Three Hokum-Xs were completed from 1998 to 2001.[83][84]
AH-1P
100 production aircraft with composite rotors, flat plate glass cockpit, and improved cockpit layout for nap-of-earth (NOE) flight. The AH-1P is also referred to as the "Production AH-1S", or "AH-1S(PROD)" prior to 1988. These improvements are considered Step 1 of the AH-1S upgrade program.[7]
AH-1E
98 production aircraft with the Enhanced Cobra Armament System (ECAS) featuring the M97A1 armament subsystem with a three-barreled M197 20 mm cannon. The AH-1E is also referred to as the "Upgunned AH-1S", or "AH-1S(ECAS)" prior to 1988. These improvements are considered Step 2 of the AH-1S upgrade program.[7] AH-1E aircraft included the M147 Rocket Management Subsystem (RMS) to fire 2.75-inch (70 mm) rockets.[85]
AH-1F
143 production aircraft and 387 converted AH-1G Cobras. The AH-1F incorporates all Step 1 and 2 upgrades to the AH-1S. It also featured Step 3 upgrades: a head-up display, a laser rangefinder, an infrared jammer mounted above the engine exhaust, and an infrared suppressing engine exhaust system, and the M143 Air Data Subsystem (ADS). The AH-1F is also referred to as the "Modernized AH-1S", "AH-1S Modernized Cobra", or "AH-1S(MC)" prior to 1988.[86]
Model 249
Experimental demonstrator version fitted with the four-blade rotor system from Bell 412, an uprated engine, and experimental equipment, including Hellfire missiles.[87]
Bell 309 KingCobra
Experimental all-weather version based on the AH-1G single-engine and AH-1J twin-engine designs.[88] Two Bell 309s were produced; the first was powered by a PW&C T400-CP-400 Twin-Pac engine set and the second was powered by a Lycoming T-55-L-7C engine.[89]

Twin-engine

Operators

A small number of former military helicopters are operated by civil organizations for display and demonstration, for example by Red Bull.[90]

 
Red Bull (Flying Bulls) TAH-1F at Berlin Tempelhof Airport
 
USFS Bell 209 during the California wildfires of October 2007
  Bahrain
  Japan
  Jordan
  Kenya
  Pakistan
  Philippines
  South Korea
  Thailand
  Turkey
  United States

Former operators

 
An Israeli AH-1F Cobra
  Israel
  Spain
  United States

Aircraft on display

Specifications (AH-1G HueyCobra)

 
 
AH-1F Cobra on display at Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center

Data from The Illustrated Encyclopedia of the World's Modern Military Aircraft,[104] Bell AH-1 Cobra,[105] Modern Fighting Aircraft: AH-1 Cobra[106]

General characteristics

  • Crew: 2: one pilot, one co-pilot/gunner (CPG)
  • Length: 53 ft (16 m) including rotors
  • Fuselage length: 44 ft 5 in (13.5 m)
  • Width: 10 ft 4 in (3.15 m) stub wings
  • Height: 13 ft 6 in (4.11 m)
  • Empty weight: 5,810 lb (2,635 kg)
  • Max takeoff weight: 9,500 lb (4,309 kg)
  • Powerplant: 1 × Lycoming T53-L-13 turboshaft, 1,100 hp (820 kW)
  • Main rotor diameter: 44 ft 0 in (13.4 m)
  • Main rotor area: 1,520 sq ft (141 m2)
  • Blade section: NACA 0009.3 mod[107]

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 149 kn (171 mph, 276 km/h)
  • Never exceed speed: 190 kn (220 mph, 350 km/h)
  • Range: 310 nmi (360 mi, 570 km)
  • Service ceiling: 11,400 ft (3,500 m)
  • Rate of climb: 1,230 ft/min (6.2 m/s)

Armament

Notable appearances in media

See also

Related development

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists

References

Citations

  1. ^ Wheeler 1987, pp. 62–64.
  2. ^ Wheeler 1987, pp. 60–61.
  3. ^ Wheeler 1987, pp. 57–62, 64–65.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab Joiner, Stephen (August 2017). "Birth of the Cobra". Smithsonian Magazine.
  5. ^ a b Verier 1990, pp. 12–17.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Donald and March 2004,[page needed].
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Bishop 2006,[page needed].
  8. ^ a b c d e McGowen 2005, p. 107.
  9. ^ Verier 1990, pp. 30–31.
  10. ^ McGowen 2005, p. 158.
  11. ^ Verier 1990, p. 44.
  12. ^ "Everyone Relax—The Army's Native American Helicopter Names Are Not Racist". Medium.com. War Is Boring. 1 July 2014.
  13. ^ McGowen 2005, pp. 157-158.
  14. ^ RD&A, Sect 135 10 July 2017 at the Wayback Machine – Army Historical Summary: FY74.
  15. ^ McGowen 2005, pp. 158-159.
  16. ^ Verier 1990, pp. 57, 59–61.
  17. ^ McGowen 2005, pp. 159-160.
  18. ^ McGowen 2005, p. 108.
  19. ^ a b McGowen 2005, p. 160.
  20. ^ Verier 1990, pp. 86–88.
  21. ^ Porter, David (September 2017). "In Vietnam, These Helicopter Scouts Saw Combat Up Close". Smithsonian Magazine.
  22. ^ a b Donald 2004, p. 166.
  23. ^ a b Bernstein, Jonathan (2003). US Army AH-1 Cobra Units in Vietnam. Osprey Combat Aircraft 41. Osprey Publishing. ISBN 978-1841766065.
  24. ^ McGowen 2005, pp. 107-108.
  25. ^ F-100 Super Sabre Flew Most Missions in Vietnam – Defensemedianetwork.com, 12 September 2013
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  28. ^ "Lam Son 719".
  29. ^ Nguyen, Duy Hinh (1979). Operation Lam Sơn 719. United States Army Center of Military History. ISBN 978-1984054463.
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  72. ^ "Chinese 'Thunderbolt' helicopters may replace American Cobras in Pakistan". The Express Tribune. 3 April 2015.
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  87. ^ Verier 1990, pp. 72–76.
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  89. ^ Richardson 1987, pp. 8–9.
  90. ^ "THE WORLD OF THE FLYING BULLS (Bell Cobra TAH-1F)". The Flying Bulls. Retrieved 25 December 2021.
  91. ^ a b Steinemann 1989, p. 23.
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Bibliography

  • Bernstein, Jonathan (2003). US Army AH-1 Cobra Units in Vietnam (Osprey Combat Aircraft #41). Oxford, UK: Osprey Publishing Limited. ISBN 978-1-84176-606-5.
  • Bishop, Chris (2005). Apache AH-64 Boeing (McDonnell Douglas) 1976–2005. Osprey Publishing. ISBN 1-84176-816-2.
  • Bishop, Chris (2006). Huey Cobra Gunships. New Vanguard. Oxford, UK: Osprey Publishing Limited. ISBN 1-84176-984-3.
  • Donald, David (1997). The Complete Encyclopedia of World Aircraft. Barnes & Nobel Books. ISBN 0-7607-0592-5.
  • Donald, David (2004). AH-64A/D Apache and AH-64D Longbow Apache: Modern Battlefield Warplanes. AIRtime Publishing Inc. ISBN 1-880588-76-5.
  • David, Donald; March, Daniel, eds. (2004). Modern Battlefield Warplanes. AIRtime Publishing Inc. ISBN 1-880588-76-5.
  • Gunston, Bill; Spick, Michael (1986). Modern Fighting Helicopters. New York, US: Crescent Books. pp. 104–105. ISBN 0-517-61349-2.
  • International Air Power Review Volume 12. AIRtime Publishing. 2004. ISBN 1-880588-77-3.
  • McGowen, Stanley S. (2005). Helicopters: An Illustrated History of Their Impact. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-1-85109-468-4.
  • Nolan, Keith W (1986). Into Laos: Dewey Canyon II/Lam Son 719, Vietnam 1971. Presidio Press. ISBN 0-89141-247-6.
  • Richardson, Doug; Peacock, Lindsay (1992). Combat Aircraft: AH-64 Apache. London: Salamander Books. ISBN 0-86101-675-0.
  • Steinemann, P. (1989). Asian Airpower - Exotic Warplanes In Action. UK: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 0-85045-907-9.
  • Verier, Mike (1990). Bell AH-1 Cobra. London: Osprey. ISBN 0-85045-934-6.
  • Wheeler, Howard A. (1987). Attack Helicopters, A History of Rotary-Wing Combat Aircraft. The Nautical and Aviation Publishing Company. ISBN 0-933852-52-5.

External links

  • AH-1 Cobra page on GlobalSecurity.org
  • AH-1 Cobra Photo Galleries on MidwaySailor.com

bell, cobra, this, article, about, single, engine, cobra, twin, engine, models, bell, supercobra, single, engined, attack, helicopter, developed, manufactured, american, rotorcraft, manufacturer, bell, helicopter, member, prolific, huey, family, also, referred. This article is about the single engine Cobra For the twin engine models see Bell AH 1 SuperCobra The Bell AH 1 Cobra is a single engined attack helicopter developed and manufactured by the American rotorcraft manufacturer Bell Helicopter A member of the prolific Huey family the AH 1 is also referred to as the HueyCobra or Snake AH 1 HueyCobra CobraA Bell AH 1G in flightRole Attack helicopterNational origin United StatesManufacturer Bell HelicopterFirst flight 7 September 1965Introduction 1967Retired 2001 US Army Status In servicePrimary users United States Army historical Japan Ground Self Defense Force Republic of Korea Army Royal Jordanian Air ForceProduced 1967 2019Number built 1 116Developed from Bell UH 1 IroquoisVariants Bell AH 1 SeaCobra SuperCobra Bell 309 KingCobraThe AH 1 was rapidly developed as an interim gunship in response to the United States Army s needs in the Vietnam War It used the same engine transmission and rotor system of the Bell UH 1 Iroquois which had already proven itself to be a capable platform during the conflict but paired it with a redesigned narrow fuselage among other features The original AH 1 being a dedicated attack helicopter came equipped with stub wings for various weapons a chin mounted gun turret and an armored tandem cockpit from which it was operated by a pilot and gunner Its design was shaped to fulfil a need for a dedicated armed escort for transport helicopter giving the latter greater survivability in contested environments On 7 September 1965 the Model 209 prototype performed its maiden flight after rapidly gaining the support of various senior officials quantity production of the type proceeded rapidly with little revision During June 1967 the first examples of the AH 1 entered service with the US Army and was promptly deployed to the Vietnam theatre It commonly provided fire support to friendly ground forces escorted transport helicopters and flew in hunter killer teams by pairing with Hughes OH 6A Cayuse scout helicopters In the Vietnam War alone the Cobra fleet cumulatively chalked up in excess of one million operational hours roughly 300 AH 1s were also lost in combat In addition to the US Army various other branches of the US military also opted to acquire the type particularly the United States Marine Corps Furthermore numerous export sales were completed with several overseas countries including Israel Japan and Turkey For several decades the AH 1 formed the core of the US Army s attack helicopter fleet seeing combat in Vietnam Grenada Panama and the Gulf War In US Army service the Cobra was progressively replaced by the newer and more capable Boeing AH 64 Apache during the 1990s with the final examples being withdrawn during 2001 The Israeli Air Force IAF operated the Cobra most prolifically along its land border with Lebanon using its fleet intensively during the 1982 Lebanon War Turkish AH 1s have seen regular combat with Kurdish insurgents near Turkey s southern borders Upgraded versions of the Cobra have been developed such as the twin engined AH 1 SeaCobra SuperCobra and the experimental Bell 309 KingCobra Furthermore surplus AH 1 helicopters have been reused for other purposes including civilian ones numerous examples have been converted to perform aerial firefighting operations Contents 1 Development 1 1 Background 1 2 Iroquois Warrior Sioux Scout and AAFSS 1 3 Model 209 1 4 Into production 2 Design 3 Operational history 3 1 United States 3 2 Israel 3 3 Japan 3 4 Jordan 3 5 Turkey 3 6 Pakistan 3 7 Philippines 3 8 Civilian operators 4 Variants 4 1 Single engine 4 2 Twin engine 5 Operators 5 1 Former operators 6 Aircraft on display 7 Specifications AH 1G HueyCobra 8 Notable appearances in media 9 See also 10 References 10 1 Citations 10 2 Bibliography 11 External linksDevelopment EditBackground Edit Closely related to the development of the Bell AH 1 is the story of the Bell UH 1 Iroquois transport helicopter an icon of the Vietnam War and one of the most numerous helicopter types built The UH 1 made the theory of air cavalry practical as the new tactics called for US forces to be highly mobile across a wide area Unlike before they would not stand and fight long battles and they would not stay and hold positions Instead the plan was that the troops carried by fleets of UH 1 Hueys would range across the country to fight the enemy at times and places of their own choice 1 The massive expansion of American military presence in Vietnam opened a new era of war from the air The linchpin of US Army tactics was the helicopters and the protection of those helicopters became a vital role 2 It became clear that unarmed troop helicopters were vulnerable against ground fire from Viet Cong and North Vietnamese troops particularly as they approached landing zones to disembark or embark troops Without friendly support from artillery or ground forces the only way to pacify a landing zone was from the air preferably with an aircraft that could closely escort the transport helicopters and loiter over the landing zone as the battle progressed By 1962 a small number of armed UH 1As were used as escorts armed with multiple machine guns and rocket mounts 3 However these makeshift gunships came with considerable tradeoffs particularly being barely able to keep up with the troop transports they were intended to protect 4 While some officials within the Pentagon particularly those within the US Army had recognised the potential value of purpose built armed rotary aircraft as early as 1962 and were keen to see such a vehicle developed promptly the issue was complicated in part due to inter service politics 4 The United States Air Force USAF largely held the opinion that most forms of US military aircraft should be operated only by their service and that the US Army would be intruding into their domain by developing a complex armed aerial combatant and ought to be largely restricted to transport aircraft Meanwhile some Army officials were concerned that the USAF did not take the close air support CAS mission as seriously as it ought to be and that response times of 30 minutes or more for fixed wing aircraft would be unacceptable 4 Iroquois Warrior Sioux Scout and AAFSS Edit Bell Model 207 Sioux Scout Main article Bell 207 Sioux Scout Bell had been investigating helicopter gunships since the late 1950s paying particular attention to the Algerian War in which French forces mounted weapons onto helicopters to fight the growing insurgency 4 The company created a mockup of its D 255 helicopter gunship concept named Iroquois Warrior The Iroquois Warrior was planned to be a purpose built attack aircraft based on UH 1B components with a new slender airframe and a two seat tandem cockpit It featured a grenade launcher in a ball turret on the nose a 20 mm belly mounted gun pod and stub wings for mounting rockets or SS 10 anti tank missiles 5 In June 1962 Bell displayed the mockup to US Army officials hoping to solicit funding for further development rival manufacturers issued protests to this approach alleging that it was an attempt by Bell to circumvent the competitive process 5 4 Nevertheless the Army was interested and awarded Bell a proof of concept contract in December 1962 Bell modified a Model 47 into the Model 207 Sioux Scout which first flew in July 1963 The Sioux Scout had all the key features of a modern attack helicopter a tandem cockpit stub wings for weapons and a chin mounted gun turret After evaluating the Sioux Scout in early 1964 the Army was impressed but also felt that it was undersized underpowered and that the Sioux Scout was generally not suited for practical operations 6 The Army s solution to the shortcomings of the Sioux Scout was to launch the Advanced Aerial Fire Support System AAFSS competition 6 This called for a heavily armed helicopter capable of at least 200 MPH A total of seven companies including Bell opted to respond to the requirement 4 It was out of the AAFSS program that the Lockheed AH 56 Cheyenne emerged a heavy attack helicopter with high speed capability During testing it proved to be too sophisticated and costly and was ultimately canceled in 1972 after ten years of development In its place the Advanced Attack Helicopter program was launched Under this initiative the Army sought a conventional attack helicopter with a greater level of survivability 6 Model 209 Edit Despite the Army s preference for the AAFSS program for which Bell Helicopter was not selected to compete the company persisted with their own idea of a smaller and lighter gunship noting that Lockheed had little experience in developing rotorcraft and correctly predicted that it would encounter considerable difficulties 6 4 Bell employee Mike Folse played a key role in developing this new gunship which he intentionally based around the existing UH 1 on the rationale that while the Army could not purchase a completely original helicopter without a formal design competition the service was able to procure a modification of an aircraft that was already in its inventory without invoking such hurdles This initiative quickly caught the approval of Bell s senior management team 4 In January 1965 Bell elected to invest 1 million to proceed with the concept s detailed design Mating the proven transmission the 540 rotor system of the UH 1C augmented by a Stability Control Augmentation System SCAS and the T53 turboshaft engine of the UH 1 with the design philosophy of the Sioux Scout Bell produced the Model 209 6 It largely resembled the Iroquois Warrior mockup 7 particularly in its cockpit and tail book in broad visual terms there was relatively little shared between the proposed design and the UH 1 Despite appearance much of the Model 209 s major elements such as the tail rotor and much of the dynamic systems were identical Roughly 80 percent of its components already had existing Huey part numbers 4 Bell 209 prototype of the AH 1 Cobra series with skids retracted FAA no N209J On 3 September 1965 Bell rolled out its Model 209 prototype and four days later it made its maiden flight only eight months after the project s go ahead and slightly under budget 4 This first flight was witnessed by around 20 US Army officials the service having had no awareness of the project s existence prior to this and rapidly drew the government s attention One early test flight was met with a reportedly enthusiastic visit by US secretary of defense Robert McNamara Bell claimed at this phase of the project that production units could be ready for service within one year 4 As the Vietnam War proceeded pressure accumulated in favor of the Model 209 Attacks on US forces were increasing and by the end of June 1965 there were already 50 000 US ground troops in Vietnam 6 1965 was also the deadline for AAFSS selection but the program would become stuck in technical difficulties and political bickering The US Army needed an interim gunship for Vietnam and it approached five separate companies with its request to provide a quick solution Submissions came in for armed variants of the Boeing Vertol ACH 47A Kaman HH 2C Tomahawk Piasecki 16H Pathfinder Sikorsky S 61 and the Bell 209 6 4 During April 1966 Bell s submission emerged victorious in an evaluation against the other rival helicopters The US Army promptly signed the first production contract ordering an initial batch of 110 aircraft 6 8 By the end of the year rapid follow on orders had increased this to 500 Cobras 4 Bell added Cobra to the UH 1 s Huey nickname to produce its HueyCobra name for the 209 The Army applied the Cobra name to its AH 1G designation for the helicopter 9 The Bell 209 demonstrator was used for the next six years to test weapons and fit of equipment An additional use for the demonstrator was participating in marketing initiatives 4 It was also modified to match the AH 1 production standard by the early 1970s The demonstrator was retired to the Patton Museum at Fort Knox Kentucky and converted to approximately its original appearance 7 Into production Edit The Bell 209 design was modified in several respects for production The retractable skids were replaced by simpler fixed skids this was not due to any recorded design flaw or serviceably but it was feared that the landing gear bay could become inundated with mud 4 Furthermore a new wide chord rotor blade was adopted It was also decided that a plexiglass canopy should replace the Model 209 s armored glass canopy which was heavy enough to negatively impact performance 7 10 The umbrella shaped dive brake was deleted having reportedly self destructed during its first test flight 4 Numerous changes of the design were incorporated after the Cobra had entered service The principal amongst these changes was the repositioning of the tail rotor from the helicopter s left side to the right which facilitated an increase in the effectiveness of the tail rotor 11 The AH 1 was the first U S Army helicopter not named for a Native American people since the practice began with the H 13 Sioux and continued with the UH 1 Iroquois AH 56 Cheyenne OH 58 Kiowa and later helicopters 12 Within its first decade of service the US Army had put the original Cobra model through various exercises and operations which highlighted both the attack helicopter s promise and areas in which it could be improved 13 By 1972 the US Army openly sought an improved anti armor capability Under the Improved Cobra Armament Program ICAP trials of eight AH 1s fitted with TOW missiles were conducted in October 1973 After passing qualification tests the following year Bell was contracted with upgrading 101 AH 1Gs to the TOW capable AH 1Q configuration 14 While early production examples were not compatible with night vision goggles the cockpit instrumentation of later Cobras was altered to facilitate their use 4 Further variants of the Cobra were promptly developed with both new build models and early production examples being modified to incorporate the improvements During March 1978 the US Army opted to procure a batch of 100 new build Cobras that featured a new T shaped instrument panel improved composite rotor blades revised transmission and gearboxes the M128 helmet mounted sight and the M28A3 armament system 15 A major feature was the adoption of the more powerful T53 engine Designated AH 1S the Cobra was upgraded in three stages culminating with the AH 1F 6 16 17 The AH 1F integrated numerous countermeasures including an infrared jammer a radar jammer and a hot plume exhaust suppressor 4 The U S Marine Corps USMC quickly became interested in the Cobra opting to order an improved twin engine version in 1968 under the designation AH 1J 18 During the early 1970s the USMC proceeded to order an upgraded model the AH 1T which featured dynamic elements derived from the abortive Bell 309 KingCobra as such it featured a longer fuselage and tailboom These dynamic changes were combined with the adoption of heavier armaments which provided the USMC with an effective anti armour capacity unlike the preceding model 19 The USMC s interest in the Cobra would lead to the production of more twin engine variants of the helicopter 20 Design Edit An AH 1S Cobra 1986 The Bell AH 1 Cobra is a dedicated attack helicopter built to provide close air support and to escort friendly troop transports 8 4 The visual design of the Cobra was intentionally made to be sleek and be akin to that of a jet fighter 4 Aviation author Stanley McGowen observed that its appearance differed radically from any prior rotorcraft designed by Bell possessing a relatively narrow fuselage and a then unusual cockpit arrangement This cockpit was covered by a large fighter like canopy and its occupants protected by armor such included tempered steel seats and personal body armor 4 8 It was operated by both a pilot and gunner who were seated in a stepped tandem arrangement in which the commander was placed in the rear seat while the gunner occupied the forward position 8 This forward position provided a higher level of visibility to that of the rear seat Both positions were provided with flying controls while both crew would typically be certified pilots enabling control of the Cobra to be exchanged quickly through the course of the mission 4 Much of the Cobra s armaments could be installed upon the multiple hardpoints that were attached to the stub wings set on either side of the fuselage 4 8 In comparison to armed UH 1s the Cobra would typically carried twice as much ammunition and arrive on station in half the time it also had three times the loiter time which enabled the type to arrive in a designated landing zone ahead of transport helicopters to clear it provide support fire while they are present and to continue fighting as they withdraw 4 The slim profile of the helicopter allegedly provided defensive benefits by making it harder for opponents to accurately hit it with small arms fire although man portable air defense system MANPADS did prove to be effective against the Cobra Particularly vulnerable areas included the tail rotor drive shaft and to the main transmission 4 Typically the Cobra would avoid hovering at any point in an active engagement instead emphasis was placed on maintaining speed and mobility 4 The gunner often fired the chin mounted cannon with the intention of suppressing hostile targets in between barrages of 2 75 inch rockets held in pods upon the stub wings which were fired by the back seater It was unusual for Cobras to operate alone instead two or more would be dispatched and teamwork encouraged leading to hunter killer tactics being used to flush out and eliminate ground targets 4 Pairings with other helicopters such as the Bell OH 58 Kiowa scout helicopter were also common occurrences Radio communications were handled by the gunner Regardless of mission profile low altitude flying was commonplace 4 21 Operational history EditFor AH 1J AH 1T AH 1W AH 1Z and other twin engine variants see Bell AH 1 SuperCobra Bell AH 1G over Vietnam United States Edit By June 1967 the first AH 1G HueyCobras had been delivered Originally designated as UH 1H the A for attack designation was soon adopted and when the improved UH 1D became the UH 1H the HueyCobra became the AH 1G The AH 1 was initially considered a variant of the H 1 line resulting in the G series letter 22 Overview video of the Bell AH 1G Huey Cobra weapon systems c 1967 source source source source source source source source source source source source The first six AH 1s arrived at Bien Hoa Air Base South Vietnam on 30 August 1967 for combat testing by the U S Army Cobra New Equipment Training Team 23 11 On 4 September the type scored its first combat kill by sinking a sampan boat killing four Viet Cong 23 11 The first AH 1 unit the 334th Assault Helicopter Company was declared operational on 6 October 1967 The Army operated the Cobra continuously up to the U S withdrawal from South Vietnam in 1973 Typically the AH 1 provided fire support for ground forces and escorted transport helicopters in addition to other roles including aerial rocket artillery ARA battalions in the two Airmobile divisions They also formed hunter killer teams by pairing with OH 6A Cayuse scout helicopters a team normally comprised a single OH 6 flying slow and low to find enemy forces If the OH 6 drew fire the Cobra could strike at the then revealed enemy 7 24 On 12 September 1968 Capt Ronald Fogleman was flying an F 100 Super Sabre when the aircraft was shot down and he ejected 200 miles 320 km north of Bien Hoa Fogleman became the only pilot to be rescued by holding on to an Army AH 1G s deployed gun panel door 25 Bell built 1 116 AH 1Gs for the U S Army between 1967 and 1973 and the Cobras chalked up over a million operational hours in Vietnam 6 the number of Cobras in service peaked at 1 081 26 Out of nearly 1 110 AH 1s that were delivered between 1967 and 1973 approximately 300 were lost to a combination of combat and accidents during the conflict 7 27 During Operation Lam Son 719 in Southeastern Laos 26 U S Army AH 1Gs were destroyed while a further 158 sustained some level of damage 28 29 The U S Marine Corps also operated the AH 1G Cobra in Vietnam for a short time before acquiring the twin engine AH 1J Cobras 22 The AH 1Gs had been adopted by the Marines as an interim measure a total of 38 helicopters having been transferred from the U S Army to the Marines in 1969 30 31 During Operation Urgent Fury the invasion of Grenada in 1983 several AH 1T Cobras were deployed to fly close air support and helicopter escort missions On the first day of the invasion two of the four Cobras involved were lost to anti aircraft fire in the attack on Fort Frederick 32 19 During 1989 Army Cobras participated in Operation Just Cause the U S invasion of Panama 7 It operated alongside its eventual successor in US Army service the Boeing AH 64 Apache for the first time during the combat in Panama 33 34 During Operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm in the Gulf War 1990 91 both the Cobras and SuperCobras deployed in a support role The USMC deployed 91 AH 1W SuperCobras while the US Army operated 140 AH 1 Cobras of various models in the theatre these were typically operated from dispersed forward operating bases in close proximity to Saudi Arabia s border with Iraq Three AH 1s were lost in accidents during fighting and afterward Cobras successfully destroyed large numbers of Iraqi armored vehicles and various other targets during the intense fighting of the conflict 7 35 US Cobras were deployed in further operations across the 1990s Army Cobras provided support for the US humanitarian intervention during Operation Restore Hope in Somalia in 1993 They were also employed during the US invasion of Haiti in 1994 7 During the 1990s the US Army gradually phased out its Cobra fleet completely retiring the type from active service in March 1999 36 The service which had long sought a more capable successor to the Cobra had procured a large fleet of AH 64 Apaches since receiving the first example of the type during early 1984 37 38 The withdrawn AH 1s were typically offered to other potential operators usually NATO allies 6 36 The Army retired the AH 1 from its reserves in September 2001 The retired AH 1s were then disposed of often through sales to overseas customers the final portion of the fleet was liquidated in 2010 39 40 Some were also given to the USDA s Forest Service 6 The US Marine Corps retired the AH 1W SuperCobra in 2020 and continues to operate the AH 1Z Viper Israel Edit Israeli Air Force Tzefa helicopters Israel was an early export customer for the Cobra purchasing six AH 1Gs from the US Army 41 The government was keen to procure a capable attack helicopter as recent combat in the Yom Kippur War had shown a need for a capable platform for countering enemy armour The type was operated by the Israeli Air Force IAF with the First Attack Helicopter Squadron formally commencing on 1 December 1977 41 The service named the type as the Tzefa Hebrew צפע for Viper 42 43 On 9 May 1979 the IAF s Cobras performed their first attack firing four Orev missiles at a house near Tyre Lebanon that was occupied by militants 41 Israel s fleet of Cobras was particularly active on the Lebanon front having participated in the fighting there for in excess of 20 years They were intensively used during the 1982 Lebanon War to destroy Syrian armor and fortifications alike being reportedly responsible for the destruction of dozens of Syrian ground vehicles In one operation alone a pair of IAF Cobras destroyed three enemy tanks and one truck 41 Based upon its performance in the conflict it was decided to remove the rocket pods and increase the amount of ammunition carried for the cannon instead Other operational changes included a greater emphasis on cooperation with ground units to avoid friendly fire incidents 41 Largely due to a US embargo that prevented the purchase of further Cobras Israel procured alternative platforms instead including around 20 McDonnell Douglas MD 500 Defenders in late 1979 41 Between 1983 and 1985 by which time the embargo had been lifted 24 new Cobras were purchased the expanded fleet enabled the creation of a second squadron known as the Fighting Family Squadron on 1 June 1985 41 During 1990 the IAF received its first Boeing AH 64 Apache attack helicopters 44 having acquired a fleet of 42 by 2000 45 At the time of the Apache s procurement there was considerable political controversy over the IAF s decision to overlook upgrades to its existing Cobra fleet in favour of acquiring an entirely separate model of attack helicopter 46 Throughout the 1980s and 1990s the Cobras continued to play a role in major operations against groups such as Hezbollah including Operations Accountability and Grapes of Wrath in southern Lebanon 41 During August 1996 the IAF s Cobra fleet was expanded yet again via 14 surplus US Army AH 1F Cobras being acquired some of which were used by the front line squadrons while others were operated exclusively for flight training purposes During the 2000s the Cobra s precision strike capability was bolstered by the adoption of the Spike missile 41 During late 2013 Israel opted to retire the last of its 33 AH 1 Cobras from front line service largely due to budget cuts Its role was taken up entirely by the IAI s squadrons of AH 64 attack helicopters while an extensive fleet of unmanned aerial vehicles UAVs took over the role of patrolling combat zones The Cobra fleet was considerably older than the Apaches which contributed to several fatal crashes of the type The Cobras were also more expensive to maintain than UAVs and their use exposed pilots to attacks from man portable air defense systems operated by guerrilla groups 47 Around the same time frame the IAF also pursued upgrades to its AH 64 fleet 48 49 In late 2014 Israel transferred 16 of the recently withdrawn Cobras to the Royal Jordanian Air Force to bolster the numbers of their existing fleet 50 Japan Edit Japan Ground Self Defense Force AH 1S Cobra April 2014 Japan manufactured 89 AH 1S Cobras under license by Fuji Heavy Industries from 1984 to 2000 51 The type is used by the Japan Ground Self Defense Force and are Step 3 models which are roughly the equivalent to the U S Army s AH 1Fs The engine is the T53 K 703 turboshaft which Kawasaki Heavy Industries produced under license 7 During the 2010s Japan was examining options for procuring a fleet of new rotorcraft to replace its aging Cobras it has been specified that the replacement helicopter would need to be optimized for marine use and able to operate from expeditionary airstrips or sea bases and that between 30 and 50 such craft would be purchased 52 In December 2022 the Japanese government decided to replace 47 AH 1S 12 AH 64D 33 OH 1 and 26 U 125A with unmanned aerial vehicles Japan plans to increase its defense budget from 1 24 of GDP in fiscal 2021 to around 2 0 within 10 years and has decided to retire these helicopters and aircraft as part of an effort to spend its defense budget efficiently 53 Jordan Edit USMC and Royal Jordanian Air Force Cobras May 2012 Jordan obtained an initial batch of 24 AH 1Fs during the late 1980s In 2001 nine additional ex US Army Cobras were acquired to supplement the fleet During 2010 Jordan transferred 16 AH 1F helicopters to Pakistan under a US sponsored support program that provided Islamabad with 40 AH 1 refurbished helicopters 54 In late 2014 Israel and Jordan came to an agreement under which the former transferred 16 ex IAF Cobras to the Royal Jordanian Air Force The deal was publicly stated to be for the purpose of increasing border security which was viewed as a pressing concern of both nations due to the threats posed by Islamic State IS militants as well as by other insurgent groups at that time 50 The Royal Jordanian Air Force has at least one squadron of Cobras in service and is supposed to have used them in combat in Iraq and Syria 55 Turkey Edit Turkey bought ten AH 1Ws in the early 1990s and supplemented them with 32 ex US Army Cobras These additional units included several TAH 1P trainers while the majority were brought up to the AH 1F standard 54 During the 2010s Turkish Cobras have repeatedly seen combat in operations against Kurdish insurgents around Turkey s borders with both Syria and Iraq Two Cobras were reportedly lost to enemy fire during these operations 56 57 Amid the 2016 Turkish coup d etat attempt Turkish Cobras were alleged to have fired upon several police vehicles 58 Pakistan Edit Between 1984 and 1986 Pakistan was supplied with an initial batch of 20 AH 1S gunships by the US 59 these were later upgraded with the C NITE thermal imaging package 60 Operated by Pakistan Army Aviation the service first used Cobra overseas in Somalia during the United Nations Operation in Somalia II where a single squadron was deployed in 1994 61 Pakistani Cobras subsequently saw action in Sierra Leone 62 63 By 2013 Pakistan reportedly operated a fleet of 35 AH 1F helicopters 64 Maintaining these aircraft has been difficult but possible through commercial channels Additionally the US government provided 750 000 through 2013 to update the existing AH 1F S Cobra fleet 65 However controversy over how much of this funding has actually been spent on Pakistan s Cobras has also been present throughout the 2010s 66 Turkey has also become a key supplier of spare parts for the Cobra often free of cost to Pakistan 67 During the 2010s Pakistan lost a total of three aircraft in separate incidents 68 69 Pakistan repeatedly sought the Bell AH 1 SuperCobra from the US to supplement and replace its current AH 1 Cobras 60 Attempts to acquire the AH 1Z Viper or AH 64 Apache from the US were rejected so Pakistan turned to buying other foreign attack helicopters Possible candidates have included the Turkish T129 the Chinese CAIC Z 10 and the Russian Mi 35 Hind 70 In November 2014 Russia approved the sale of Mi 35M helicopters to Pakistan 71 In April 2015 China delivered three Z 10s to Pakistan 72 During the same month the US Department of State approved the sale of 15 AH 1Zs and associated equipment to Pakistan 73 During October 2017 the T129 was also reported to be a contender for further orders 74 Philippines Edit Philippine Air Force Bell AH 1F The Jordanian government offered to provide up to four surplus AH 1F Cobras to the Philippines for counter terrorism operations The offer was later reduced to two units which the Philippine government accepted 75 76 On 26 November 2019 an Antonov An 124 airlifter carried the two Bell AH 1F Cobras from Jordan to Clark International Airport Clark Air Base The helicopters are reportedly painted in a light grey livery similar to the paint scheme of the PAF s AgustaWestland AW109E armed helicopters 75 Civilian operators Edit In 2003 the US Forest Service acquired 25 retired AH 1Fs from the US Army 6 These have been designated Bell 209 and are being converted into Firewatch Cobras with infrared and low light sensors and systems for real time fire monitoring 77 78 The last two Firewatch Cobras were retired in October 2021 79 The Florida Division of Forestry also acquired three AH 1Ps from the US Army These are called Bell 209 Firesnakes and are equipped to carry a water fire retardant system 6 80 Variants Edit Japan Ground Self Defense Force AH 1S U S Forest Service Bell 209 on the Bar Complex Fire in California AH 1P front cockpit restoration AH 1P rear cockpit restoration Single engine Edit Bell 209 Original AH 1G prototype with retractable skid landing gear This model number is also used by the FAA for the civilian registration of former U S Army AH 1s used in firefighting service AH 1G HueyCobra Initial 1966 production model gunship for the US Army with one 1 400 shp 1 000 kW Avco Lycoming T53 13 turboshaft JAH 1G HueyCobra One helicopter for armament testing including Hellfire missiles and multi barrel cannon 81 TH 1G HueyCobra Two seat dual control trainer 81 Z 14 HueyCobra The Spanish Navy purchased eight new build AH 1Gs designating the type the Z 14 These were equipped with the M35 20 mm cannon system and were used to support coastal patrol boats Four of these were lost in accidents The remaining helicopters were retired in 1985 with three sent back to the US and one kept in storage in Spain 81 82 YAH 1Q Eight AH 1Gs with XM26 Telescopic Sight Unit TSU and two M56 TOW 4 pack launchers 7 AH 1Q HueyCobra Equipped with the M65 TOW Cobra missile subsystem M65 Telescopic Sight Unit TSU and M73 Reflex sight All future versions will be equipped with the TSU and be equipped to fire the TOW missile subsystem YAH 1R AH 1G powered by a T53 L 703 engine without TOW system 7 YAH 1S AH 1Q upgrade and TOW system 7 AH 1S The baseline AH 1S is an AH 1Q upgraded with a 1 800 shp 1 300 kW T53 L 703 turboshaft engine The AH 1S is also referred to as the Improved AH 1S AH 1S Modified or AH 1S MOD prior to 1988 Prior to 1988 all upgraded aircraft were referred to as variants of the AH 1S 7 QAH 1S A target drone conversion of the AH 1S by Bell Bristol Aerospace under a joint US and Canada development program started in 1994 Honeywell further modified the QAH 1S into the Hokum X by installing systems and hardware to allow it to simulate the Russian Kamov Ka 50 attack helicopter Three Hokum Xs were completed from 1998 to 2001 83 84 AH 1P 100 production aircraft with composite rotors flat plate glass cockpit and improved cockpit layout for nap of earth NOE flight The AH 1P is also referred to as the Production AH 1S or AH 1S PROD prior to 1988 These improvements are considered Step 1 of the AH 1S upgrade program 7 AH 1E 98 production aircraft with the Enhanced Cobra Armament System ECAS featuring the M97A1 armament subsystem with a three barreled M197 20 mm cannon The AH 1E is also referred to as the Upgunned AH 1S or AH 1S ECAS prior to 1988 These improvements are considered Step 2 of the AH 1S upgrade program 7 AH 1E aircraft included the M147 Rocket Management Subsystem RMS to fire 2 75 inch 70 mm rockets 85 AH 1F 143 production aircraft and 387 converted AH 1G Cobras The AH 1F incorporates all Step 1 and 2 upgrades to the AH 1S It also featured Step 3 upgrades a head up display a laser rangefinder an infrared jammer mounted above the engine exhaust and an infrared suppressing engine exhaust system and the M143 Air Data Subsystem ADS The AH 1F is also referred to as the Modernized AH 1S AH 1S Modernized Cobra or AH 1S MC prior to 1988 86 Model 249 Experimental demonstrator version fitted with the four blade rotor system from Bell 412 an uprated engine and experimental equipment including Hellfire missiles 87 Bell 309 KingCobra Experimental all weather version based on the AH 1G single engine and AH 1J twin engine designs 88 Two Bell 309s were produced the first was powered by a PW amp C T400 CP 400 Twin Pac engine set and the second was powered by a Lycoming T 55 L 7C engine 89 Twin engine Edit For all twin engine variants such as AH 1J AH 1T AH 1W and AH 1Z see Bell AH 1 SuperCobra Operators EditA small number of former military helicopters are operated by civil organizations for display and demonstration for example by Red Bull 90 Red Bull Flying Bulls TAH 1F at Berlin Tempelhof Airport USFS Bell 209 during the California wildfires of October 2007 BahrainBahrain Air Force 64 JapanJapan Ground Self Defense Force 64 JordanRoyal Jordanian Air Force 64 No 10 Squadron RJAF AH 1S 91 No 12 Squadron RJAF AH 1S 91 KenyaKenya Air Force 92 93 PakistanPakistan Air Force citation needed Pakistan Army 64 PhilippinesPhilippine Air Force 94 South KoreaRepublic of Korea Army 64 95 ThailandRoyal Thai Army 64 TurkeyTurkish Army 64 United StatesFlorida Department of Forestry 96 U S Forest Service 97 98 Former operators Edit An Israeli AH 1F Cobra IsraelIsraeli Air Force 47 99 SpainSpanish Navy 100 101 United StatesU S Army 102 Washington State Department of Natural Resources 103 Aircraft on display EditMain article List of displayed Bell AH 1 CobrasSpecifications AH 1G HueyCobra Edit AH 1F Cobra on display at Steven F Udvar Hazy Center Data from The Illustrated Encyclopedia of the World s Modern Military Aircraft 104 Bell AH 1 Cobra 105 Modern Fighting Aircraft AH 1 Cobra 106 General characteristicsCrew 2 one pilot one co pilot gunner CPG Length 53 ft 16 m including rotors Fuselage length 44 ft 5 in 13 5 m Width 10 ft 4 in 3 15 m stub wings Height 13 ft 6 in 4 11 m Empty weight 5 810 lb 2 635 kg Max takeoff weight 9 500 lb 4 309 kg Powerplant 1 Lycoming T53 L 13 turboshaft 1 100 hp 820 kW Main rotor diameter 44 ft 0 in 13 4 m Main rotor area 1 520 sq ft 141 m2 Blade section NACA 0009 3 mod 107 Performance Maximum speed 149 kn 171 mph 276 km h Never exceed speed 190 kn 220 mph 350 km h Range 310 nmi 360 mi 570 km Service ceiling 11 400 ft 3 500 m Rate of climb 1 230 ft min 6 2 m s Armament 2 7 62 mm 0 308 in multi barrel Miniguns or 2 M129 40 mm grenade launchers or one of each in the M28 turret When one of each was mounted the minigun was mounted on the right side of the turret due to feed requirements 2 75 in 70 mm rockets 7 rockets mounted in the M158 launcher or 19 rockets in the M200 launcher M18 7 62 mm Minigun pod or XM35 armament subsystem with XM195 20 mm cannonNotable appearances in media EditMain article Aircraft in fiction Bell AH 1 CobraSee also Edit Aviation portalU S Helicopter Armament Subsystems AH 1 CobraRelated development Bell 207 Sioux Scout Bell 309 KingCobra Bell AH 1 SuperCobra Bell AH 1Z Viper Bell UH 1 Iroquois Bell YAH 63Aircraft of comparable role configuration and era Agusta A129 MangustaRelated lists List of active United States military aircraft List of attack aircraft List of rotorcraftReferences EditCitations Edit Wheeler 1987 pp 62 64 Wheeler 1987 pp 60 61 Wheeler 1987 pp 57 62 64 65 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab Joiner Stephen August 2017 Birth of the Cobra Smithsonian Magazine a b Verier 1990 pp 12 17 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Donald and March 2004 page needed a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Bishop 2006 page needed a b c d e McGowen 2005 p 107 Verier 1990 pp 30 31 McGowen 2005 p 158 Verier 1990 p 44 Everyone Relax The Army s Native American Helicopter Names Are Not Racist Medium com War Is Boring 1 July 2014 McGowen 2005 pp 157 158 RD amp A Sect 135 Archived 10 July 2017 at the Wayback Machine Army Historical Summary FY74 McGowen 2005 pp 158 159 Verier 1990 pp 57 59 61 McGowen 2005 pp 159 160 McGowen 2005 p 108 a b McGowen 2005 p 160 Verier 1990 pp 86 88 Porter David September 2017 In Vietnam These Helicopter Scouts Saw Combat Up Close Smithsonian Magazine a b Donald 2004 p 166 a b Bernstein Jonathan 2003 US Army AH 1 Cobra Units in Vietnam Osprey Combat Aircraft 41 Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1841766065 McGowen 2005 pp 107 108 F 100 Super Sabre Flew Most Missions in Vietnam Defensemedianetwork com 12 September 2013 Webster amp Pedrotty et al Historical and Architectural Overview of Military Aircraft Hangars pp 5 23 United States Air Force Air Combat Command September 1999 Verier 1990 p 35 Lam Son 719 Nguyen Duy Hinh 1979 Operation Lam Sơn 719 United States Army Center of Military History ISBN 978 1984054463 Marine AH 1J SeaCobra Archived 7 August 2007 at the Wayback Machine vectorsite net McGowen 2005 pp 108 109 Kreisher Otto Operation URGENT FURY Grenada Marine Corps Association amp Foundation Archived from the original on 19 April 2016 Retrieved 6 April 2016 Richardson and Peacock 1992 pp 51 52 Bishop 2005 pp 16 17 Tegler Eric 20 October 2020 The Marines AH 1 Super Cobra Attack Helicopter Is Slithering Away After Three Decades Of Service forbes com a b Edward Zink 31 March 1999 Army retires Cobras from active force Army Link News US Army archived from the original on 5 May 2002 Richardson and Peacock 1992 pp 14 15 Bishop 2005 pp 5 6 AH 1 Cobra retirement program at Fort Drum ends final four helicopters head to Thailand www army mil Rogoway Tyler 19 January 2018 Pentagon To Sell Off Its AH 1W Super Cobra Attack Helicopter Fleet The War Zone a b c d e f g h i The End of the Cobra Era israeldefense co il 29 April 2014 Boyne Walter J January 2013 Airpower Classics PDF Air Force Magazine Air Force Association 84 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Donald 2004 p 191 Donald 2004 p 157 Orme William A 3 February 2000 Israeli Says U S Fears Endanger Major Purchase of Apache Copters The New York Times Pinkas Alon 23 March 1994 IA Experts Criticize Air Force For Preferring Apache Over Upgraded Cobra Jerusalem Post Archived from the original on 25 October 2012 Retrieved 30 March 2021 a b Drones gain ground in Israel after Cobra helicopters cut Reuters 28 May 2014 Archived from the original on 16 October 2015 Retrieved 30 June 2017 Israel s AH 64A Attack Helos Get Custom Upgrades Despite the USA Defense Industry Daily 17 March 2014 Archived from the original on 21 March 2014 Israel s AH 64A Attack Helos Get Custom Upgrades Despite the USA updated Defense Industry Daily 26 October 2017 Archived from the original on 4 November 2017 Israel Upgrades Apache Helicopters After US Blocked Their Modernization World Tribune 14 March 2014 Archived from the original on 24 June 2015 a b Israel gives Jordan helicopters for border security U S source Reuters 23 July 2015 Archived from the original on 16 October 2015 Retrieved 30 June 2017 Apache wins Japan deal Flight International 4 September 2001 Yeo Mike 29 November 2018 Japan sets naval friendly requirement in search to replace AH 1S Cobra fleet defensenews com 空自捜索機や陸自戦闘ヘリを廃止 無人機で代替へ 防衛予算効率化 Yomiuri Shimbun 9 December 2022 a b Goebel Greg 1 June 2020 2 6 International Cobra Sales AirVectors Embraer In association with World Air Forces directory 2022 Flight Global Retrieved 31 January 2022 Cunningham Erin 14 May 2016 Kurdish militants reportedly shoot down Turkish security forces helicopter The Washington Post Rogoway Tyler 14 May 2016 Video Shows PKK Fighter Blasting A Turkish AH 1 Cobra Out Of The Sky With A Shoulder Fired Missile The War Zone Huitt Desiree 23 July 2016 Watch Cobra Attack Helicopters firing on Turkish police vehicles during the failed coup sofrep com SIPRI armstrade sipri org Retrieved 15 April 2013 a b Pakistan Wants More Helicopter Gunships 2 January 2010 Army Aviation www pakistanarmy gov pk Archived from the original on 6 September 2017 Retrieved 13 September 2017 Army Aviation www pakistanarmy gov pk Archived from the original on 6 September 2017 Retrieved 13 September 2017 US transfers Cobra helicopters to Pakistan GEO News 16 March 2010 Archived from the original on 29 October 2013 a b c d e f g h World Air Forces 2013 PDF Flightglobal Insight 2013 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 US delivers Cobra gunships to Pakistan The Nation Pakistan 17 March 2010 Archived from the original on 2 November 2013 Maintaining Pakistan s Cobra Attack Helicopters defenseindustrydaily com 5 August 2016 Turkey to provide Cobra spare parts free of charge Daily Times Pakistan 25 January 2010 Archived from the original on 2 November 2013 Pakistan Army Archived from the original on 31 October 2013 Retrieved 13 June 2013 Pakistani Army s AH 1 Cobra helicopter crashes injuring pilots Voice of Russia 28 October 2013 Archived from the original on 1 November 2013 Retrieved 30 October 2013 Pakistani Cobra Crash Further Stresses Tired Fleet Defensenews com 27 June 2014 Archived from the original on 25 July 2014 Pakistan Wins Approval To Purchase Mi 35 Helo Defensenews com 13 November 2014 Chinese Thunderbolt helicopters may replace American Cobras in Pakistan The Express Tribune 3 April 2015 Joe Gould and Usman Ansari 7 April 2015 State Dept OKs 952M Pakistan Helo Deal Defense News Shahid Khaqan Abbasi becomes Pakistan s first PM to fly military helicopter Dawn 23 October 2017 a b Transfer of AH 1F Cobra Attack Helicopters from Jordan Project of the Philippine Air Force Philippine Defense Resource Archived from the original on 15 December 2019 Retrieved 12 June 2019 Jordan donates 2 attack helicopters INQUIRER net 24 May 2018 Retrieved 24 May 2018 Firewatch Helicopter page US Forest Service 2004 Archived 27 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine Shasta Trinity National Forest Home PDF fs fed us Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Retrieved 1 April 2015 Broadbent Mark December 2021 Rotary Focus Air International Vol 101 no 6 p 16 ISSN 0306 5634 Stephens Ernie Recycling helicopters from military service to public service Rotor amp Wing November 2008 Retrieved on 12 October 2009 a b c Donald 1997 p 112 Goebel Greg International Cobra Sales Archived 30 November 2009 at the Wayback Machine Vectorsite net 1 December 2008 Bristol Aerospace Hokum X Jane s Unmanned Aerial Vehicles and Targets Jane s Information Group 2006 subscription article dated 14 December 2006 permanent dead link Honeywell QAH 1S Jane s Unmanned Aerial Vehicles and Targets Jane s Information Group 2006 subscription article dated 3 February 2006 McGowen 2005 p 159 Bishop 2006 p 11 Verier 1990 pp 72 76 Verier 1990 p 57 Richardson 1987 pp 8 9 THE WORLD OF THE FLYING BULLS Bell Cobra TAH 1F The Flying Bulls Retrieved 25 December 2021 a b Steinemann 1989 p 23 Cherisey de Erwan 30 June 2017 Kenya takes delivery of AH 1 Cobras IHS Jane s 360 Paris Archived from the original on 17 July 2017 Retrieved 17 July 2017 Binnie Jeremy 13 December 2017 Kenyan displays new AH 1 Cobras IHS Jane s 360 Archived from the original on 18 December 2017 Retrieved 18 December 2017 M113 APCs and AH 1F Cobras donated by Jordan to the Philippines Army Recognition 24 April 2018 Archived from the original on 5 May 2018 Retrieved 5 May 2018 South Korean Army Bell AH 1S Demand media Retrieved 12 February 2013 B 209 FireSnake helicopter floridaforestservice com Archived from the original on 17 July 2012 Retrieved 12 February 2013 USFS Fire Watch program firewatchcobra com Archived from the original on 31 August 2013 Retrieved 12 February 2013 USFS Bell AH 1F Cobra 209 Demand media Retrieved 12 February 2013 Israel halts AH 1 sales talks with Nigeria flightglobal com Retrieved 25 January 2015 AH 1G Cobra in Arma Aerea de la Armada Espanola Helis com World Military Aircraft Inventory 2014 Aerospace Source Book Aviation Week and Space Technology January 2014 Cobra Gold The US Army s Smart Retirement Program defenseindustrydaily com Retrieved 12 February 2013 HeliHub com Washington State retires AH 1 fleet from firefighting duties adds two UH 1s helihub com 14 March 2011 Gunston Bill 1978 The Illustrated Encyclopedia of the World s Modern Military Aircraft New York Crescent Books p 205 ISBN 978 0 517 22477 9 Verier p 184 Richardson Doug 1987 AH 1 Cobra New York Prentice Hall p appendix ISBN 0 13 020751 9 Lednicer David The Incomplete Guide to Airfoil Usage m selig ae illinois edu Retrieved 16 April 2019 Bibliography Edit Bernstein Jonathan 2003 US Army AH 1 Cobra Units in Vietnam Osprey Combat Aircraft 41 Oxford UK Osprey Publishing Limited ISBN 978 1 84176 606 5 Bishop Chris 2005 Apache AH 64 Boeing McDonnell Douglas 1976 2005 Osprey Publishing ISBN 1 84176 816 2 Bishop Chris 2006 Huey Cobra Gunships New Vanguard Oxford UK Osprey Publishing Limited ISBN 1 84176 984 3 Donald David 1997 The Complete Encyclopedia of World Aircraft Barnes amp Nobel Books ISBN 0 7607 0592 5 Donald David 2004 AH 64A D Apache and AH 64D Longbow Apache Modern Battlefield Warplanes AIRtime Publishing Inc ISBN 1 880588 76 5 David Donald March Daniel eds 2004 Modern Battlefield Warplanes AIRtime Publishing Inc ISBN 1 880588 76 5 Gunston Bill Spick Michael 1986 Modern Fighting Helicopters New York US Crescent Books pp 104 105 ISBN 0 517 61349 2 International Air Power Review Volume 12 AIRtime Publishing 2004 ISBN 1 880588 77 3 McGowen Stanley S 2005 Helicopters An Illustrated History of Their Impact ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 85109 468 4 Nolan Keith W 1986 Into Laos Dewey Canyon II Lam Son 719 Vietnam 1971 Presidio Press ISBN 0 89141 247 6 Richardson Doug Peacock Lindsay 1992 Combat Aircraft AH 64 Apache London Salamander Books ISBN 0 86101 675 0 Steinemann P 1989 Asian Airpower Exotic Warplanes In Action UK Osprey Publishing ISBN 0 85045 907 9 Verier Mike 1990 Bell AH 1 Cobra London Osprey ISBN 0 85045 934 6 Wheeler Howard A 1987 Attack Helicopters A History of Rotary Wing Combat Aircraft The Nautical and Aviation Publishing Company ISBN 0 933852 52 5 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to AH 1 Cobra AH 1 Cobra page on GlobalSecurity org AH 1 HueyCobra page on Rotorhead org AH 1 Cobra Photo Galleries on MidwaySailor com Cobras over the Frontier by Usman Ansari End of an era for Fort Drum s Cobras Aircraft Training Manual Attack Helicopter AH 1 TC 1 213 1992 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bell AH 1 Cobra amp oldid 1136280330, wikipedia, wiki, 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