HELRAS

{{Short description|Naval helicopter undersea sensor}}

HELRAS or the Helicopter Long Range Active Sonar is a naval helicopter undersea sensor, a dipping sonar (a form of towed array sonar), deployed by helicopters of many naval air forces around the world to detect submarines; it is a form of geophysical MASINT.

History

HELRAS was first developed in the 1970s by Bendix, FIAR and British Aerospace.[https://www.janes.com/images/assets/541/51541/Active_dipping_sonar_technology.pdf Active dipping sonar technology] Another rival system was called FLASH (Folding Light

Acoustic System for Helicopters). In the 1980s, the system was supplied by Bendix.[https://www.flightglobal.com/FlightPDFArchive/1987/1987%20-%202230.PDF Flight International October 1987]

A competitor of HELRAS is the Low Frequency Active Sonar (LFAS).

Capability

It can detect submarines up to 60NM.[https://www.kvmo.nl/images/pdf/2014/scriptieASWknippenberg.pdf Simulating Anti-Submarine Warfare using MANA]

Manufacture

Parts for the system are made by Rolls-Royce North America.[https://www.rolls-royce.com/~/media/Files/R/Rolls-Royce/documents/customers/marine/naval-handling-sys-brochure.pdf Rolls-Royce Naval Handling]

Deployment

The system has been fitted to EH101, S70B, NH90, CH-148, AS532SC, AB412, and AS565 with helicopter of navies such as Italy, Turkey, Greece, Netherlands, Canada, Singapore, Thailand, Chile, Brazil, Indonesia, and Morocco. The system has also been fitted to unmanned surface vessels Seagull and RHIBs for Israel and USN.

See also

References