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Red Hawk rising: how the Z-20 family is plugging China’s chronic defence gaps

Red Hawk rising: how the Z-20 family is plugging China’s chronic defence gaps
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Red Hawk rising: how the Z-20 family is plugging China’s chronic defence gaps Modern technology has put the multi-role utility helicopter ahead of the original Black Hawk, making it an anchor of the PLA’s new air era The striking resemblance underscores China’s decades-long effort to close the technological gap with the United States and Russia in the important aviation sector of helicopters. Yet, there are differences: the Z-20 has five main rotor blades compared with the UH-60’s four, and...

Red Hawk rising: how the Z-20 family is plugging China’s chronic defence gaps Modern technology has put the multi-role utility helicopter ahead of the original Black Hawk, making it an anchor of the PLA’s new air era The striking resemblance underscores China’s decades-long effort to close the technological gap with the United States and Russia in the important aviation sector of helicopters. Yet, there are differences: the Z-20 has five main rotor blades compared with the UH-60’s four, and its cabin features two front windows instead of the American model’s three. The Z-20 is Beijing’s most advanced military helicopter designed for multiple situational uses, including in the Taiwan Strait. Over the next three and a half decades, China relied solely on this ageing and shrinking fleet for both military and civilian missions in its vast high-altitude territories.
Red Hawk (PERSON) China (LOCATION) Black Hawk (PERSON) PLA (ORG) the United States (LOCATION) Russia (LOCATION) American (ORG) Beijing (LOCATION) the Taiwan Strait (LOCATION)
Originally published by South China Morning Post Read original →