TechRussian tanker fires at German navy helicopter over Baltic Sea

Russian tanker fires at German navy helicopter over Baltic Sea

The incident was reported by the German Minister of Foreign Affairs, Annalena Baerbock. Information on this matter – without revealing the circumstances or the date of the event – was presented during a NATO meeting in Brussels.

German helicopter Super Lynx Mk88a
German helicopter Super Lynx Mk88a
Images source: © Bundeswehr
Łukasz Michalik

Shots, using signal ammunition, were fired from a Russian tanker toward a Super Lynx Mk88a helicopter conducting a patrol flight over the Baltic Sea. This type of aircraft is used by the German Navy as a shipboard helicopter. The statement does not specify whether the Russians used flares or more dangerous tracer ammunition.

The Lynx helicopters serving in the German Navy are a variant of the British design first flown in 1971. The helicopter was developed as a British alternative to the American multi-role helicopter UH-1 Iroquois.

The twin-engine machine is approximately 13 metres long and, in its takeoff configuration, can weigh up to 5,400 kilograms. The helicopter can carry two anti-submarine torpedoes, two Sea Skua anti-ship missiles, as well as various other weapons, such as guided anti-tank missiles or firearms.

The Lynx is characterized by excellent manoeuvrability and is capable of performing some aerobatic manoeuvres – the Lynx is capable of performing a barrel roll (a roll around the horizontal axis of the machine) and a loop. Despite its age, the helicopter also holds a speed record. In 1986, some British Lynxes exceeded a horizontal flight speed of 402 km/h.

Super Lynx multi-role helicopter

The version of the helicopter used by the German Navy is its development variant, the Super Lynx. Machines in this version have been equipped with special BERP (British Experimental Rotor Program) rotors – a response to the problem that occurs when the rotor tips, moving at a higher speed than their inner parts, reach a speed close to the speed of sound.

Machines in the maritime version are also equipped with radar and an electro-optical head and can be armed with anti-ship or anti-tank missiles, such as TOW or Hellfire.

Lynx helicopters can undertake a wide range of missions – from combating surface and underwater vessels, through supply, search and rescue missions, to strike, evacuation, or transport tasks. According to the manufacturer, installing the appropriate equipment to adapt the helicopter for specific tasks takes no more than 40 minutes.

The Lynx helicopter already has its successor – the AgustaWestland AW159 Wildcat. For the German Navy, the Lynx's successor is the NH90 NFH helicopter.

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