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Westland Whirlwind (rotary wing)
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Westland Whirlwind (rotary wing)

Westland Whirlwind
Image
caption
Description
Role
Crew
First Flight
Entered Service
Manufacturer
Dimensions
Length 41 ft 8.5 in 12.7 m
Rotor Diameter 53 ft 16.2 m
Height 15 ft 4.5 in 4.7 m
Weights
Empty lb kg
Loaded lb kg
Maximum takeoff lb kg
Capacity
Powerplant
Engines
Power hp kW
Performance
Maximum speed 109 mph at sea level 176 km/h at sea level
Combat range miles km
Ferry range miles km
Service ceiling ft m
Rate of climb ft/min m/min
Wing loading lb/ft² kg/m²
Thrust/Weight
Power/Mass hp/lb kW/kg
Avionics
Avionics
Armament
Guns
Bombs
Missiles
Rockets
Other

The Westland Whirlwind helicopter was a British-built version of the U.S. Sikorsky S-55/H-19 Chickasaw. It primarily served with the Royal Navy (Fleet Air Arm) in anti-submarine and search-and rescue roles.

The first prototype British Whirlwind HAR 1 flew in August 1953, with the 600hp Pratt & Whitney Wasp R-1340-40, and it entered service shortly afterwards. They served in non-combat roles, including search and rescue and communications functions. The HAR 3 had a larger 700hp Wright Cyclone R-1300-3 engine. It was not until 1955 that the HAR 5 flew for the first time with a British power plant, the Alvis Leonides Major.

The HAS7 become the first British helicopter designed for anti-submarine work in the front-line when it enetered service in 1956. It was equipped with radar and dipping ASDIC for submarine detection and designed to be equipped with a torpedo, but could not carry both simultaneously. In this version the engine was a 750 hp (560 kW) Alvis Leonides Major 755/1. This helicopter had a hovering ceiling at 9,400 ft and a range of 334 miles at 86 mph.

Later in their lives, some HAR9s were converted to use the Rolls-Royce Gnome turbine engine.

From its start with the Navy, the Whirlwind came to be used by the British Army and RAF. More than 400 Whirlwinds were built, of which nearly 100 were exported to the following countries: Austria, Brazil, Canada, Cuba, France, Ghana, Jordan, Iran, Kuwait, Spain, Saudi Arabia and Yugoslavia.

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