Zakharra wrote:Zakharra wrote: I didn't know it made any difference. The 30mm an A-10 carries is more powerful than any a helicopter can carry and fire. It's also the weight of the weapon system and the recoil.
The 30mm gun the A-10 carries and shoots is far more powerful than ANY gun a helicopter can carry and shoot. Helos are more versatile in that they can hover and stuff, but they aren't meant to carry or fire the single weapon system the A-10 was
built around to carry and shoot. There's a reason why it was built and carried in a plane rather than a helo, Relax. A helo carrying the same weapon system would not be stable when it fired, and I don't think they could take that kind of stress on the air frame. A helo can carry a smaller 30mm, but it won't do the same damage as the one the A-10 carries. Also their mission tasks are different.
A helo can carry and fire any weapon it can lift just as any airplane can. Can a helo lift a slightly heavier gun than it already carries? Yes. Would it want to? No.
Basic engineering/Aerodynamics. What you "underlined" is not exactly true. On an airplane there simply is no other position to PUT the gun. All airplanes are "built around" something. For fighters it is their engine. For cargo transports it is their cargo. For attack aircraft it is their gun. It is a nice PR point, but hardly unique. Has been true since dawn of airplane design. Same goes for Helo design.
Stability: Has everything to do with the stability mechanisms(active and passive). The AH-64 gun is actually MORE stable than the A-10 fixed gun as it has stabilizers built into it unlike the AU-8 Avenger. The gun on the A-10 only has recoil dampers and not stabilizers. The LACK of active stabilizers is one reason many think the A-10 is obsolete. In practice, the A-10 and their pilots have proven that active stabilization while a nice feature, is not necessarily required. Its platform and aerodynamics would dictate even if could be stabilized + rotation, rotation would be +/- a couple degrees at best. You may have noticed that the F-35 gun supposedly will not be "ready to fire" until 2017? It is not that they cannot install and fire it today. Rather they are working on the electro optical targeting and stabilizing mechs for optimum firing since this is supposedly going to be a "CAS" aircraft.
The A-10 gets away without stabilizers because it uses far superior ballistics ammo(nearly a pound when using Uranium) and far greater firing rate. 4000RPM vrs 600RPM. Lets look at the craft eh? One can skim along at 300mph and requires a firing rate capable of destroying an entire convoy in a single pass, the other does not. That speed also keeps it safer. Lets look at the targets eh? Tanks are compartmentalized. They need more than a single bullet strike to destroy. They need several unless you get lucky and blow the ammo compartment. A Humvee on the other hand requires a single shot to destroy.
Both Apache/A-10 gun are aligned fairly close with the CG. CG moves due to fuel/bomb/missile loadout so the gun systems in question are never actually "aligned" with the CG of the aircraft. The only major difference between the A-10's gun and the Apache's gun is the fact that there are 7 slightly longer barrels verses 1 slightly shorter barrel using a larger breach length to make use of that longer barrel and heavier Uranium projectile. Total energy transfer, depending on ammo is 2X-4X greater per shot. Not exactly an engineering problem that cannot be addressed.
Apache has single point failure points on its 1st tier flight systems. A-10 does not. Both have "armor" against small arms fire. A-10 is completely redundant on its flight controls and on its structure. Apache is not. An A-10 has the fuel capacity(range) to get behind the enemy lines and hunt many targets of opportunity en route to the front. Exposure & need to get back across enemy lines while damaged. A helo does not. An A-10 does not require very vulnerable fuel PIGS (trucks) to be close to the enemy lines. Apaches do(along with the armor/infantry it supports). Rather A-10 require more vulnerable(can't move), but further behind enemy lines of rough runways and fuel PIGS.
There is little reason to put a much larger gun on an Apache/helo even though it is more than capable structurally and dynamically, when it is far more likely to be hurt going after far tougher targets able to carry far more SAM's and Ground based radar tracked gun AAA systems. The platform has zilch to do with the gun it carries. Rather its MISSION determines what it carries. You do not need a 7 barreled Gatling gun throwing nearly 1lb depleted uranium bullets to destroy a pickup truck or Humvee!