This is a list of all aircraft operated by the Australian Army since its formation.
Aircraft | Origin | Role | Versions | Year introduced | No. in service[1] | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Boeing CH-47 Chinook | United States | Transport helicopter | CH-47F | 10 | ||
Eurocopter Tiger | Europe | Attack helicopter | Tiger ARH | 2004 | 22 | |
Sikorski UH-60M Blackhawk | United States | Utility Helicopter | UH-60M Blackhawk | 2023 | 3 (40 ordered) | After reliability issues with the MRH90, in 2021 the ADF announced they would replace the MRH90 fleet with 40 UH-60M Blackhawk helicopters, announced the same year as the previous S-70A-9 Blackhawks were retired from service. The first 3 were delivered in 2023 after the grounding and subsequent retirement of the MRH90 fleet. The US announced an accelerated delivery timeline on the remaining 37 Blackhawks to help Australia replace the MRH90 fleet.[2] |
NHIndustries NH90 | Europe | Utility helicopter | MRH90 – TTH: Tactical Transport Helicopter | 2007
(retired 2023) |
39 (40 original. 1 destroyed in crash) | The MRH90 fleet was prematurely retired in September 2023, after a fatal crash of an MRH90 in Northern Queensland Pacific Ocean killing 4 servicemembers.[3][4] Previously in March 2023 an engine failure lead to an MRH90 ditching in the ocean off Jervis Bay.[5][6] |
Aircraft | Origin | Role | Versions | Year introduced | No. In service | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
AeroVironment Wasp AE | United States | SUAS – Reconnaissance and battlefield surveillance | Wasp EA | 2018 | undisclosed | Wasp entered service in 2014 for test and evaluation. the Wasp AE entered service with the Australian Army in 2018.[7] |
Black Hornet Nano | Norway | MicroUAS Squad Level Reconnaissance and surveillance | PD-1000 Black Hornet | 2014 | undisclosed | The Black Hornet entered service in 2014 for test and evaluation. |
AAI RQ-7 Shadow | United States | Tactical UAS Reconnaissance and battlefield surveillance | RQ-7B Shadow 2000 UAV | 2012 | 18 | 18 aircraft. The Shadow 200 entered service in 2012 replacing the ScanEagle. Operated by the 20th Surveillance and Target Acquisition Regiment, Royal Australian Artillery |
Aircraft type | Origin | Variant | Role | Years In service | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
A50 AAI Aerosonde | Australia | Aerosonde Mk 2 | Surveillance | 2003 | Four aircraft. Deployed to the Solomon Islands during Operation Anode in 2003. Operated by the 131st surveillance and Target Acquisition Battery. |
Boeing Insitu ScanEagle | United States | Reconnaissance and battlefield surveillance | – 2012 | Obsolete, No longer operated by the Australian Army. Operated by the 20th Surveillance and Target Acquisition Regiment, Royal Australian Artillery | |
Elbit Systems Skylark | Israel | Skylark I | Reconnaissance and battlefield surveillance | Obsolete, no longer in service with the Australian Army. Replaced by the Wasp EA. | |
Phantom (unmanned aerial vehicle series) | China | Phantom 4 | Reconnaissance and battlefield surveillance | 2017– | 350 aircraft |
Aircraft type | Origin | Variant | Role | Service period | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
A11 Auster Mark III | United Kingdom | Mk III MK V AOP.6 |
Two-seat air observation post aircraft | 1944–1959 | 58 aircraft. Operated by the RAAF in support of the Australian Army. |
A98 Cessna 180 | United States | Model 180A Model 180D Model 180E |
Two to four seat liaison, observation aircraft | 1959–1975 | 19 aircraft |
A14 Pilatus PC-6B Turbo-Porter | Switzerland | PC-6B Turbo Porter | Eight-seat reconnaissance, light transport aircraft | 1968–1992 | 19 aircraft |
Cessna L-19 Bird Dog | United States | O-1 Bird Dog | One or two-seat liaison, observation aircraft | 1967–1968 | Three aircraft on loan from the US Army. Operated by the 161st Independent Reconnaissance Flight (Australia) |
Beechcraft Queen Air | United States | A65 Queen Air B70 Queen Air |
1971–19?? | Four aircraft. Operated by the Australian Army Survey corps | |
A18 GAF Nomad | Australia | Nomad N22B Nomad N24A |
Two-crew twin-engine utility transport, reconnaissance aircraft, capable of carrying 11 passengers | 1975–1995 | 22 aircraft |
A32 Beechcraft Super King Air | United States | King Air B350 | Twin-engine utility transport aircraft | 1997-2009[8] | 24 aircraft. Including leased civilian aircraft. 4 owned aircraft given to the RAAF in 2009. |
Embraer EMB 110 Bandeirante | Brazil | EMB 100P1 Bandeirante | 1995 only | Four aircraft were leased from Flight West Airlines. Operated by the 173rd Aviation Squadron (Australia) | |
De Havilland Canada DHC-6 Twin Otter | Canada | DHC-6-320 Twin Otter | 1996–2004 | Three aircraft were leased from Hawker Pacific 1996. Operated by the 173rd Aviation Squadron (Australia) | |
CASA C-212 Aviocar | Spain | C-212-400 | 2007-current | Two aircraft leased from Skytraders since 2013 with two 212-200 formerly leased from Military Support Services.[9][10] Operated by the Australian Defence Force Parachuting School.[9] |
Aircraft type | Origin | Variant | Role | Service period | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
A22 Aerospatiale AS.350B Squirrel | France | AS.350B Squirrel | Two-crew light utility, training helicopter | 1990–1998 | 18 helicopters. Operated by the Australian Defence Force Helicopter School |
A1 Bell 47 Sioux | United States | Model 47G-2 Sioux Model 47G-2A Sioux Model 47G-3B1 Sioux |
Three-seat light utility, training helicopter | 1960–1977 | 47 helicopters |
A17 Bell / CAC CA-32, OH-58A Kiowa | United States Australia |
CAC CA-32, OH-58A Kiowa Model 206B-1 Kiowa |
Light observation, reconnaissance helicopter | 1971–2018 | 64 helicopters. Including eight US built helicopters, which were leased to the Australian Army. |
A2 Bell UH-1 Iroquois | United States | UH-1H Iroquois | Multi-role utility transport helicopter | 1990–2007 | 25 helicopters. Transferred from the RAAF to the Australian Army in 1990 |
A17 Boeing CH-47 Chinook | United States | CH-47D Chinook CH-47F Chinook |
Twin-rotor medium-lift transport helicopter | 1995-current | 18 helicopters |
A25 Sikorsky S-70 Blackhawk | United States | S-70A-9 Black Hawk | Four-crew multi-role battlefield support helicopter, capable of carrying 10 troops | 1990-2021 | 39 helicopters. Transferred from the RAAF to the Australian Army. |
A38 Eurocopter Tiger | Europe | Tiger ARH | Armed reconnaissance, attack helicopter | 2004-current | 22 helicopters |
A40 NHIndustries NH90 | Europe | TTH: Tactical Transport Helicopter | Utility transport helicopter | 2007-current | 40 helicopters |
Bell 412 | United States Canada |
Bell 412 AB 412 |
2007-current | Two helicopters. Operated by the Army Aviation Training Centre |
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List of Australian Army aircraft.
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