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Gyrodyne QH-50C Drone Anti-Submarine Helicopter (DASH)

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This object is on display in the Boeing Aviation Hangar at the Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center in Chantilly, VA.


Gyrodyne QH-50C Drone Anti-Submarine Helicopter (DASH)

 

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Gyrodyne QH-50C Drone Anti-Submarine Helicopter
The QH-50 D.A.S.H. was the first drone helicopter to enter operational service, the first rotorcraft deployed with nuclear armament, and one of the first armed unmanned aerial vehicles. The introduction of Soviet nuclear-powered submarines in the early 1960s created an immediate demand for a remotely piloted helicopter that could operate from smaller, older destroyers and could carry a Mark 57 nuclear depth bomb (like the training model seen here) or two torpedoes.
Most QH-50 deployments consisted of anti-submarine patrols with torpedoes, but a number of the craft were used during the Vietnam War primarily for spotting naval gunfire. A few were adapted to carry gun and rocket systems. Gyrodyne built 758 D.A.S.H. airframes, most of which went to the U.S. Navy. Japan also operated a few.
Rotor diameter: 6.1 m (20 ft)
Length: 6.1 m (20 ft)
Height: 3 m (9 ft 8.5 in)
Weight, empty: 530 kg (1,169 lb)
Weight, gross: 1,046 kg (2,306 lb)
Engine: Boeing T50-BO-8A, 270 shp
Manufacturer: Gyrodyne Company of America, St. James, N.Y., 1965
Gift of Peter P., Barbara, and Alexander Papadakos


Gyrodyne QH-50C Drone Anti-Submarine Helicopter
The QH-50 D.A.S.H. was the first drone helicopter to enter operational service, the first rotorcraft deployed with nuclear armament, and one of the first armed unmanned aerial vehicles. The introduction of Soviet nuclear-powered submarines in the early 1960s created an immediate demand for a remotely piloted helicopter that could operate from smaller, older destroyers and could carry a Mark 57 nuclear depth bomb (like the training model seen here) or two torpedoes.
Most QH-50 deployments consisted of anti-submarine patrols with torpedoes, but a number of the craft were used during the Vietnam War primarily for spotting naval gunfire. A few were adapted to carry gun and rocket systems. Gyrodyne built 758 D.A.S.H. airframes, most of which went to the U.S. Navy. Japan also operated a few.
Rotor diameter: 6.1 m (20 ft)
Length: 6.1 m (20 ft)
Height: 3 m (9 ft 8.5 in)
Weight, empty: 530 kg (1,169 lb)
Weight, gross: 1,046 kg (2,306 lb)
Engine: Boeing T50-BO-8A, 270 shp
Manufacturer: Gyrodyne Company of America, St. James, N.Y., 1965
Gift of Peter P., Barbara, and Alexander Papadakos



Inventory number: A20090023000