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The first prototype first flew in April 1991. When Aerospatiale and MBB, among others, merged in
1992 to form the Eurocopter Group, the Tiger program was transferred as well. Serial production of the
Tiger began in March 2002 and the first flight of the first production Tiger HAP for the French Army
took place in March 2003. The delivery of the first of the eighty helicopters ordered by the French took
place in September 2003.
At the end of 2003 deliveries began of the 80 UHT version combat support helicopters ordered by
Germany to the Federal Office of Defense Technology and Procurement.
Export orders
In December 2001 Eurocopter was awarded the contract for the Australian Army’s "Air 87
Requirement", which was for 22 helicopters of the Tiger ARH (Armed Reconnaissance Helicopter)
version. The first Tiger ARH was scheduled to enter service in 2004. Some local assembly and
production will also take place.
In September 2003, Spain selected a variant of the Tiger HAP combat support helicopter - the Tiger
HAD - for its army. The 24 helicopters of this type that have been ordered will be armed with the Trigat
and Mistral missile systems. They will also have an uprated Enhanced MTR390 engine and a heavier
payload. Deliveries are scheduled for 2007 - 2008[1]. France opted to upgrade most of its HAP
Helicopter to HAD; so the HAC-Variant will never be built.
In June 2006, the Rafael Spike-ER was selected by the Spanish Army to be the ATGM of the Spanish
HAD, instead the previously announced Trigat missile system.
Variants
It should be noted that, while the Tiger has a conventional helicopter gunship configuration of the two
crew sitting in tandem, it is somewhat unusual in that the pilot is in the front seat and the gunner is in the
back, unlike all other current attack helicopters. As a consequence, the seats are offset to opposite sides
of the centerline to improve the view forward for the gunner in the back.
Tiger HAP
The Tiger HAP/HCP (Helicoptere d'Appui Protection / Helicopter for Close Protection) is a medium-
weight air-to-air combat and fire support helicopter built for the French Army.
It is fitted with a chin-mounted 30 mm gun turret and 68 mm SNEB unguided rockets for the fire
support role as well as Mistral air-to-air missiles.
UH Tiger
The UHT (from Unterstützungshubschrauber Tiger; Ger. supporting helicopter Tiger) is a medium-
weight multi-role fire support helicopter built for the Bundeswehr (German Army).
The UHT can carry Trigat "fire and forget" and/or HOT3 anti-tank missiles as well as 70 mm SNEB air-
to-ground fire support rockets. Four AIM-92 Stinger missiles (2 on each side) are mounted for air-to-air
combat. Unlike the HAP/HCP version it has no integrated gun turret, but a 12.7 mm gunpod can be
fitted if needed. The German Army decided against the French 30 mm GIAT cannon that is used on
other Tiger versions because of the recoil. The upgrade of the UHT with the Rheinmetall RMK30, a 30
mm recoilless autocannon, is not yet clarified due the budget.
Another noticeable difference with the HAP version is the use of a mast-mounted sight, which has a
second-generation infrared channel and a TV channel.
Countermeasures include radar/laser/missile launch/missile approach warning receivers and decoy
launchers.
Tiger ARH
The Tiger ARH (Armed Reconnaissance Helicopter) is the version used by the Australian Army. The
Tiger ARH is a modified and upgraded version of the Tiger HAP with upgraded MTR390 engines as
well as a laser designator incorporated in the Strix sight for the firing of Hellfire II air-to-ground
missiles. Instead of the SNEB unguided missile, the ARH use the 70 mm(2.75Inch) rockets developed in
Belgium.
Tiger HAD
The Tiger HAD (Hélicopter d'Appui Défense / Support-Defence Helicopter) version is essentially
identical to the HAP version, but with 14% more engine power available due to the upgraded Enhanced
MTR390 engines and a better ballistic protection. It can also be equipped with the Trigat anti-tank
missiles that were originally developed for the German UHT version.
The helicopter is suited for a support and fire suppression role and has been selected by the Spanish
Army. The French Army Air Corps (ALAT) decided to upgrade most of their HAP helicopters to the
HAD-Variant and thus the former HAC Variant (i.e. Hélicoptère Anti-Char or Helicopter Anti-Tank)
was cancelled.
By June 2006, 28 production Tigers were flying, including 18 aircraft delivered to their customers of 4
countries. These 28 aircraft had logged about 4000 flight hours together.
Cost
The system cost (helicopter, armament, support) depends on number and version: 2002 Spain was
submitted an offer about 28/20 helicopters.
General characteristics
Performance
Armament
1x 30 mm GIAT 30 cannon in chin turret (HAP,HAD,ARH) or 1x 12.7 mm or 20
mm gun in pod (UHT)
8x Trigat and/or HOT3 (UHT,French HAD) or Rafael Spike-ER (Spanish HAD)
or Hellfire II (ARH) anti-tank missiles
4x Stinger air-to-air missiles (UHT,ARH) or 4x Mistral air-to-air missiles
(HAP,HAD)
Pods of 19x 70 mm SNEB (UHT,HAD) or Hydra (ARH), or 22x 68 mm SNEB
(HAP), or 7x 70 mm SNEB (HAD) or 70 mm or 2.75" unguided rockets.
Popular culture
The helicopter's first major public appearance was in the 1995 James Bond film GoldenEye, where the
theft of a prototype was a major plot element.
The Tiger also appears in the PC game Battlefield 2, as the HAP variant. It is the helicopter for the EU
army in the expansion pack Euro Force.