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Helicopter Anti-Submarine Squadron 9 (HS-9) was the designation of two helicopter antisubmarine warfare squadrons of the United States Navy. The first squadron bearing the designation HS-9 was established on 1 June 1956 at Naval Air Station Quonset Point, Rhode Island with five HSS-1N “Seabat” helicopters. The squadron was disestablished on ...
HSC-9 was established as Helicopter Antisubmarine Squadron Three (HS-3) on 18 June 1952, at the Naval Air Facility Elizabeth City, North Carolina. The Tridents commenced operations flying the Piasecki HUP-2S Retriever helicopter, and later transitioned to the Sikorsky HO4S and Sikorsky HSS-1 Seabat helicopters.
HS9, HS-9, or HS.9 may refer to: HS9, in the HS postcode area, a postcode district in the Outer Hebrides, Scotland, United Kingdom; HS9, the rocket used for the Hypersonic Flight Experiment; Helicopter Anti-Submarine Squadron 9 (HS-9), the designation of two Helicopter Antisubmarine Warfare Squadrons of the United States Navy
English: A U.S. Navy Sikorsky SH-3A Sea King of Helicopter Anti-Submarine Squadron 9 (HS-9) "Sea Griffins" in flight, in 1965. HS-9 was assigned to Carrier Anti-Submarine Air Group 60 (CVSG-60) aboard the anti-submarine carrier USS Essex (CVS-9) for a deployment to the Mediterranean Sea from June to September 1965.
The "Anti-submarine Squadron (Light)" (HSL) designation was established in 1972 to designate anti-submarine squadrons which operated the "light" Kaman SH-2 Seasprite helicopter (as compared to the HS squadrons' much larger Sikorsky SH-3 Sea King helicopters) in detachments aboard surface force ships as a part of the Light Airborne Multi-Purpose ...
A derivative of the Hopfner HS-5/28 via the Hopfner HS-8/29, the HS.9 was a parasol wing monoplane with a fixed tailskid landing gear and room for two occupants in tandem open cockpits, and first flew as the Hopfner HS-9/32 in 1932, powered by a de Havilland Gipsy I engine.
Experimental helicopter Platt-LePage Aircraft Company: First helicopter tested by the USAAF. [1] 1941 Never 2 Sikorsky R-4: Sikorsky Aircraft Corporation: World's first large-scale mass-produced helicopter and the first helicopter used by the United States Army Air Forces. [2] 1942 Unknown 131 Sikorsky H-5: Sikorsky Aircraft Corporation 1943 ...
This prototype weighs around 1.5 tonnes and flew to an altitude of 65 km [11] mounted on top of an expendable solid booster HS9. [12] [13] On August 28, 2016, ISRO successfully tested its scramjet engine on second developmental flight of its Advanced Technology Vehicle ATV-D02 from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre for 28 August 2016.