The US Army has used the ATAS variant on its
OH-58D Kiowa Warrior and
UH-60 Black Hawk helicopters in the air-to-air role. In a 19 November 1996 demonstration, a Stinger (ATAS) Block-1 missile was launched from an OH-58D at the
Yuma Proving Ground and successfully destroyed a
QUH-1 drone helicopter deploying countermeasures at a range greater than . All Air-to-Air Stinger (ATAS) Block II missiles will be modified existing Stinger RMP missiles (FIM-92C). Block II will incorporate various improvements including a new staring IR focal plane array seeker, a new battery, and advanced signal processing capabilities. The seeker permits engagements of helicopters in clutter out to the maximum physical range of the missile, also improved accuracy and IRCCM capabilities, and will provide a full night capability. The Block II missile also supports seeker slaving (steering the missile's seeker off-axis before launch to lock onto targets). This was first demonstrated on 6 November 1997 at Yuma.
ATAL is an upgrade to the Air-to-Air Stinger launcher fielded on the OH-58D Kiowa Warrior and Blackhawk helicopters. In mid 2000, tests were carried out with the ATAL system mounted on the
AH-64 Apache Longbow helicopter. Nine missiles were fired, eight of which scored direct hits against simulated hovering helicopter targets in a cluttered environment. The missiles were launched with the Longbow helicopter traveling at speeds from hovering to , side slips up to , partial power descents, pull-up maneuvers, hovering pedal turns, push-over maneuvers, and a 22-degree bank. ==Operational history==