A
adenl
Guest
I think it is a model of a Turkish plane from the 40'sI like the twin engined prop UAV on Mr Akar’s left. It has a look of a mix of Hurkus and Aksungur about it.
I think it is a model of a Turkish plane from the 40'sI like the twin engined prop UAV on Mr Akar’s left. It has a look of a mix of Hurkus and Aksungur about it.
NU.D 40, very little is known about it.
I don’t think we will have any problem building the plane with all the technical help from BAE Systems and the know how we have accumulated building f35, f16 etc. Most important part of the plane is the engine. Without it, all of this is immaterial.
I don't get it why people think Turkey will develop a turbofan engine that can compete with the latest and greatest? IMO an engine in the class of the F119 is the best Turkey can develop and produce by 2030 and should aim for that. Do not expect F-135/izdeliye 30/WS-15 like thrust engines before 2035. At the least/worst expect Turkey to develop and produce a F110-GE-129/132 like engine with corresponding thrust by 2030.I don’t think we will have any problem building the plane with all the technical help from BAE Systems and the know how we have accumulated building f35, f16 etc. Most important part of the plane is the engine. Without it, all of this is immaterial.
With Altay we made the mistake of not concentrating on the engine when we were building the body. We thought we would have no problem acquiring engines.
At least with TFX we are working on an indigenous engine. But to be on the safe side I would have preferred a production line set up with either RR or GE with all parts being produced in house and freedom to sell to third parties. This was already agreed to, by RR. But as we insisted on holding the IP rights as well, RR deal did not progress.
But to put all our eggs in to one basket is a risky move. If TEI falters or can’t make the engine ready in time we will be left in limbo again. Russians have been working on their SU57 engine for years. First Izdeliye 30 engine was tested November 2016. Still not expected to be fully operational until 2022-23. This is a factory that is already building AL-41F engines. We will be building our first turbofan engine! !
We are building a 5th generation fighter aircraft. It IS the latest and the greatest technology that is in use today. If we are not going to aim for a truly 5th gen air craft why even try?I don't get it why people think Turkey will develop a turbofan engine that can compete with the latest and greatest? IMO an engine in the class of the F119 is the best Turkey can develop and produce by 2030 and should aim for that. Do not expect F-135/izdeliye 30/WS-15 like thrust engines before 2035. At the least/worst expect Turkey to develop and produce a F110-GE-129/132 like engine with corresponding thrust by 2030.
The size and dimension figures given to us about the TF-X are very similar to the Flanker airframe. With improvements in metallurgy and construction methods but with a larger cross-section because of the internal weapons carriage, the TF-X should not weigh more than an additional 2 tonnes over the basic SU-27 (16000kg). At 18 tonnes empty weight with the same fuel load as an SU-27 of 9000kg and with a full air to air loadout of 6 BVR and 2 WVR missiles, such a configuration should not weigh more than 28500kg. Equipped with two F119 like 15 tonnes thrust engines, this gives a TWR in full air-superiority mission of greater than 1. (1.05)
The engine seems to be the hardest part to make but in a discussion made a few years back about the plane Japan is making somebody brought up that the Japs will have the hardest time pulling off the sensor fusion. Any ideas how we can cope in that department?I don’t think we will have any problem building the plane with all the technical help from BAE Systems and the know how we have accumulated building f35, f16 etc. Most important part of the plane is the engine. Without it, all of this is immaterial.
With Altay we made the mistake of not concentrating on the engine when we were building the body. We thought we would have no problem acquiring engines.
At least with TFX we are working on an indigenous engine. But to be on the safe side I would have preferred a production line set up with either RR or GE with all parts being produced in house and freedom to sell to third parties. This was already agreed to, by RR. But as we insisted on holding the IP rights as well, RR deal did not progress.
But to put all our eggs in to one basket is a risky move. If TEI falters or can’t make the engine ready in time we will be left in limbo again. Russians have been working on their SU57 engine for years. First Izdeliye 30 engine was tested November 2016. Still not expected to be fully operational until 2022-23. This is a factory that is already building AL-41F engines. We will be building our first turbofan engine! !
Better be late than with foreign components.
We have the UAVs existing and coming to cover a lot of bases so some delay in TFX and tank developments is tolerable. We are also not paying for off the shelf whole systems anymore so the money saved there will be pretty much enough for development projects. And it pays in a lot of ways when you do stuff in house.
Despite some delays in many fields of development I believe with the pace of corporate entrepreneurship we will leapfrog big hurdles in the coming half decade of uphill movement after which the path will all be downhill.
High capability unmanned systems mitigate the risk of ending up with no domestic subsystems in the short to medium term. Both with TFX and MBT. It adds a good deal of waiting capability. Sooner or later we will make it. We only need back ups to close gap until we make it. UAVs are made for it.If the delay is too long, it means you have to buy completely foreign fighters. I would rather play safe than putting all eggs in one basket.
High capability unmanned systems mitigate the risk of ending up with no domestic subsystems in the short to medium term. Both with TFX and MBT. It adds a good deal of waiting capability. Sooner or later we will make it. We only need back ups to close gap until we make it. UAVs are made for it.
You gotta start somewhere. Otherwise the Turkish defense industry would be in a limbo like the Indonesian defense industryIf the delay is too long, it means you have to buy completely foreign fighters. I would rather play safe than putting all eggs in one basket.
Cruise missile part is mainly done, Kale has almost completed the engine for SOM, working on Gezgin's meanwhile TEI will soon complete medium size TJ. What is missing on that class is Ramjet and Tübitak works on the tech for awhile.I would say Turkey should concentrate their turbo jet development on cruise missile and then UAV. TFX should be aimed at receiving imported capable engine since the start. If some how Turkey can make turbojet engine for fighter plane, then it will be a bonus. This is the best way IMO to avoid Altay fate while in the same time keep progressing with jet engine development.
Cruise missile part is mainly done, Kale has almost completed the engine for SOM, working on Gezgin's meanwhile TEI will soon complete medium size TJ.
It is very likely the prototypes and first batch will be powered by foreign engine, the national engine is mainly intended for platforms which engines will not be sold for (Jet powered UAV-UCAV).
Whether developed indigenous or with license /JV the national engine will be able to integrated on TF-X without much burden.
I am thinking the way they do.Well, I hope your President and Defense Minister has such determination and think the way like you do.
Kale is supported by P&W and RR. But not as experienced as TEI. They do produce certain parts of the f35 engine for P&W . It took them a long time (nearly 8 years) to produce a viable turbojet engine for the SOM and Atmaca cruise missiles.I have repeatedly said that Kale should be the one developing turbojet engine. Since SOM missile is a cruise missile so it doesnt need longer life span like jet engine for fighter. Jet engine for UAV is the way you guys learn how to make the engine has longer life span. Next step is building higher thrust jet engine for 5 generation fighter.
Any way, if Turkey has two jet engine producers in its early jet engine development stage, it will be not a good thing considering they both will compete for a small domestic market.