Those ships and launchers are beyond of their operational life, we won't need those once a missile has been developed or adopted on naval platforms.I’m expecting a naval air defence missile that can fit into Gabya class’s (ex-Perry) ROTARY launchers which can fire Standard-MR & Harpoon (~34 cm dia & ~4.6-4.7 m length with folding wings)
Any one knows the diameter of Hisar missiles?
I too , can not understand how the G40 has not been requested by the the Turkish navy.How has G40 not yet been requested?! We need an ESSM replacement going forward. This project should have been greenlit in 2019 already.
without these companies, we wouldn't have a defence industry to begin with.Companies with names that end with -SAN try to take everything. It's a big problem in defense industry. There has to be a lot more organization with this limited budget. Roketsan is probably overtaking G40 with a Hisar based solution for point defense. We have to wait and see how the situation would developed
without these companies, we wouldn't have a defence industry to begin with.
It is not a matter of know-how transfer, those "companies" avoid working on a same project unless it is imposed from above, they are practically a rival of each other and they tend to duplicate products at certain projects, intentionally.Organization has to improve. With limited budget and time frame. State-owned companies, private companies, institutions etc. have to cooperate a lot better with each other. Stupid contract processes/politics. Lack of knowledge flows between companies. Lack of higher education institutions being involvement in R&D etc etc.
For example, project had been delayed as an engineering problems occurred. A company X worked for 5 months to find a solution. Turns out company Y had similar problem before and solved it. The solution that delays the project 5 months could had been solved, save budget and time. But there is no communication or cooperation between companies X and Y.
That's a bit strange to put it this way as Tubitak is not a production company but an R&D company / institute.Companies with names that end with -SAN try to take everything. It's a big problem in defense industry. There has to be a lot more organization with this limited budget. Roketsan is probably overtaking G40 with a Hisar based solution for point defense. We have to wait and see how the situation would developed
But there is no communication or cooperation between companies X and Y.
32x Tozkoparan 100 Km range 20 km alttitude
32x G-40/Essm 40-50 km range 12 km alttitude.
Very logical line of thoughts! To add;These missiles have their own pros/minus. G40 will be a fast reaction missile with divert attitude thrusters and soft launch tech but Its planned altittude was announced as 40000ft which is lower than Rf Hisar. If we spare 4 cell of 16 cell MIDLAS to G40, This will make total 16 G40 missiles in I class. Modular structure of G40 will provide great advantages.
However, Hisar-O+Rf is designed to fill the altitude gap between Hisar-O+(15km) and Hisar-U/Tozkoparan (?) (20km). I don't have any info about packing structure of Rf missiles inside domestic VLS but If Hisar-Rf is planned as a quad pack, this will be impressive as well and give enough reason TN to eliminate G40. Hisar-Rf is a hot-launch missile, but because of the fact that I have mentioned, I suppose it will have a better altitude climb feature up to 60000ft-18km. Rf missile can provide a no-fly zone to any advanced fighter jet. If Hisar-Rf don't have quad pack feature, then Navy will need G40 missiles drastically.
Just noticed how it seems Turkish missiles are a lot heavier and thiccer than missiles with similar ranges, why is that?Very logical line of thoughts! To add;
By reading between the lines of what Mr Gurcan Okumus was talking about G40, and the way he hesitated and mentioned that the G40 was not contracted to be produced, I can’t help but think that the TN is going for MDAS launched Hisar RF and may be in conjunction with 100km ranged Tozkoparan . These 2 missiles will be the outright choice of the Navy if they can be quad packed as well.
But The Hisar missile, with it’s shape and size seems bigger than an ESSM. If the picture and the sizes given in below chart, is anything to go by, the Hisar O missile is 4.5 m tall and 30cm diameter missile. Now if that doesn’t fit in to a quad pack, then it will fit in to a dual pack.
View attachment 21501
If that is actually the case it maybe attributed to the fact that they are based on locally produced parts and the national industry is still making the initial iterations of the systems. My guess is that particularly the fuell is not as energetic as some of the competition therefore more of it need to be used. A couple iterations down the road they will likely be on par with their peers as development of better components are underway.Just noticed how it seems Turkish missiles are a lot heavier and thiccer than missiles with similar ranges, why is that?