This was interesting for me, so wanted to share here.
Mr. Akşit said that TS1400's continuous power is 1570 shp multiple times. And interestingly, since last 2-3 months, he mentioned 1600+ shp, but that 1600 shp figure is for continuous power or is it for emergency power, couldn't figure myself.
Ugly as hell!
Unbelievable. This was one of the worst cock ups from TAI and they are sharing a video of it? Just let people forget about it until you are truly ready to show it again ffs.
Does Turkey even need a heavy-attack helicopter?
Doesn't the T129 ATAK cover all of Turkey's needs?Yes.
Doesn't the T129 ATAK cover all of Turkey's needs?
TAI already has too much on its plate without including a helicopter into the mix.
Celebrating birthday of a prematurely born-dead project.Unbelievable. This was one of the worst cock ups from TAI and they are sharing a video of it? Just let people forget about it until you are truly ready to show it again ffs.
Going into production "quickly" when an engine is available means the development has already been completed, the design has been frozen (which can't be done without an engine), the production line has been established and the supply chain has been successfully set up.The project only lacks an engine and once an engine is available it can go to production quickly.
How quickly do you want it.Going into production "quickly" when an engine is available means the development has already been completed, the design has been frozen (which can't be done without an engine), the production line has been established and the supply chain has been successfully set up.
From what I'm reading on these forum pages, the ATAK 2 project development at this stage is clearly years away from completion, and significanlty further away from production.
Well no, actually Navy demands it, a platform sharing the same drive train with the Multi Role helicopter platform. And TAI doesn't seem to spare enough resources for Navy-related programmes (like they did with Rotor UAV - G- IHA and so on). Can't blame them either, they have a lot to do in a short time span with limited resources. But been waiting G-IHA for more than a decade already and haven't seen much.T-929 is a technology demonstrator developed in a short timeframe. TAI didn't go through a lot of trouble making one. But the data learned from making it is invaluable. The project only lacks an engine and once an engine is available it can go to production quickly. I think when TEI or TR-Motor have an empty schedule to accommodate a TS3000 project they can go for one and they can start a TP3000 project along with it as they are very similar. Totally worthwhile doing it.
RİHA was the name AFAIK, Vestel was tasked with it. If Baykar's Kalkan VTOL UAV is up to the task then the problem is already solved. I believe Baykar will make larger versions of Kalkan as more powerful motors and engines become available.Well no, actually Navy demands it, a platform sharing the same drive train with the Multi Role helicopter platform. And TAI doesn't seem to spare enough resources for Navy-related programmes (like they did with Rotor UAV - G- IHA and so on). Can't blame them either, they have a lot to do in a short time span with limited resources. But been waiting G-IHA for more than a decade already and haven't seen much.
I thought about how much an unmanned helicopter can add value by mission type, excluding small drones (FPVs and such).T-129 is fine but it lacks the firepower and protection of a heavy attack helicopter. T-929s would play a key role in amphibious assaults as they can carry a lot more missiles. Think of it this way. The T-129 is good for quick anti-terror strikes in the mountains. Meanwhile, the T-929 is more suitable for peer warfare; Launching cruise missiles, keeping the coast safe during landings, targeting any remaining strongholds with precision after the primary air campaign is complete. Ideally you want something that is PACKED with an assortment of different weapons for this role.
I still think that we should accelerate work on our unmanned helicopter concepts. Because as useful as helicopters are, they are deathtraps.
"G-IHA" is not merely R-IHA and Vestel was tasked with catapult launched UAV not R-IHA.RİHA was the name AFAIK, Vestel was tasked with it. If Baykar's Kalkan VTOL UAV is up to the task then the problem is already solved. I believe Baykar will make larger versions of Kalkan as more powerful motors and engines become available.