TR Attack & Utility Helicopter Programs

Saithan

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In that case cancelling the T629 makes even less sense because the weight was much closer to T129 and that in itself would mean that we would have been able to deliver our own engine to a combat helicopter much sooner than a drawing on a paper.

with drones and loitering ammo in the air, and with Ukraine shooting down a fighterjet with a drone we've entered a new era, and all we got is Gökbey with CTS-800.
 

Yasar_TR

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In that case cancelling the T629 makes even less sense because the weight was much closer to T129 and that in itself would mean that we would have been able to deliver our own engine to a combat helicopter much sooner than a drawing on a paper.

with drones and loitering ammo in the air, and with Ukraine shooting down a fighterjet with a drone we've entered a new era, and all we got is Gökbey with CTS-800.
Apart from Attack helicopters becoming natural and easy targets for drones and many air defence systems, T-129 has certain deficiencies that were subject for complaints. Being light and weak armoured were some of them. It had balancing issues. The force really had it’s hearts set in a heavy Atak-2.
But currently, the Atak helicopter fills in the need for our attack helicopter needs. It performs really well in the terrain it is operated.
We have to prioritise where we need to invest carefully in the short term. A T-925 is more urgent than a heavier attack helicopter at the moment. Armed forces etc have nearly 80+ of T-129 delivered or about to be delivered. There is no immediate need for more.
 

Yasar_TR

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@Yasar_TR I thought TAI had the exclusive IP right of the T-129 ?
Under the agreement, Turkey has full marketing and intellectual rights of the T-129 helicopter.
But not of the foreign sourced components of the helicopter like the engines. The transmission was developed and built jointly by Tusas and Leonardo. Turkey probably has full rights over that too.

We may have full IP rights for the helicopter. But the joint partnership of the platform itself between Tusas and Leonardo, where the latter has provided the base platform and it’s technology has a say as a partner.
Tusas here has been focusing on indigenous development of mission computers, avionics, weapons systems, and other components. And holds full Intellectual Property rights.

But Leonardo, (Then Augusta Westland) must have provided the original design , and the contract drawn out must have stipulated the use of a CTS-800 engine which would be licence produced at TEI.

Edit:
I think we can sell it to anyone but Italy or UK!!!
 
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