TR HÜRJET-Advanced Jet Trainer/ Light attack aircraft

Chocopie

Contributor
South Korea Correspondent
Messages
634
Reactions
35 2,277
Nation of residence
Germany
Nation of origin
South Korea
That's also how its happening with T/FA-50, they couldn't sell to some countries because of US
The US only blocked sales of T-50 to Uzbekistan so far. Lockheed gets share of revenues, they‘re interested in making money and will push export chances.

And UK refused approval for sales of light fighter FA-50 to Argentina (Martin-Baker ejection seat and other UK parts).

The other failed bids are lost tenders or canceled procurement plans by diverse countries.
 

Baryshx

Contributor
Messages
969
Reactions
8 2,070
Website
www.twitter.com
Nation of residence
Turkey
Nation of origin
Turkey
The US only blocked sales of T-50 to Uzbekistan so far. Lockheed gets share of revenues, they‘re interested in making money and will push export chances.

And UK refused approval for sales of light fighter FA-50 to Argentina (Martin-Baker ejection seat and other UK parts).

The other failed bids are lost tenders or canceled procurement plans by diverse countries.
This is where the importance of localizing all parts as much as possible comes into play. Of course, time is needed for this, even know-how. Maybe it will have to be bought from abroad out of necessity, but all in all, efforts should be made.

In fact, the same situation happened with the Atak helicopter.
 

Hasanrize

Committed member
Messages
191
Reactions
5 545
Nation of residence
Finland
Nation of origin
Turkey
This is where the importance of localizing all parts as much as possible comes into play. Of course, time is needed for this, even know-how. Maybe it will have to be bought from abroad out of necessity, but all in all, efforts should be made.

In fact, the same situation happened with the Atak helicopter.
True, but we need to remember that we are not a country with 700B $ in the military budget. When we pour money into somewhere, we lose the opportunity of another project. Opportunity cost should not be underestimated.

Also, Faruk Akşit himself said that they could design engines for Hürjet if necessary. It can be done by engineers working on the MMU engine. Asking engineers working on the MMU engine to work on the Hürjet engine will delay the most important engine project. That is something we can not afford; we can't risk MMU for the sake of Hürjet.
 

Chocopie

Contributor
South Korea Correspondent
Messages
634
Reactions
35 2,277
Nation of residence
Germany
Nation of origin
South Korea
For Türkiye’s Western embargo situation it would be best to localize as much parts as it can get for Hürjet.

For Korea it‘s not that urgent, T-50/FA-50 is an older design, too much costs to replace foreign parts when the blocked sales are few. Wouldn‘t make economic sense to waste money & HR on a domestic ejection seat project for a possible sale of only 10 fighters to Argentina.

The Poland deal of 48 FA-50s is a booster to finance a Block 20 version with AESA radar, BVR capability and refueling probe.
 

Rooxbar

Contributor
Think Tank Analyst
Messages
739
Reactions
57 2,221
Nation of residence
Nethelands
Nation of origin
Turkey
Temel Kotil has stated in multiple interviews that, unlike MMU, they don't have any qualms about using foreign parts in Hürjet and they have opted to procure parts from wherever they could just to finish the project, and they prioritize practicality as opposed to MMU which is a strategic asset.
 

Radonsider

Contributor
Messages
1,467
Reactions
14 2,802
Nation of residence
Turkey
Nation of origin
Bosnia & Herzegovina
Temel Kotil has stated in multiple interviews that, unlike MMU, they don't have any qualms about using foreign parts in Hürjet and they have opted to procure parts from wherever they could just to finish the project, and they prioritize practicality as opposed to MMU which is a strategic asset.
Keep in mind that Hürjet is still very much indigenous, lot less foreign parts compared to other countries
 

Rajendra Chola

Committed member
Messages
252
Reactions
88
Nation of residence
Canada
Nation of origin
India
Front landing gear disagrees with you.

I fail to see how it's also designed for carrier ops, as there are no carrier designs for it to land yet. This is made by TAI's own resources. Their goal is to create a LIFT trainer for hvkk and even that is not yet guaranteed. Let's not get that ahead of ourselves.

If Hürjet becomes a reality and an N version is in the works, it'll be buffed up heavily in structural integrity and MTOW will increase. Probably will need 2 engines or a bigger one. As it currently stands with the F404, not worth to have her on a carrier, what good will it do?

Indian Navy rejected Naval Tejas with F404 due to bulked up increased MTOW which limits the radius and weapons capacity. It also finished landing and take off tests from aircraft carriers. From the results, Navy also rejected F414 engine upgrade seeing it still would carry low capacity and wanted multi engine aircraft.

IN requirement is different. It needs to police last swathes of water. So it needs an fighter with long legs. But Turkey can make do with an fighter with shorter legs as it’s primary threats are not far away. Hurjet in Naval role may still work.
However I agree, turning an Air Force variant into Naval variant is time consuming, complex design changes etc
 

Heartbang

Experienced member
Messages
2,556
Reactions
8 3,972
Nation of residence
Turkey
Nation of origin
Turkey
Indian Navy rejected Naval Tejas with F404 due to bulked up increased MTOW which limits the radius and weapons capacity. It also finished landing and take off tests from aircraft carriers. From the results, Navy also rejected F414 engine upgrade seeing it still would carry low capacity and wanted multi engine aircraft.

IN requirement is different. It needs to police last swathes of water. So it needs an fighter with long legs. But Turkey can make do with an fighter with shorter legs as it’s primary threats are not far away. Hurjet in Naval role may still work.
However I agree, turning an Air Force variant into Naval variant is time consuming, complex design changes etc
Part of the success F404's managed to get with F-18 fighters come from F-18 being designed with CATOBAR ops in mind. When you get to yeet the plane at high velocity for launch, everything gets way easier.
Modifying Hurjet for STOBAR ops might not be worthwhile.
 

Rajendra Chola

Committed member
Messages
252
Reactions
88
Nation of residence
Canada
Nation of origin
India
Part of the success F404's managed to get with F-18 fighters come from F-18 being designed with CATOBAR ops in mind. When you get to yeet the plane at high velocity for launch, everything gets way easier.
Modifying Hurjet for STOBAR ops might not be worthwhile.

F18 is still dual engine. Two F404 would still work in Catobar or stobar config. Would still carry lot of fuel and weapons in stobar config.
But single engine with stobar would be still an tough call.

For Indian tender, F18 was tested in stobar configuration and they found it can still lift 80% of the capacity in Catobar config. For IN, it’s still an significant improvement over Mig29k
 

Heartbang

Experienced member
Messages
2,556
Reactions
8 3,972
Nation of residence
Turkey
Nation of origin
Turkey
F18 is still dual engine. Two F404 would still work in Catobar or stobar config. Would still carry lot of fuel and weapons in stobar config.
But single engine with stobar would be still an tough call.

For Indian tender, F18 was tested in stobar configuration and they found it can still lift 80% of the capacity in Catobar config. For IN, it’s still an significant improvement over Mig29k
With this in mind, we could argue making a naval Hurjet will not be a minor upgrade it needs to be and will be essentially a brand new aircraft.
At that point, it would be better idea to make a VTOL TFX.
 

Zafer

Experienced member
Messages
4,683
Reactions
7 7,389
Nation of residence
Turkey
Nation of origin
Turkey
With this in mind, we could argue making a naval Hurjet will not be a minor upgrade it needs to be and will be essentially a brand new aircraft.
At that point, it would be better idea to make a VTOL TFX.
It is an overkill to make a VTOL TFX. However smaller VTOL aircraft can be made. But still TB3 and Kızılelma can do the job already.
 

uçuyorum

Contributor
Messages
937
Reactions
13 1,535
Nation of residence
Turkey
Nation of origin
Turkey
Hürjet is not a fighter. There is a planned light attack craft version that is also not a multi-role fighter. It also has much more in common with 4th generation fighters than a 5th gen fighter. Making a twin engine naval version of Hürjet means making an entirely new, F18 A/B like fighter from scratch, and these would still have very limited usefulness in a hypothethical TCG Trakya that is similar to TCG Anadolu. And then if we were to make an entirely new full fledged aircraft carrier, would we make it for Hürjet, an underpowered platform based on outdated technology? To me it seems only in 2040-2050, after we have a significant fleet of TFX and significant economic recovery / growth could we hope to make a real aircraft carrier and a 5+ gen fighter that will be operated on it that will actually give us proper naval aviation capacity, if at all. Until then TB-3 / Kızılelma seem more realistic and useful.
 

Heartbang

Experienced member
Messages
2,556
Reactions
8 3,972
Nation of residence
Turkey
Nation of origin
Turkey
It is an overkill to make a VTOL TFX. However smaller VTOL aircraft can be made. But still TB3 and Kızılelma can do the job already.
It will be a bonafide hit. And a mighty competitor to F-35B. After TFX project bears fruit we must look into it.
Hürjet is not a fighter. There is a planned light attack craft version that is also not a multi-role fighter. It also has much more in common with 4th generation fighters than a 5th gen fighter. Making a twin engine naval version of Hürjet means making an entirely new, F18 A/B like fighter from scratch, and these would still have very limited usefulness in a hypothethical TCG Trakya that is similar to TCG Anadolu. And then if we were to make an entirely new full fledged aircraft carrier, would we make it for Hürjet, an underpowered platform based on outdated technology? To me it seems only in 2040-2050, after we have a significant fleet of TFX and significant economic recovery / growth could we hope to make a real aircraft carrier and a 5+ gen fighter that will be operated on it that will actually give us proper naval aviation capacity, if at all. Until then TB-3 / Kızılelma seem more realistic and useful.
My point exactly.
 

Yasar_TR

Experienced member
Staff member
Administrator
Messages
3,248
Reactions
141 16,277
Nation of residence
United Kingdom
Nation of origin
Turkey
Aircraft carriers are expensive and bulky platforms that are difficult to defend and operate. They are far too complicated to be useful for small but versatile navies.
For future modern navies, their presence may be questioned with a view to reform them in to more manageable platforms of sort.

A purpose built more economically calculated design carrier of 225-250 metre length of ~20000tons with CATOBAR system, operating a few squadrons of twin TF10000 engined stealthy KE UCAVs would be capable of giving both aerial and surface defence to the ship as well as project force within a diameter of 1500km.
There is no need to build expensive carriers and planes to operate from them. Expendable UCAVs can be the solution. A good ASW frigate and a submarine would suffice to provide escort for such a ship, that can also operate various helicopters to project force and defence against other surface combatants.
We don’t have to do and copy what other navies are doing. We need to develop our naval force in line with what we need and what we can afford. (Just like our tank and Pantsir killer TB2s)
 

dBSPL

Experienced member
Think Tank Analyst
DefenceHub Ambassador
Messages
2,294
Reactions
96 11,831
Nation of residence
Turkey
Nation of origin
Turkey
I don't know whether it will be an upward bifurcation from the Hurjet project or a downward fork from the MMU, but I'm almost sure that we will see another fighter jet between the two platforms, in 2030s. In addition to the TF-6000/10000 engine development program We need two engines, one in the 20.000lb (with afterburner) and one in the 35.000lb in heavy class. Apart from the Hurjet advanced training jet, the KE's heavy variant can use this 20,000lb engine in twin and single engine configurations, and the Anka-3 follow-on/heavier variant in single engine configuration, without a/b.

The 35,000lb engine can be used as a single engine in this intermediate jet as well as the MMU. Also, if the force needs a high-capacity strategic bomber/penetrator/tanker etc, this engine could be used to achieve a much heavier and larger variant of latest ANKA fork.

So to summarize, we need engines in 3 main classes for possible combat aviation projects in the medium to long term:

1. 6000/10000 light class turbofan
2. 24000/35000 heavy class turbofan
3. 13000/20000 medium class turbofan
 

MADDOG

Contributor
Türkiye Correspondent
Professional
Messages
1,220
Reactions
31 8,007
Nation of residence
Turkey
Nation of origin
Cyprus
Initial pictures. Mansur bin Zayed Al Nahyan inspecting Hürjet.

Fpa_GOIXoAAFuue.jpeg


Fpa_GOLXsAI4RtL.jpeg
 

Sanchez

Experienced member
Moderator
Think Tank Analyst
DefenceHub Diplomat
Messages
2,343
Reactions
79 10,730
Nation of residence
Turkey
Nation of origin
Turkey
A UAE order for a small batch of Hürjet would've been great. They're going with the Chinese offer for their new mainstay and to diversify but for NATO gear, Hürjet would be a great win. sad.
 

Follow us on social media

Top Bottom