TR HÜRJET-Advanced Jet Trainer/ Light attack aircraft

Zoth

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Single seated hurjet with a bigger Radome, more fuel+payload as light combat aircraft. It would be an excellent quality choice for air forces that can't afford traditional expensive 4.5th gen fighter in numbers. (Usually costing $150-200 millions each)
That's what i've been yelling for some time, Kaan is a really important and advanced project but instead of buying so many EFs and F16s we could opt out to build armed Hurjet that we can utilize and change it to our needs without any headache, and it could very well serve as a stop gap until Kaan has matured enough to be considered 5th gen, but there is not even a talk about a domestic engine for Hurjet which is really sad.
 

Kartal1

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IC3M@N FX

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That's what i've been yelling for some time, Kaan is a really important and advanced project but instead of buying so many EFs and F16s we could opt out to build armed Hurjet that we can utilize and change it to our needs without any headache, and it could very well serve as a stop gap until Kaan has matured enough to be considered 5th gen, but there is not even a talk about a domestic engine for Hurjet which is really sad.
Ok and with which engine? F-404? Hürjet has neither the capacity nor the technology to counteract an F-16 Block 70, a Eurofighter Tranche 4 or a Rafaele in the current block.
The only possibility would be to make the Hürjet 20-30% larger and equip it with 2 F-404 engines so that the thrust ratio still remains between 0.9-1.X.
But what do you do if the USA says at some point, "Fuck you, you're not getting any more F-404 engines"?
Since the Hürjet with this configuration would be a capacity as a cheap workhorse in the Turkish fleet just by its price and its quantity of e.g. 300-400 aircraft with the option as a naval aircraft, it could cause a fundamental shift in power in the region together with the stealth drones and F-16 Özgur II/Block 70, Eurofighter and TAI KAAN.

Rule number 1 that applies to all aerospace nations, you don't build up your competitor militarily, you just give them the bare minimum.

Turkey is also not in a position to manage 3-4 different engine projects for different classes of fighter aircraft, we are not the USA or China.

The Kizilelma and Anka 3 and Ankinci Jumbo variants will take over the F-16/F-4 Phantom Terminator division of labor in the long term. TAI KAAN, and the F-16 Özgur II/Block 70 and possibly the Eurofighter will be there for everything else. The result will be that we will see in Patrol Flights fewer manned fighter aircraft in the sky and when then Hürjet armed Version together with Drones.
 

Zoth

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Ok and with which engine? F-404? Hürjet has neither the capacity nor the technology to counteract an F-16 Block 70, a Eurofighter Tranche 4 or a Rafaele in the current block.
The only possibility would be to make the Hürjet 20-30% larger and equip it with 2 F-404 engines so that the thrust ratio still remains between 0.9-1.X.
But what do you do if the USA says at some point, "Fuck you, you're not getting any more F-404 engines"?
Since the Hürjet with this configuration would be a capacity as a cheap workhorse in the Turkish fleet just by its price and its quantity of e.g. 300-400 aircraft with the option as a naval aircraft, it could cause a fundamental shift in power in the region together with the stealth drones and F-16 Özgur II/Block 70, Eurofighter and TAI KAAN.

Rule number 1 that applies to all aerospace nations, you don't build up your competitor militarily, you just give them the bare minimum.

Turkey is also not in a position to manage 3-4 different engine projects for different classes of fighter aircraft, we are not the USA or China.

The Kizilelma and Anka 3 and Ankinci Jumbo variants will take over the F-16/F-4 Phantom Terminator division of labor in the long term. TAI KAAN, and the F-16 Özgur II/Block 70 and possibly the Eurofighter will be there for everything else. The result will be that we will see in Patrol Flights fewer manned fighter aircraft in the sky and when then Hürjet armed Version together with Drones.
There is a small misunderstanding here, read my post more carefully once more, be sure to read the last part where i mentioned the importance of "domestic engine".

Other than that, i kind of agree with your points but once we master making the tf10k, the process is similar whether you scale it to 35k lbf or to more similar levels to f404.

By the time we are going to receive EFs or F16 V's, we would mature Hurjet enough to be capable, we are talking around early 2028s.
 

Nutuk

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Ok and with which engine? F-404? Hürjet has neither the capacity nor the technology to counteract an F-16 Block 70, a Eurofighter Tranche 4 or a Rafaele in the current block.

Nice question, I think it is maybe even the opposite and Hurjet can be even more valuable than an F16 or Eurofighter.

We can use the Hurjet in combination with Kizilelma. Having a "loyal winman concept" with a 4th gen. light fighter will make us unique. Will give much much more deterence (if that is what we looking for) and secondly will solidify our lead in drones in the world even more.

Instead we are looking for Eurofighters, go figure. Madness IMHO. Going to make ourselves dependent on foreign missiles and bombs



The only possibility would be to make the Hürjet 20-30% larger and equip it with 2 F-404 engines so that the thrust ratio still remains between 0.9-1.X.
But what do you do if the USA says at some point, "Fuck you, you're not getting any more F-404 engines"?

Old fashioned thinking see above, let drones do the work. Besides with the money to purchase 40 Eurofighters we can purchase easily about 100 Hurjet. Where does that leave the advantage of a Eurofighter???
 

IC3M@N FX

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You overestimate the Turkish software development a bit, Turkey is still at the beginning, the other manufacturers have been developing these really modern combat aircraft since the 70/80s and therefore also have a head start in the software development of the operating system and its applications in the aircraft.
The Americans, Chinese, Europeans and to some extent the Russians have taken decades to develop flight systems that run efficiently with today's hardware, e.g. main computer, AESA radar, flight control and target computer that not only harmonize together but also develop situational awareness, in principle a summary of the collected data and an evaluation in the form of a user interface, e.g. in a helmet HUD or displays in the cockpit.
ASELSAN & Co also claim that they can do this with the F-16 Özgür I/II, TAI KAAN & TAI Hürjet.
But this can and should be clearly defined and the actual data provided by the hardware and software are two different things.
How do you know that the retrieved data is not only worse from ASELSAN Systems, but also slower than that of the American/European versions and in a dogfight, for example, time is a very important factor.
I want to draw a comparison with a current iPhone, for example, where the software and hardware has been optimized to death over a decade so that it runs really well, and for comparison a completely new Android smartphone manufacturer comes onto the market with its new smartphone, which probably still has teething problems and runs on unoptimized software, and you have to imagine aircraft systems in the same way.
There is a reason why Turkey really wants to have F-16 Block 70 and Eurofighter, the hardware and software is simply not ready yet, it will take at least another 7-8 years to get something usable.
 
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Nutuk

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You overestimate the Turkish software development a bit, Turkey is still at the beginning, the other manufacturers have been developing these really modern combat aircraft since the 70/80s and therefore also have a head start in the software development of the operating system and its applications in the aircraft.
The Americans, Chinese, Europeans and to some extent the Russians have taken decades to develop flight systems that run efficiently with today's hardware, e.g. main computer, AESA radar, flight control and target computer that not only harmonize together but also develop situational awareness, in principle a summary of the collected data and an evaluation in the form of a user interface, e.g. in a helmet HUD or displays in the cockpit.
ASELSAN & Co also claim that they can do this with the F-16 Özgür I/II, TAI KAAN & TAI Hürjet.
But this can and should be clearly defined and the actual data provided by the hardware and software are two different things.
How do you know that the retrieved data is not only worse from ASELSAN Systems, but also slower than that of the American/European versions and in a dogfight, for example, time is a very important factor.
I want to draw a comparison with a current iPhone, for example, where the software and hardware has been optimized to death over a decade so that it runs really well, and for comparison a completely new Android smartphone manufacturer comes onto the market with its new smartphone, which probably still has teething problems and runs on unoptimized software, and you have to imagine aircraft systems in the same way.
There is a reason why Turkey really wants to have F-16 Block 70 and Eurofighter, the hardware and software is simply not ready yet, it will take at least another 7-8 years to get something usable.

Good you make an analogy with an example

Let me counter with a counter analogy, suppose we had purchased American Reaper drones. They are bigger, faster, Americans are virtually the creator of software. Would it have served us better than TB2?

If you do not own the tech you can purchase a black box and use it only in the form as the manual describes (in other words you are severely limited to use the product as the foreigner sells it to you in the allowed limits). Yes it would be a nice shiny expensive toy, but tactically much much less valuable than the TB2 as in the reaper example.
 

Huelague

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You overestimate the Turkish software development a bit, Turkey is still at the beginning, the other manufacturers have been developing these really modern combat aircraft since the 70/80s and therefore also have a head start in the software development of the operating system and its applications in the aircraft.
Don't worry, this job will made by AI in the future.
 

Nutuk

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What is the most funny part is that I hear a lot of arguments like we need the Eurofighter to counter Rafale.

Just LOL! So we gonna purchase an aircraft to use it against and EU country with MBDA missiles etc.?

What kind of Einstein does it take to come to such a solution? That is virtually purchasing a stick that will beat you. You'd virtually give them means to embargo, manipulate your weapons, stop selling you spares etc. etc. (now what kind of donkey logic would that be, Nasrettin hoca stile cutting the branch you sit on)
 

IC3M@N FX

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Don't worry, this job will made by AI in the future.
AI is not a panacea - how do you want to have program code analysed and optimized by AI software in order to eliminate sources of error or speed things up? To do this, the AI software must first of all know the program code and know what context it belongs to and what it is needed for.
The software would have to be optimized by the AI at the same time.
To do this, an AI model would first have to be developed that is capable of doing this.
I'm sorry, but Turkey doesn't have the capacity to simply pull something like Google Gemini or CHAT GPT out of its sleeve in such high quality. With all due love and pride in what has been achieved so far, real AI software that processes META data and pulls information from all sources while still searching for and offering possible solutions is a multi-billion dollar affair - not even China is capable of delivering such AI systems just like that, how is Turkey supposed to do it?

If you mean scripting systems that react to situation A with solution B, then that's not AI for me.
 
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IC3M@N FX

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Good you make an analogy with an example

Let me counter with a counter analogy, suppose we had purchased American Reaper drones. They are bigger, faster, Americans are virtually the creator of software. Would it have served us better than TB2?

If you do not own the tech you can purchase a black box and use it only in the form as the manual describes (in other words you are severely limited to use the product as the foreigner sells it to you in the allowed limits). Yes it would be a nice shiny expensive toy, but tactically much much less valuable than the TB2 as in the reaper example.

That is not what I wanted to tell you, the path that Turkey is taking is indispensable and it has to take this path to get this independence to be able to sit at the table in the future when resources become scarcer in the world.

But it doesn't change the fact that there is a rocky road ahead and a learning process is taking place.
Operating systems and applications don't come from one day to the next.
Even operating systems such as Windows were developed from Windows 95 to the evolution to Windows 11.
Software development is the most difficult thing you can't speed it up with any money in the world because it is ultimately a trail and error affair.
And honestly, if Turkey had not received an SDK from Dessault for the development of an aircraft operating system and all the software subcomponents for TAI KAAN & Hürjet, they would not even have a fighter plane today. Have fun with the development of a development environment and its tools for creating an operating system.
Turkey is not in a position to do this because if it were, it would have already used its own.
 

selim

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You don't need Chat GPT answering you questions about Hitler or Mars.

Huelague is right: AI will or probably is already writing code.
AI needs to be fed with coding best-practices (books, Professor, Coders), the ability to interpret what you are asking of it and its own simulation environment where it can benchmark its own written code.
The more I think about it the less complicated it seems, you just need some competent people working on it.

ARF, ranked as the world's 313th most powerful supercomputer with a processing capacity equivalent to over 35,000 laptops and a cost exceeding 11 million dollars, will enable our researchers serving in strategic fields, such as defense industry, manufacturing, drug design, and disease diagnostics, to perform simulations concurrently as needed
 

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