TR Propulsion Systems

Cabatli_TR

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I hope they realize the criticality of this and are not unnecessarily frugal with it. Just pour money into this thing. Need several environmental testing facilities, high altitude test facility, etc. and the test bed which costs a lot afaik. Anybody have any idea what's our situation with these things already?

Pay attention to priority levels

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Zafer

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RR involvement should shorten the development timeline by many years. I bet they already have worked out what the engine should be like. It will depend in part on what production and material science capabilities TEI will be able to afford before the design is finalized. I think all the speculations about timelines will be reconsidered in this case. 2026 first ignition and 2028 first production dates are a piece of cake IMO.
 

Nilgiri

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This is nice to hear. Eutectic is a terminology used in chemistry. It denotes a mixture of two or more elements (in set proportions) which would melt and solidify at a single temperature that is lower than the melting points of the individual constituents.
Alloys made from Eutectic Oxides of CMC can be directionally solidified so that a single Crystal is formed and in turn they can improve the thermal performance properties of turbines. You can read a bit more in the link down below.

If we are working on these that is good news. I hope TEI is also planning to study adaptive cycle systems along side of the development of TF35K engine.


Its a complicated emerging field since about the 1970s (DS oxide composites).

You could technically use non-eutectic oxides and make DS. One would save cost and QC needs in the early production stage but severely increase them in the later stage (along with performance loss, I am unsure of the exact scale of the performance loss, but it would be lot worse than Single crystal superalloy for sure ). Basically the tradeoff is really bad for non-eutectics here (this does change somewhat for the semiconductor field, but thats another story).

It has to do with keeping the material as simple as possible regd grain boundaries and alignments (the overall integrals governing them in 3D-space). A eutectic always ensures presence of 2 rather than 3 factors.....or 3 instead of 4 ( n minus 1)....and so on (but composites rarely go past ternary and for good reason again due to benefit of simplicity and how that mitigates cascading in something later).

The great advantages (among others regarding the materials themselves) are thus baked in to harness in the directional solidification final stage and fabrication quality control....which are very much related to the crystallography of page 6 found in the paper you posted....a non-eutectic (though offering a wider temperature range benefit and cost savings there) would greatly increase the orientations in play (because of n instead of n - 1 in the "baking") and all failure modes associated would cascade and weaken both what you can do with fab and final performance and QC.

Its not my field (my integrals involve the fluids rather than solids in these engines), but I remember reading a paper couple years ago and there were still lot of challenges they are in the process of figuring out, so this field will take a while to come to manufacturing stage, not sure how long though.

There were iirc basically tradeoffs within choice of binary (2) or ternary (3). Intuitively with the "keep it simple as possible". one would think 2 is best here, but there are advantages with 3 that boil down to pros and cons of Zirconia (and I think other interesting elements too) in these setups that they are still figuring out w.r.t the whole end-end production final cost/benefit (to say proven single crystal). We have to see how this rationalisation evolves.

In end everything kind of boils down to mother nature though...metals are very special in their electronic configuration w.r.t their nucleus sizes. This is what undergirths all the combination potentials in this broader metallurgy, ceramics and composite RnD field.
 
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Cabatli_TR

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Mr Akşit: "We are trying to persuade SSB support to establish a company with our industrialists for hydraulic forging operations of Titanium and Nickel super alloys with a capacity of 15,000+ tons press. SSB said they will support"
 

Cabatli_TR

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Image from strategic Pure Nickel and pure Cobalt production

Screenshot_20231203_221258_Opera beta.jpg


Laboratory scale studies and process optimization.
Establishing the process flow and verifying the process at pilot scale
 

Rodeo

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Mr Akşit: "We are trying to persuade SSB support to establish a company with our industrialists for hydraulic forging operations of Titanium and Nickel super alloys with a capacity of 15,000+ tons press. SSB said they will support"
they should go for a heavier press. I have my doubts about producing bulkheads for KAAN through 3d printing. It may not scale well and we would be at mercy of the US for the equipment. We should be independent of the US in making of our planes and 15.000 ton press would not cut it.

F35, for instance, uses 50.000 ton press.
 

Cabatli_TR

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Aviation stainless steel: AISI316 and 321
Super-Alloy: IN718, IN718+, UD720
SCB alloy: CMX4 and CMX10
Special alloy: Managing steel and M50

@Yasar
TEI has already produced CMSX10 in addition to CMSX4. Next one most likely will be the 4th generation MG-NG SCB...

Screenshot_20231203_220938_Opera beta.jpg
 

BalkanTurk90

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they should go for a heavier press. I have my doubts about producing bulkheads for KAAN through 3d printing. It may not scale well and we would be at mercy of the US for the equipment. We should be independent of the US in making our planes and 15.000 ton press would not cut it.

F35, for instance, uses 50.000 ton press.
With what press is Tai building Hurjet and Kaan for now? Did they start the aircraft with not ready production equipment ? 🤦‍♂️🤦‍♂️
 

Afif

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With what press is Tai building Hurjet and Kaan for now? Did they start the aircraft with not ready production equipment ? 🤦‍♂️🤦‍♂️

TAI has bought world largest metal electron beam 3d printers from USA.
 

Nilgiri

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they should go for a heavier press. I have my doubts about producing bulkheads for KAAN through 3d printing. It may not scale well and we would be at mercy of the US for the equipment. We should be independent of the US in making of our planes and 15.000 ton press would not cut it.

F35, for instance, uses 50.000 ton press.

The QC is in the end related to the pressure (in psi) the forge is able to develop. So for components in say propulsion, 15,000 ton would cover everything you need here.

Outsized monolith parts in the airframe like bulkhead yeah if you want to get the advantage of forging (over say 3d print or other options), you would need a larger forge there given much larger part (area) needing same pressure. There is trade off study here to do depending how many you plan to produce, as forging great advantage is its production rate.

But for propulsion context, this forge size mentioned is fine, the part sizes are small enough.


TAI has bought world largest metal electron beam 3d printers from USA.

The production rate is lot lower for these. Great for optimized parts which number just 1 to n within say an engine. But over a certain n number (and sometimes part size), forging is way more economical....holding complexity and QC the same.

A production line needs access to every capacity available so nothing holds up another, you just allocate to each which parts are best suited.

I had read that EBAM 3D printing of Inconel shows similar microscopic structure to forged ones

It is a field of great promise and potentials being unlocked. The main drawback with it is production rate (for what you invest) and will remain so for a long while.
 

what

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Mr. Akşit and Denizli industrialist meeting presentation


So they have produced and put into service engines that are not publicly announced due to, I assume, political reasons?
Nice, but curious what that might be.
 

Kartal1

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So they have produced and put into service engines that are not publicly announced due to, I assume, political reasons?
Nice, but curious what that might be.
Can u tell more ? What kind of engines and where did they put?
The one that comes to my mind is the national replacement for the Herons in inventory. I don't remember to be officially announced but it is a public secret.
 

Yasar_TR

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Aviation stainless steel: AISI316 and 321
Super-Alloy: IN718, IN718+, UD720
SCB alloy: CMX4 and CMX10
Special alloy: Managing steel and M50

@Yasar
TEI has already produced CMSX10 in addition to CMSX4. Next one most likely will be the 4th generation MG-NG SCB...

View attachment 63530
It is great that we are working on 4th generation single crystals now.
As can be seen from below file, CMSX4 series are 2nd generation and CMSX10 series are the third generation single crystal super alloys.


MC-NG super alloy is the 4th generation version of the single crystals developed by the French company Onera.


TMS-138A is also a fourth generation single crystal super alloy that contains Ru (rubidium) and high concentration of Mo (Molybdenum) elements.


The Japanese IHI Corporation’s engine FX9, contains 5th generation single crystal super alloy turbine blades. Japanese have been quite active in the development of newer generation of single crystals.

TMS162, TMS173 and TMS196 alloys are all 5th generation single crystal super alloys.


TMS238 is a 6th generation single crystal alloy

Each new generation brings a 30 to 40 degrees centigrade improvement to the heat resistance properties of the blades. Also comes with each new generation, a better result for stress, creep resistance and micro-structural stability; plus a higher cost.
 
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DBdev

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I know nothing about engines but. Why are we not doing what even GE is doing to get ahead: Working with Japan? Their XF9 engine's thrust is superior to F110 in a smaller diameter. While it's thrust is lower than F135 & F136 perhaps it's only because it 's diameter is %20 smaller than those 2. Just under 1m. Why not simply use XF9 in KAAN by procuring IP rights from IHI? Could speed things up a lot.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IHI_Corporation_XF9
 

uçuyorum

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I know nothing about engines but. Why are we not doing what even GE is doing to get ahead: Working with Japan? Their XF9 engine's thrust is superior to F110 in a smaller diameter. While it's thrust is lower than F135 & F136 perhaps it's only because it 's diameter is %20 smaller than those 2. Just under 1m. Why not simply use XF9 in KAAN by procuring IP rights from IHI? Could speed things up a lot.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IHI_Corporation_XF9
IHI sharing ip rights or even selling an engine? Good one mate
 

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