TR Turkish Air Forces|News & Discussion

Bogeyman 

Experienced member
Professional
Messages
9,192
Reactions
67 31,256
Website
twitter.com
Nation of residence
Turkey
Nation of origin
Turkey

The UH-1H type military helicopter, which took off from Izmir Çiğli 2nd Main Jet Base, made a forced landing in an empty land in Bademler village of Urla district. One personnel was injured during landing. An investigation has been launched into the accident.
 
Last edited:

Bogeyman 

Experienced member
Professional
Messages
9,192
Reactions
67 31,256
Website
twitter.com
Nation of residence
Turkey
Nation of origin
Turkey

It was reported that the military helicopter, which took off from Izmir Çiğli 2nd Main Jet Base, made a forced landing in an empty land in Bademler village of Urla district, and 1 personnel was injured.
GH573E-WMAAYH5L
 

Sanchez

Experienced member
Moderator
Think Tank Analyst
DefenceHub Diplomat
Messages
2,483
Reactions
84 11,400
Nation of residence
Turkey
Nation of origin
Turkey
Last edited:

Kartal1

Experienced member
Lead Moderator
Messages
5,291
Reactions
114 19,719
Nation of residence
Bulgaria
Nation of origin
Turkey
Air Engineer Specialist Sergeant Ercan GUVEN is the identity of the martyr who lost his life during the crash of the NF-5 jet earlier in Konya. May Allah accept his martyrdom!

1710450504364.png
 

Corvus

Active member
Messages
144
Reactions
5 368
Nation of residence
Italy
Nation of origin
Turkey
This is the second F-5 crash in a short time if I'm not mistaken.

Maybe it's time to say goodbye to them?
 

No Name

Well-known member
Messages
408
Reactions
6 435
Nation of residence
Australia
Nation of origin
Afghanistan
they still can be crashed and killing people in land bro , we need just replace all of them with hürjet ,old trainers and those stars f5
I meant till Turkey's other projects are operational since it has become clear that it is too dangerous to have pilots fly them.
 

BalkanTurk90

Contributor
Messages
684
Reactions
5 1,070
Nation of residence
Albania
Nation of origin
Turkey
I meant till Turkey's other projects are operational since it has become clear that it is too dangerous to have pilots fly them.
Hürjet is ready just need to mass produce it , And we have T-38 Talon around 60 and cf-5 some 15 so we need 80 hürjets which can be produced for 2-3 years
 

Mis_TR_Like

Contributor
Staff member
Administrator
Messages
1,435
Reactions
30 5,620
Nation of residence
Australia
Nation of origin
Northern Cyprus
Hürjets will replace the F5s as trainers. But more interestingly, Kızılelmas will fill in the role of a light fighter in the Turkish airforce for the first time in a long time

Imagine an image of Kızılelmas lined up like this:

images.jpeg-61.jpg



We often talk about layered air defences, but we never speak about a layered airforce. Perhaps because in recent decades, airforces have been streamlined to the point where a single type of multirole aircraft is expected to do everything.

When you think about it, the Kızılelma is the perfect replacement for the F5s original light fighter role... As light fighters are supposed to be cheaper and more expendable (no risk of losing a pilot in Kızılelmas case). Imagine Kızılelmas leading the charge with Kaans in the back, whilst Anka 3s take out ground targets.
 

Sanchez

Experienced member
Moderator
Think Tank Analyst
DefenceHub Diplomat
Messages
2,483
Reactions
84 11,400
Nation of residence
Turkey
Nation of origin
Turkey
Hürjet is ready just need to mass produce it , And we have T-38 Talon around 60 and cf-5 some 15 so we need 80 hürjets which can be produced for 2-3 years
I mean there still only exists a single flying prototype, it is by no means ready. And plans after 2025 is 2 aircraft a month per Kotil's words.
 

boredaf

Contributor
Messages
1,447
Solutions
1
Reactions
17 4,045
Nation of residence
United Kingdom
Nation of origin
Turkey
I mean there still only exists a single flying prototype, it is by no means ready. And plans after 2025 is 2 aircraft a month per Kotil's words.
And only as a trainer. Light attack version doesn't even exist yet on anything but paper.
 

boredaf

Contributor
Messages
1,447
Solutions
1
Reactions
17 4,045
Nation of residence
United Kingdom
Nation of origin
Turkey
Hürjets will replace the F5s as trainers. But more interestingly, Kızılelmas will fill in the role of a light fighter in the Turkish airforce for the first time in a long time

Imagine an image of Kızılelmas lined up like this:

View attachment 66556


We often talk about layered air defences, but we never speak about a layered airforce. Perhaps because in recent decades, airforces have been streamlined to the point where a single type of multirole aircraft is expected to do everything.

When you think about it, the Kızılelma is the perfect replacement for the F5s original light fighter role... As light fighters are supposed to be cheaper and more expendable (no risk of losing a pilot in Kızılelmas case). Imagine Kızılelmas leading the charge with Kaans in the back, whilst Anka 3s take out ground targets.
F4 can carry 8 tons (or something like that) of munitions, calling it a light fighter is an insult to that plane, have some respect for your elders mate :D
 

Sanchez

Experienced member
Moderator
Think Tank Analyst
DefenceHub Diplomat
Messages
2,483
Reactions
84 11,400
Nation of residence
Turkey
Nation of origin
Turkey
Turkey's possible Eurofighter purchase: "Positive signals for local ammunition integration"

Quoting the parts I deemed relevant:
"BAE Systems declined to comment on the Eurofighter Typhoon configuration requested by Turkey. The company responded positively to the question of whether Turkey, which has a wide range of indigenous munitions, "has the opportunity to integrate its own munitions." The British defense giant explained that Typhoon has unrivaled agility with its capacity to carry a wide range of air-to-air and air-to-ground ammunition, and has a positive and strong track record in providing integrations in accordance with the wishes of user countries."

"One of the main reasons for Turkey's interest in acquiring the Eurofighter Typhoon is that it has a very good air-to-air (air-to-air) capability among the 4++ generation fighters. Typhoon's future ECRS (European Common Radar System) Mk2 AESA radar will be almost completely different from the current Mk 0 and Mk 1 radars. While the previous series used GaAs modules, the Mk2 uses a combination of GaAs and GaN modules. The biggest trademark of the Mk 2 is that it allows simultaneous broadband electronic warfare. The radar integrated electronic warfare system, which is also an ambitious feature of the F-35 fighter jets, will provide a great advantage for Typhoon."

"BAE Systems did not provide information on the possible sale of ECRS Mk2 to Turkey, but said that the radar has not yet started flight trials this year, but has been integrated into the test and evaluation aircraft and ground tests are continuing at the Air Combat Engineering Center. The company also stated that it will be integrated into existing UK Typhoons by the 2030s."

"When asked whether the company is considering independent production from other partners, BAE Systems officials were clear that the program is being carried out in conjunction with the partner countries. The program is "a long-term cooperative partnership built on the industrial and political strengths of the four partner countries (Germany, Italy, Spain and the United Kingdom)," the company said, adding that it has received excellent support from the four partner countries."

Green light on Turkish munitions integration. Possibly no way of building them without Germany. New radar won't be ready for some time and if Turkey orders now with a quicker schedule program, it would need to buy them with Mk1 radars, requiring to spend again later to replace them with Mk2s.
 

Follow us on social media

Top Bottom