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T-129 Spotted in S.Korea

BordoEnes

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Guess what dropped by the office today
The SAAF Forum • View topic - Mangusta at Wonderboom???
http://www.****************/forums/air-force-aviation/t-129-attack-helicopter-7572-5/
:tup:
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---------- Post added at 08:42 PM ---------- Previous post was at 08:41 PM ----------

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is that Korea? the last picture looks more like Turkish nature! nonetheless, great news!
 
Enes it's South Africa not South Korea, read the comments.

.......Goddamn it!! I really need classes! Made the same mistake once !!

---------- Post added at 08:52 PM ---------- Previous post was at 08:49 PM ----------

Nevertheless our T-129 really deserves a Safari vacation dont you guys think? :)
 
As we see from links, world thinks we are producing T-129 with license. But the reality is, we have equal rights with Italy. (Just like Eurofighter consorcium)
 
As we see from links, world thinks we are producing T-129 with license. But the reality is, we have equal rights with Italy. (Just like Eurofighter consorcium)
Nope. TAI has the full rights.
 
Sub Categories: » HOMEPAGE / ECONOMY/ ECONOMICS Tuesday,May 29 2012, Your time is 21:49:59

Turkish-Italian group on South Korean copter shortlist
ANKARA - Hürriyet Daily News
South Korea includes Turkish Aerospace Industries (TAI) and Italian AgustaWestland joint venture into three possible makers of its up to 50 helicopters. This is a major success, says a Korean source. The competition to be finalized in October is a hard one as the remaining two rivals are US-based defense giants Boeing and Bell

South Korea has shortlisted a Turkish-Italian defense group consisting of Turkish Aerospace Industries (TAI) and AgustaWestland, together with two U.S. companies, as the potential makers of up to 50 attack helicopters for the nation’s military, a South Korean official said over the weekend.

TAI-AgustaWestland has been building 59 T-129 helicopters for Turkey’s military, and deliveries will start toward the end of the year. TAI-Agusta Westland has been shortlisted together with the U.S.

companies Boeing, maker of AH-64D Apache gunships for the U.S. Army, and Bell Helicopter Textron, maker of the Cobra family of helicopters for the U.S. Marine Corps, in the South Korean contest worth billions of dollars, the Korean official said.

“It is a major success for TAI and AgustaWestland to be shortlisted even before their product entered service in the Turkish military,” the official said.

TAI-Agusta Westland is due to deliver nine T-129s to the Turkish Army before the end of this year. The T-129 is a Turkish version of the Italian company’s A-129 Mangusta International attack
helicopter. One Turkish procurement official confirmed that South Korean officials will attend the tests for the T-129, scheduled to be held in July. South Korea’s decision on its gunship fleet is expected to come in October.

Apache the main rival

“The competition is mainly between Boeing, the long time-maker of the Apaches, which can be considered the best attack helicopter maker in the world, and TAI-AgustaWestland,” said one defense analyst. “The South Korean military fervently wants the Apache for their service. And TAI-AgustaWestland definitely needs to cut its price considerably to support its bid.”

Turkey wants top promote the T-129, so is willing to do that. “As for the Italians, they are in a deep economic crisis, and also want this sale very much,” the analyst said. He added that South Koreas bid to buy between 35 and 50 gunships is presently one of the world’s biggest programs.

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said recently that Turkey’s while bilateral trade volume with South Korea amounts to seven billion dollars, Turkey’s exports to the country amount to only $500 million, and has called for moves to correct this imbalance. The two countries have recently signed a free trade agreement, with the South Korean side pledging to lessen the trade imbalance.

In addition, Turkey is soon expected to announce the winner of its program to build a nuclear power plant worth at least $10 billion in the country’s north, and South Korea’s Kepco is among the most-favored contenders. Kepco is up against the Japanese, the Chinese and the Canadians in the nuclear tender. Defense analysts say that although the two programs are not linked to each other officially, South Korea’s attack helicopter program is a good opportunity to correct the trade imbalance.
South Korea is mainly expected to use its attack helicopters to prevent North Korea’s use of small
patrol boats operating in the Yellow Sea, to the west of the two countries.

Turkey and South Korea have enjoyed very close political ties since the Korean War of the 1950s, when Turkey was part of the United Nations forces fighting against North Korea and China. The two countries have also recently forged good defense ties.

Defense ties

Under a $1 billion dollar license agreement, Turkey has been building South Korean howitzers since the 1990s. Korean Aerospace Industries is now building, together with TAI, a $450 million program to build 50 basic trainers at the TAI plant, and the deal is coming to an end. Hyundai Rotem, under a $500 million agreement, is helping the Turkish armored vehicles maker Otokar to build four prototypes of Turkey’s first indigenous tank, the Altay, which will be completed around 2017. TAI also views the Koreans as a potential a partner in a multibillion-dollar program to build an indigenous fighter aircraft after 2020.
May/28/2012
ECONOMICS - Turkish-Italian group on South Korean copter shortlist
 
same look :coffee:
You are not very observant i guess.

Body is longer and engine intakes and exhausts are much different because the damn engine is different, rotor has five blades and FLIR is a whole new FLIR these are the most significant differences from outside you should see in first look anyway cockpit features are completely unique and you might find more information if you search the sticky threads. Thank you
 
Can't wait to see first patch of these babies in service, its supposed to be enter service in these months right ?
 
Can't wait to see first patch of these babies in service, its supposed to be enter service in these months right ?

Well that or at the end of the Year. And The new infantry rifle will also enter production in a couple days :woot:
 
You are not very observant i guess.

Body is longer and engine intakes and exhausts are much different because the damn engine is different, rotor has five blades and FLIR is a whole new FLIR these are the most significant differences from outside you should see in first look anyway cockpit features are completely unique and you might find more information if you search the sticky threads. Thank you

Additions,

-Strengthened Wing stations which gives T-129 Atak ability of carrying much more payload than A-129 (300kg for each weapon station).
-Completely new Transmission/gear system manufactured by Turkish industry to transfer the power of high capable engine to rotors effectively.
-New aft tail rudder to give the sharp resonse of longer fuselage with more payload
-Enhanced munition store capacity
-New 5 blades main rotor to be manufactured by TAI
-No need to mention state of art Aselsan main mission computer, Avionics, Electro-optics, communication devices, helmet mounted display unit and many software system such as Moving map, Obstacle Detection system which is typed by the institutes like Meteksan, SDT.

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