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Turkey's First A400M Being Built In Sevilla :

ozi2000

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C4Defence has taken a picture of A400M airlifter that Turkish Air Forces will take over soon. Airbus Military invited limited number of journalists to Seville and demonstrated Turkish airlifter serial number MSN9. The engines are run in the production line and it will leave the line soon. The plane will be painted and will start taxying tests. The tests will end at the end of June and maiden flight will take place. The plane is expected to be delivered to the Turkish Air Forces by September 2013.

FIRST PICTURE OF TURKISH A400M



Turkish A400M is at the end of production line


Turkey’s A400M aircraft with serial number MSN9 is at the flight clearance tests. The Turkish plane's that appears on screen first flight is expected by the end of June 2013. The plane will be at delivery centre at the end of august. The Turkish Air Forces acceptance tests will take place.


 
First Airbus Military A400M for Turkey runs its engines

The first Airbus Military A400M airlifter for the Turkish Air Force has begun final tests towards its delivery. The four engines on the aircraft were successfully run simultaneously for the first time on 29th July at the Airbus Military facility in Seville, Spain. The aircraft will be transferred to the Airbus Military delivery centre in September.
First Airbus Military A400M for Turkey runs its engines

 
Turkey’s A400M (MSN9) made its maiden flight in Seville Spain

Turkey’s A400M (MSN9) made its maiden flight in Seville Spain. The plane has undergone engine controls at Seville and finally took off for its maiden flight. The plane will undergo some several other test flights and then will be delivered to transfer centre for Turkish Air Forces to complete acceptance procedures. The plane is expected to be delivered by end of September of early October to Turkey. Turkey

FIRST FLIGHT



http://www.zaman.com.tr/gundem_turkiyenin-ilk-a400m-ucagi-gokyuzu-ile-bulustu_2119023.html

Funny that Spain selling 13 of 27 A400M
First Turkish A400M flies; Spain selling 13

Written by defenceWeb/ReutersMonday, 12 August 2013
altAirbus Military has flown the first of ten A400M airlifters for the Turkish Air Force, while Spain has decided to sell 13 of its 27 aircraft on order.

Airbus Military said the first Turkish example took to the skies above Seville, Spain, on Friday and landed some 5.5 hours later. Turkish Air Force loadmasters, pilots and maintenance technicians are undergoing training at the Airbus Military International Training Centre at Seville.

Meanwhile, Spain has moved to halve its planned fleet of A400Ms by offering the rest for export, casting a fresh shadow over Europe's largest defence project as the long-awaited aircraft goes into service, Reuters reports.

The move is the latest sign of pressure on crisis-hit European nations that bought the delayed transport, which itself had to be rescued in 2010 because of a cost blowout blamed on technical, management and political errors.

After a four-year delivery delay, the first A400M flew to its new operating base in Orleans, south of Paris, on August 2.

The aircraft was designed to meet a looming shortfall in military transport capacity among seven European NATO nations: Belgium, Britain, France, Germany, Luxembourg, Spain and Turkey.

But the 20 billion euro ($26 billion) project went more than 5 billion over budget, forcing buyers to agree a price hike and a cash injection to be repaid from future export royalties.

After reviewing its needs, Spain has reduced its requirement to 14 aircraft instead of 27, a defence official told Reuters.

It has told Airbus Military that the 13 remaining A400M aircraft it has ordered would be available for export. European buyers have ordered a total of 170 A400Ms, reduced from 180.

Although the 2010 rescue package prevents buyers from cancelling further orders outright, the largest customer, Germany, is expected to release 13 of its 53 aircraft for export as a condition of parliamentary approval for the purchase.

Others including France are studying whether they can do the same, defence sources said. But doing so raises thorny issues over export royalties and would require all partners to agree.

FRANCE UNDECIDED

Airbus Military is seen as keen to avoid a premature stampede towards export markets as it seeks to keep factories running to support exports after securing domestic production.

So far Malaysia is the only foreign buyer with 4 on order.

After writing off a total of 4.2 billion euros for its share of losses on the domestic part of the programme, Airbus aims to kickstart a fresh export campaign now that the A400M is in use.

"Export of the A400M is key for the profitability of the programme," spokeswoman Maggie Bergsma said.

"We estimate a market of around 400 aircraft over the next 30 years on top of the current 174 orders."

The prospect of some nations jumping in front of others to export will fuel a debate about when the first royalties would be paid and whether the market would be damaged for others.

But experts say it is unlikely to cause a repeat of the politically explosive discussions of several years ago.

"The economic situation is such that this is the best face-saving opportunity for the nations concerned and I think the programme is now so far down the line that I don't see how it can unravel," said UK-based consultant Alexandra Ashbourne-Walmsley.

"It is just another bump in the road and will take effort to smooth out, but the history of European programmes suggests ... it is the most elegant solution for short-term difficulties."

The Spanish official said no changes would be made until "there's an agreement with all of the partners".

Spain's economy has teetered in and out of recession since 2008, and while financing conditions have improved since it moved away from the brink of a full European bailout, it remains under pressure to cut public spending and a big budget deficit.

France unveiled a six-year defence spending plan on Friday that includes 15 A400M aircraft between 2014 and 2019 but failed to remove uncertainty over the remaining 35 it has on order.

Defence minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said France would still need 50 military transporters of all types in 2025, but left the door open to keeping some older planes longer than expected.

"I haven't yet decided what will happen after 2019. The number of A400M aircraft within the total requirement has not yet been fixed," he told a news conference.

http://www.defenceweb.co.za/index.p...pain-selling-13&catid=35:Aerospace&Itemid=107
 
C4Defence has taken a picture of A400M airlifter that Turkish Air Forces will take over soon. Airbus Military invited limited number of journalists to Seville and demonstrated Turkish airlifter serial number MSN9. The engines are run in the production line and it will leave the line soon. The plane will be painted and will start taxying tests. The tests will end at the end of June and maiden flight will take place. The plane is expected to be delivered to the Turkish Air Forces by September 2013.

FIRST PICTURE OF TURKISH A400M



Turkish A400M is at the end of production line


Turkey’s A400M aircraft with serial number MSN9 is at the flight clearance tests. The Turkish plane's that appears on screen first flight is expected by the end of June 2013. The plane will be at delivery centre at the end of august. The Turkish Air Forces acceptance tests will take place.



So what is the unit cost of A-400M when compared to:
C-130J30s
Y-9s
Antonov new plane???
 
Congratulations on the first A400M flight, indeed a good boost for Turkey's airlift capabilities.

South Africa was one of the original members of the A400M consortium with a contract for 8 A400M's but decided to pull out I think during 2009 however some of the A400M components like WFF's etc are manufactured here so its still good for our economy :)
 
The first production Airbus Military A400M airlifter for the Turkish Air Force (TAF) has been painted and flown for the first time in its new markings. The aircraft is the first of ten ordered by Turkey and will be delivered in the coming weeks.


 
is a400 of turkish can be transformed into tanker
It'd be the cruelest thing to do. It's a cargo plane that is so versatile that can land on short runways, that can drop paratroopers, that can be turned into a gunship and so on... transforming it into a tanker would limit it's potential we have other planes for that
 
Türk Hava Kuvvetleri ilk A400M’i teslim aldı!

teslima400-700x350.jpg
 
It'd be the cruelest thing to do. It's a cargo plane that is so versatile that can land on short runways, that can drop paratroopers, that can be turned into a gunship and so on... transforming it into a tanker would limit it's potential we have other planes for that

2 can be converted into tankers for certain missions.
:)
 
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