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Turkish Defence Industry Exports & Updates

Hmm, than by that logic.

Normal vest 3kg for AK 8kg =>2.66......

@T-123456 seems like you are right mate.

A total thickness of the layers would be max, 3cm....and weight around 0.8kg.. inorder to protect from AK-Bullets. :)

Then this thing is fantastic :D
I will forgive you for doubting my ''Hesap'' making:azn::rofl:
Btw,the best thing,NO ExPORT!
 
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Did you watch the video,post 96?
I searched a bit. Nurol developed boron-carbide armor. Its basically kind of ceramic which is already used in bullet proof wests around the world. So I would not expect any miracle results with it.
 
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I searched a bit. Nurol developed boron-carbide armor. Its basically kind of ceramic which is already used in bullet proof wests around the world. So I would not expect any miracle results with it.

The material that is being mentioned in the video is not ceramic.. something like plastic sheet. (a composite material woven by nanotechnology if i didn't understand it wrong.)

Producers say their vest weight only 300 gr and offer the same protection as a conventional vest which weighs 3 kg.
 
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Graphs has most tear resistance and Boor has most tensile strength, but it looks more than a spun yarn.
 
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The material that is being mentioned in the video is not ceramic.. something like plastic sheet. (a composite material woven by nanotechnology if i didn't understand it wrong.)

Producers say their vest weight only 300 gr and offer the same protection as a conventional vest which weighs 3 kg.

Now it is time for The Conqueror Soldiers of The Future...

How ?..

They should cover whole body of our soldiers with this...
 
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Savunma Sanayii Müsteşarlığı

1. Composite Engineering Inc. (CEi)

2. İPA Elektronik Bilişim Teknolojisi Enerji ve Savunma Sanayi Dış Tic. Ltd. Şti

3. Ortadoğu Mühendislik İnşaat Savunma Teknolojileri Sanayi Yazılım ve Tic. A.Ş.

4. Selex ES S.p.A

5. TUSAŞ Türk Havacılık ve Uzay Sanayii. A.Ş.

6. Vestel Savunma Sanayi A.Ş.
 
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Turkish Defense Exports Up 17.6% for Last Five Months
Jun. 30, 2014 -By BURAK EGE BEKDIL

bilde

Turkey reports defense exports for the first five months of the year were up 17.6 percent compared with the same period in 2013. The country had an all-time annual high of $1.4 billion in defense exports last year, attributed mainly to sales by Turkish Aerospace Industries of products such as the Hurkus trainer aircraft. (TAI)


ANKARA
— Exports by Turkey’s defense industry rose by 17.6 percent to $600 million January through May, up from $510 million in the same period last year, official figures revealed.

According to the Turkish Exporters’ Council, exports to Turkey’s biggest market, the United States, rose to $230 million for the five-month period, up from $194 million in the same period of 2013.

Other top markets for Turkish defense equipment, by rank, are the United Arab Emirates, Italy and Spain. Turkey exports arms and related systems to 130 countries.

Meanwhile, in a written statement, Turkish Defense Minister Ismet Yilmaz said that the government had granted $135 million in subsidies to defense companies between 2006 and 2013.

Turkey’s defense industry exports in 2013 were at an annual all-time high of $1.4 billion, up 10 percent from a year earlier. Between 2008 and 2012, exports, which account for a third of the country’s total production, rose by 43 percent.

Turkey aims to reach $2 billion in exports this year and an ambitious $25 billion in 2023.

Traditionally, top export items are aircraft and helicopter parts; engines; armored land vehicles; speed boats; missiles; rockets; launching platforms;light weapons; and electronic systems, including transmitters, command-and-control systems, simulators, sensors and practical software.


Turkish Defense Exports Up 17.6% for Last Five Months | Defense News | defensenews.com
 
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Indonesia close to ratifying Turkish defence industrial agreement
Jon Grevatt, Bangkok - IHS Jane's Defence Industry
30 June 2014


Indonesia's House of Representatives (DPR) is expected to ratify an accord later this year that will formalise defence industrial ties with Turkey.

The ratification process commenced in the DPR on 30 June. This process has been delayed since the accord was proposed in 2010 due to administrative issues, although vice chairman of the DPR's defence commission, Tubagus Hasanuddin, indicated that the agreement will soon be sanctioned.

The accord is geared to support bilateral collaboration in the fields of development, technology transfer, production, sustainability and investment. These activities are likely to hinge on Indonesian purchases of Turkish-designed military equipment.

Hasanuddin added that, once ratified, the accord is expected to promote deeper defence industrial ties between the two countries, particularly in land systems.

Indonesia close to ratifying Turkish defence industrial agreement - IHS Jane's 360
 
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Indonesia, Turkey Closer To Cooperation in Defense Industry Development
Wed, July 2 2014 12:17 |

Fardah

Jakarta (Antara News) - Turkey and Indonesia have been exploring cooperation in military and defense industry development over the last few years.

This was in accordance with a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) on defense industry signed by the two countries when President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono had visited Turkey in June 2010.

At a closed-door meeting at the Indonesian Parliament building on June 30, 2014, the Indonesian government and the House of Representatives (DPR) had agreed to begin the deliberation of a bill to ratify the defense industry agreement between Indonesia and Turkey.

"We have agreed to introduce the bill in a plenary meeting," T.B. Hasanuddin, the deputy chairman of the House Commission I, remarked following the meeting, which was attended by Chief of the House Commission I Mahfudz Siddiq, Defense Minister Purnomo Yusgiantoro, Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa, and several officials from the law and human rights ministry, among others.

The plenary meeting to endorse the bill into law will be held soon, probably next week, according to Hasanuddin.

The cooperation in the development of the defense industry is aimed at not only forging bilateral relations but also creating job opportunities by manufacturing defense instruments used in many countries, remarked Hassanudin, who is also a politician of the Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (PDIP).

Minister Marty Natalegawa applauded the House of Representatives move to deliberate the bill. Both the House Commission and the government shared the same view on the importance of the agreement in the field of defense industry, he said, adding that the cooperation was part of comprehensive relations between the two nations. "So, this is a very strategic move," he noted.

Marty said that the agreement did not cover the sale and purchase of weapon systems but was aimed at developing the capacity of the defense industries of both countries.

He added that the House Commission and the ministry had agreed to endorse the bill. "This clearly reflects the partnership between the government and the parliament, and in this case especially the House Commission I, which is worth appreciating," Marty Natalegawa noted after the meeting with House Commission I overseeing foreign affairs and defense.

Bilateral relations between Turkey and Indonesia have been strengthened following the visits of Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono to Turkey in June 2010 and Turkish President Abdullah Gul to Jakarta in early April 2011.

The two leaders visits were historic for both nations because Yudhoyonos visit was the first by an Indonesian president to Turkey in the last 25 years, while Guls visit was the first by a Turkish president to Jakarta in the last few years.

Yudhoyono and Gul had expressed commitment to stronger bilateral ties and witnessed the signing of various MOUs, among other initiatives on cooperation in the fields of politics, defense industry, small and medium businesses, and joint
programs
to increase investment.

They had particularly set an ambitious target to step up their bilateral trade to US$5 billion by 2015. In 2011, bilateral trade figures had reached US$2.24 billion or almost half the target.

Concerning the bilateral cooperation in defense field, Volkan Bozkir, the chairman of the Turkish Parliaments Foreign Affairs Committee, when visiting Jakarta in September 2012, stated that his country was very advanced in the defense industry and ready to establish cooperation in the sphere with Indonesia.

The Turkish governments willingness to support the revitalization of Indonesias defense industry was also expressed earlier when a seven-member Indonesian parliamentarian delegation headed by Mahfudz Siddiq made a three-day working visit to Turkey in April 2011.

During the visit, the DPR commission I delegation, which was accompanied by Indonesian Ambassador to Turkey Nahari Agustini, was received by President Abdullah Gul and visited several defense industries such as MKEK, T.A.I. (Turkish Aerospace Industry), Roketsan, FNSS, shipbuilding industry DEARSAN, and Nurol Holding.

President Gul convinced the Indonesian legislators on the significance of Indonesian-Turkish bilateral relations. He said at the Cankaya Palace, in Ankara on April 19, that bilateral ties with Indonesia were among the most important for his country.

In the Ankara meeting, the legislators of both the countries had agreed to encourage close cooperation in the fields of military and defense industry.

"We have agreed to encourage and support the MoU in the fields of military cooperation and defense industry that President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and President Abdullah Gul have signed," Mahfudz Siddiq said.

According to a media report, an agreement to jointly develop a new medium tank was signed between the Indonesian and Turkish governments in Jakarta, Indonesia, in February 2014. The new medium tank will be of a conventional design, fitted with a turret armed with a 105-mm rifle and 7.62 mm coaxial machine gun coupled to a computerized fire control system.

For ease of deployment in Indonesia, it is expected to have a combat weight of around 25 tons. Turkish company FNSS Savunma Sistemleri will work with Indonesian company PT Pindad to develop the tank for the Indonesian Army.

Daily Sabah reported on March 11, 2014, that the Turkish defense industry exports $1.4 billion (TL 3.11 billion) worth of arms each year but now has its sights set on being one of the worlds top defense exporters. Turkeys defense sector, which currently ranks eighth in the world in arms exports, is aimed at finding foreign buyers for $2 billion worth of arms and overtaking Italys global ranking as sixth.

Meanwhile, ReportsnReports.com reported that according to a new report titled "Future of the MINT (Mexico, Indonesia, Nigeria and Turkey) Defense Industry - Market Attractiveness, Competitive Landscape and Forecasts to 2019," the MINT region is expected to increase its defense expenditure from US$40.6 billion to US$61.1 billion over the forecast period.

Turkey, with a cumulative budget allocation of over US$100 billion over the forecast period, is the major contributor in the region, followed by Indonesia, with US$88.4 billion; Mexico, with US$46.4 billion; and Nigeria, with approximately US$20 billion, stated the report distributed by PRWire Service recently. (*)
(f001/INE/a014)


Editor: Fardah

COPYRIGHT © 2014

Indonesia, Turkey Closer To Cooperation in Defense Industry Development - ANTARA News
 
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Indonesia will spent more than 120 billion US dollar for military budget in the next 10 year periode, with that money i hope Indonesia can buy and getting technological transfer in arms industries from Turkiye in the near future.
 
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ELINT System ARES-2LC/T


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ARES2-LCT%20%C3%BCr%C3%BCn%20detay.jpg


ASELSAN Man-Pack ESM/ELINT System (ARES-2LC/T) is small in size, light in weight and has easy deployment and operation features. It can be operated in complex combat environment where it is difficult for vehicle to reach. Four or five soldiers can carry the equipment units to the deployment site to execute the mission.

ARES-2LC/T can search, intercept, measure, analyze, DF and classify conventional and complex types of signals for ground, airborne, naval radars like missile seeker, guidance radar, ship born tracking radar, fire control radar.

General Features:
  • Modular Units Design
  • Wide-Band Microwave Digital Receiver Architecture
  • High Probability of Intercept (POI)
  • Low Probability of False Alarm
  • Capability of Frequency, PRF, PW, Antenna Scan Type/Period, Modulation Type Measurements
  • Inter-Pulses and Intra-Pulse Analysis
  • Direction Finding, (Amplitude and/or Phase Comparison Method)
  • Ability to operate while CW emitters are around
  • Mission Data File including Sub-modes (Frequency, PW, PRI parameters), Radars, and Platforms
  • Identification of emitters via Mission Data File and Operator Data File
  • Capability of Audible and Visual Alarms for Lock-on, CW emitters, Guided Missiles and for the emitters defined in Mission Data File, Operator Data File and Alarm List
  • Capability for Soft Filtering over the desired Frequency and Azimuth Sectors
  • High Reliability and Easy Maintenance
 
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