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Turkish Space Programs

what else? guess ....Rotax 914, GD 883 or about 35 percent of Arrow missile components including the electronics section, booster motor case and missile canister........

In life, it must be always extremely precise. Precise, ok…:devil:


Rotax 914 piston aero-engine (Rotax Manufacturer - Austria)

‘IAI Heron’ (UAV)


IAI Heron - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Rotax 914 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


General Dynamics GD883 (MTU883) engine

‘Merkava Mark IV’ tank

Merkava - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Arrow 2





Dennis Yglesias, systems integration technician, checks drawings displayed on the overhead computer screen before routing and clamping cables inside the Arrow interceptor section II at a Boeing facility in Huntsville (USA).




Tammy Sisk, left, integration technician, and Dana Cousins, test technician, assemble cables, electrical boxes and batteries into the Arrow interceptor at a Boeing facility in Huntsville (USA).
 
what else? guess ....Rotax 914, GD 883 or about 35 percent of Arrow missile components including the electronics section, booster motor case and missile canister........

Art of counter-trolling :mps:
 
Whenever someone reports a product in this forum, some users will come by and say "No, my dick is longer"
the saudi guy,mosa tried to quiz us and in return we replied to his ridicules post.

anyway congratulation to Turkish members.cause this is a huge achievment for them!.
 
what else? guess ....Rotax 914, GD 883 or about 35 percent of Arrow missile components including the electronics section, booster motor case and missile canister........

Well if i would guess what else my guess be the photos are also made in Turkey, that is pretty much all.

175527_360971367328606_1100251484_o.jpg


Some of Tamir missiles of Iron Dome most probably also be build in USA, and it is not because Israeli industry cannot build them, but because USA fund the procurement of batteries to IDF, Iron Dome to date is all designed and built in Israel, the same with Arrow. When you buy camera from Korea and call it Turkish observation satellite it is a self ownage.
 
Well if i would guess what else my guess be the photos are also made in Turkey, that is pretty much all.

175527_360971367328606_1100251484_o.jpg


Some of Tamir missiles of Iron Dome most probably also be build in USA, and it is not because Israeli industry cannot build them, but because USA fund the procurement of batteries to IDF, Iron Dome to date is all designed and built in Israel, the same with Arrow. When you buy camera from Korea and call it Turkish observation satellite it is a self ownage.


Why ? When you buy chassis and automotive subsystems from X, Engines from Y and call it like Israeli Armoured Vehicle, After integration of some armour plates on is also a SelfOwnage ? You are good at electronic system-subsystems manufacturing that brings big money and system engineerings. Rest is other's contributions on Israeli state of art systems. Same in your radars, missiles, tanks...etc Witout foreign help, Israeli electronic industry proceeds doing good things but When It comes to complete systems such as warships, strategic missiles, armoured vehicles, tanks...etc, You just suck so bad...
 
Well if i would guess what else my guess be the photos are also made in Turkey, that is pretty much all.
...
When you buy camera from Korea and call it Turkish observation satellite it is a self ownage.

Don't worry! The future electro optical satellite ‘Göktürk IV’ (that will be put in orbit in 2018) will be ‘completely’, ‘fully’, ‘entirely’ Turkish by ToT. ‘Electro-optical camera’ including, of course. :azn:



An armada of domestic satellites await countdown

Umit Enginsoy
Thursday, November 08, 2012


A total of 17 satellite programs are expected to come into orbit from 2012 to 2020. Over the next five years satellite contracts could amount to $2 billion, according to a space industry expert based in Turkey.

The Turkish government has devised an ambitious road map for the country’s multiple satellite programs through 2020.

According to the road map, a total of 17 Turkish satellites will come into orbit from 2012 to 2020. A space industry expert based in Turkey said the next five years’ satellite contracts would amount to $2 billion. “This is a niche market with strong prospects due to Turkey’s genuine ambitions in space technology,” he said.

According to the road map, Turkey will this year launch the Göktürk II, an electro optical reconnaissance and observation satellite. Göktürk I as well as Türksat 4A, a communications satellite, will be launched in 2013. Türksat 4B will be launched in 2014 and Türksat 4R in 2015 along with the Göktürk III, a synthetic aperture radar (SAR) reconnaissance and observation satellite. 2016 will see an infrared early warning satellite sent into orbit, along with the Türksat 5A communications satellite. In 2017, Türksat 5B and a second infrared satellite will be launched. The electro optical Göktürk IV and two more infrared satellites will be put in orbit in 2018, and yet two more infrared satellites will be launched in 2019. In 2020 Turkey will launch its second SAR Göktürk V.

The road map comes after the government set up a Space Technologies Directorate under the supervision of the Transport Ministry last November. Officials said this office will later become the country’s first National Space Agency.

There is a multitude of space actors in Turkey, but experts hope efforts will be better coordinated with the establishment of the National Space Agency. Current organizations include the State Planning Organization, the Ministry of Transportation, the communications satellite operator Türksat, the state scientific research institute Tübitak and the defense procurement agency the Undersecretariat for Defense Industries.

Tübitak cooperates with the Federal Russian Space Agency Roscosmos, German aerospace center DLR, Britain’s space agency BNSC and the Netherlands space office NSO.

Defense companies Aselsan, Roketsan and Turkish Aerospace Industries, as well as three universities, are also involved in space programs.

The Turkish government identified space as a priority area in scientific and technological progress in 2004. As part of this strategy it has sought to develop programs in line with the Human Space Technology Initiative, an effort under the framework of the United Nations Program on Space Applications. The effort promotes international cooperation in human space lift and space exploration-related activities.

In 2009, Telespazio, a joint venture between Italy’s defense giant Finmeccanica and France’s Thales, signed a deal worth nearly 250 million euros (about $345 million) for the Turkish military satellite.


TR Defence


Satellite programs from 2012 to 2020





See also old link :

http://www.defence.pk/forums/milita...ellite-launch-lifts-koreas-space-program.html


I'm sure you'll love, also (Especially for your ‘Jericho III’), the future satellite program ‘Space-Based Infrared System (SBIRS)’ Turkish by ToT.




See link :

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space-Based_Infrared_System
 
Last edited by a moderator:
I would like to see Turkey also getting SLV capability soon. Indigenous capability to launch own satellites brings down the cost. And also gives strategic edge.

^^

See old links :

KSLV-1 South Korea space launcher

The space launcher KSLV-1 (Naro-1), which can reach an altitude of 170 km and launch a satellite of 100 kg on a low Earth orbit elliptical with a perigee of 300 km and an apogee of 1500 km, has been developed with the help of Russia, despite the negative opinion of the USA.

Russia now refuses any transfer of space technologies to further South Korea under the pretext “Control Regime Missile Technology” fearing military use of these systems. But South Korea on the contrary accelerates its space program even alone anyway.

The KSLV-2 (capable of carrying 1,5 to 2 tons payload) is a version of the space launcher based entirely on technologies that South Korea plans to build. A budget of 22 billion won (approximately 12.5 million Euros) be allocated for the development of new propulsion system. The construction of this new launcher started in August 2009, with the first launch in 2021.


http://www.defence.pk/forums/turkey-defence/174482-g-kt-rk-2-sattelite-finished-2.html#post2858027

http://www.defence.pk/forums/turkey-defence/174482-g-kt-rk-2-sattelite-finished-2.html#post2858033

http://www.defence.pk/forums/turkey-defence/174482-g-kt-rk-2-sattelite-finished-2.html#post2858046
 
GokTurk2 Satellite launched and settled at the orbit

uydular.png


launching video so good job Chinese!
Göktürk-2'nin F

Gokturk-2 Technical Specifications:

Orbit : Sun Synchronous Orbit
Altitude : ~ 700 km
Period : ~ 98 minutes
Daily Ground Station Contact : ~ - 40 min (day time and night)
Imaging by Full Coverage of Earth
Real Time Image Transfer
Mass :< 409 kg.
Image Storage Capacity :> 15 Gbit
Resolution : 2,5 m

The project GÖKTÜRK-2 Satellite will be the first National Earth Observation Satellite which has been funded by The Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey (TÜB&#304;TAK) resources.

The contract was signed by the Ministry of Defense (MoD), The Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey (TÜB&#304;TAK) and TUB&#304;TAK UZAY-TAI Consortium on 13 April 2007, which has become effective on 1th May 2007.

With the GÖKTÜRK-2 Project, not only the national capabilities and resources for the Space systems (such as new technologies, experienced manpower and possession of new infrastructures) will be developed, but the image requirements of the Turkish Armed Forces and other public institutions will also be met.
 
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