After several
years of confusion around the TF-X’s engine choice, General Electric’s
F110 has been selected, an engine with which Turkey is already intimately
familiar through local firm Tusas Engine Industries (TEI), which
assembles and maintains the F110 for the Turkish Air Force’s F-16 fleet.
The F110 will power the TF-X prototypes, says TUSAS President and CEO
Temel Kotil.
The use of the F110 reflects an increase in the power demands for the
future aircraft. Previously, TUSAS had been looking at 20,000-lb.-thrust-class
engines such as the Eurojet EJ200, but company literature now calls
for a powerplant in the 25,000-30,000-lb.-thrust class—apt for an
aircraft that will be similar in size to the Lockheed Martin
F-22Raptor.
Development of a production engine will fall to Ankara-based TR Motor
Power Systems, a joint venture of TUSAS and BMC Power Motor—the majority
shareholder and part of the larger BMC automotive group. Framework
agreements for TR Motor’s work were signed last November, and the company
needs to deliver production-standard engines by the early 2030s.
“The [TR Motor] team is working, although it is not full-size yet,” Kotil
told Aviation Week during the IDEF defense exhibition in Istanbul in
early May. While he is optimistic that the company can deliver an
advanced fighter engine in just over a decade, historical precedents
suggest that could be a challenge. After all, China has struggled with
the advanced metallurgies associated with the high-thrust engines for its
Chengdu J-20 combat aircraft. Turkey has more access to skilled
international engineering knowledge, though.
“Of course, in a high-technology program, we know many things can cause
issues. . . . But the team already has a basic design; they know the fan
diameters, temperatures and so on,” says Kotil.
He points to the example of TEI, which is developing a turboshaft engine
for the indigenous T625 Gokbey utility helicopter. The company is
expected to produce a prototype engine in around 30 months, almost three
years earlier than the outlined eight-year plan had envisaged.
Two years ago, Rolls-Royce teamed with local company Kale,
proposing a new fighter engine using technology from the former’s Trent
airliner powerplant, but the agreements with TR Motor appear to suggest a
move away from international collaboration. Rolls-Royce and Kale made an
improved offer to Ankara last December, which remains in place.
During the IDEF show, TUSAS presented a concept of future cockpit
technologies. The company is currently envisioning the use of a single
wide-area display like that on the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, but this
would be supplemented by the use of a helmet-mounted sight capable of
projecting augmented reality displays, which could be manipulated through
hand gestures.
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