Yep..:if this is the current progress of P1, and P2 is supposed to fly a few months after P1 does, then the P2 must be in final assembly as well?
Turkish Aerospace Industries (TAI) officials said the two prototypes are in an advanced state of structural assembly and work is underway on system integration in the company’s Kaan final assembly line here in Ankara. A ground test vehicle also is in production....
so there are 3 prototypes being built under that roof? plus P0, that's 4 KAANYep..:
Great catch! I don't see any visual differences from the P0/GTU-0/Tech Demo from this angle yet, which isn't very surprising unlike what some amateurs might think.
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Well, the prototypes of the Karat IRST, Toygun EOTS, IVDL datalink, MURAD-600A FCR, etc., are all ready and have been confirmed as planned for integration in 2026 for airborne tests aboard Kaan, and the TAI GM has indeed said similar things multiple times in the recent past.To catch up, was it confirmed if these two prototypes would have any mission systems integrated? like radar, eots, irst, ku band terminals etc.?
We don't know yet. We've heard conflicting information in the past, and the GTU-0 has featured access hatches in place of IWBs since it was basically just a tech demonstrator/ground test unit that was originally never meant to fly.that's a nice shot of what seems to be the side weapons bay.
So to confirm, Kaan has two tandem main weapons bays and two side weapons bays?
Just seeing multiple Kaans in a single frame is amazing in itself, don’t you think? Look at how far we’ve come...so there are 3 prototypes being built under that roof? plus P0, that's 4 KAANmy god
Nice comparison, looks like on the P1 inlets have been pushed back somewhat
They're still up? https://www.secretprojects.co.uk/threads/tai-tf-x-milli-muharip-uçak-mmu-kaan.13448/post-732648Last time open sidebay pics got posted they got taken down, this time I've saved them.
No they were clearer than that and closer, but I hadn't seent that particular photo thanks.
Look at the shape of the side weapon bay. I think the KAAN will shoot the infrared-guided missile like the F-22 instead of the J-20.Out of the very few 5th gens out there, China's implementation of side weapons bay on J-20 has got to be my favourite - hoping TAI does something similar
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* greatestest..greatest leaders of our time.
For a future Block-XX Kaan without the need for WVR capability, those cavities can hold another 6000 liters of fuel easily.
If those are 12ft long instead of 10ft (ish), I'd assume they'd just stick an AMRAAM in it (or whatever)For a future Block-XX Kaan without the need for WVR capability, those cavities can hold another 6000 liters of fuel easily.
In 10 years, once it successfully develops and deploys indigenous engines for its major aircraft, Turkey will no longer have any reason to stay in the good graces of the US; even from a pragmatist view, maintaining neutral relations will suffice. Every serious Turkish foreign policy expert and influential figure understands this.US congress pretty much has the power to impose a lengthy delay to KAANs development.
View: https://x.com/AksanSertac/status/1972019042514051554?t=Y1Yw_zhfGeRIFvoD9bWJ7w&s=19Minister of Foreign Affairs Hakan Fidan:The CAATSA issue with the US must be resolved. They need to take action for both the F-35 and KAAN engines. The license for KAAN's engine has been suspended. Restrictions with the US will force us to seek alternative avenues within the international system.
The best option is to be able to get the engines. The second best option is them to reject the engine request outright. And the worst option is the request to sit in the congress for years without any definitive answer.Not too get too off topic, but aren't relations between the US and Turkey good enough at the moment that the nuclear option of permanently stopping delivery of these engines and completely derailing the KAAN program is not a serious threat ?
Not really, everyone knew this would happen.
The general consensus among us, based on what has been said following the Trump–Erdogan meeting, is that they have reached a deal on a course of action to be taken by the end of the year (as per the American ambassador). It likely has something to do at the very least with the S-400 issue, and they intend to convince the Congress to approve it. (But we're convinced it will take a whole lot more to get them to pass it.)A standing ovation must go to these geniuses who kept insisting there would be no issues with engine supplies from the U.S. despite everyone knowing full well that the Congress would do everything in its power to block them.
U.S. lawmakers have introduced amendments to the 2026 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) that would block F-35 fighter jet deliveries and other arms sales to Türkiye unless Ankara meets specific political and security conditions, including certifications regarding Hamas, Israel, and defense cooperation with U.S. adversaries.
A bipartisan amendment introduced by Republican Rep. Gus Bilirakis and Democrat Rep. Brad Schneider would prohibit F-35 sales to Türkiye unless the White House certifies that Ankara is not "materially supporting Hamas or any of its affiliates."
The proposed legislation would also require certification that Türkiye is not "engaging in military threats to Israel" and is not conducting military cooperation, including drone sales, with Russia, China, Iran, and North Korea.
Another amendment calls for the State, Defense, and Treasury departments to conduct detailed investigations and submit a joint report to Congress examining whether Türkiye is harboring Hamas members or financial assets, or otherwise permitting the group's officials to operate from its territory.
The report, requested within 180 days, would assess security risks to the U.S. and allies, activities of groups including Hamas, Hezbollah, and Iran's Revolutionary Guards, terrorism history, threats to U.S. personnel and bases, and Türkiye's responses to these threats.
Additional amendments submitted to the House Armed Services Committee by Representatives Dan Goldman of New York and Josh Gottheimer of New Jersey target Türkiye's military presence in Turkish Cyprus and its regional activities, according to Greek Reporter.
These proposals would require Türkiye to stop alleged violations of Greece and Greek Cyprus, avoid defense cooperation with U.S. rivals like Russia, and ensure U.S.-made weapons are not used in Turkish Cyprus. The restrictions would remain in effect for five years unless these conditions are met.
The amendments also require Türkiye to disclose to the U.S. all American-origin systems used in Turkish Cyprus.
There’s an ongoing expectation for the core of the indigenous engine to be ignited for the first time next year. TEI has been extremely secretive about it, while also managing expectations by emphasizing how difficult it is to develop an engine in this class, but we’ll see how it goes.Redesigning engine bay would be, lengthy. The closest option would be Russian engine, as EU doesnt seem to have anything in class of F-110 family. Variant of AL-31FN, similar as used in early J-10 and J-20 can be used, as those are the closest Russia have for F-110, and its engine accessory box are in bottom instead of top similar as F-110 family.
izd.177
Afterburning thrust of 14,500 kgf, maximum 9,000 kgf, cruising fuel consumption of 0.77 kg/kgf*h
@Radonislav @Deino Why the laughs? I wasn't sarcastic.For a future Block-XX Kaan without the need for WVR capability, those cavities can hold another 6000 liters of fuel easily.
Are those in series production yet?izd.177
Afterburning thrust of 14,500 kgf, maximum 9,000 kgf, cruising fuel consumption of 0.77 kg/kgf*h
They are not and never were. WS-15 is clean sheet design and WS-10s were far more influenced by CFM-56 cores basically F101Are those in series production yet?
Honestly, the biggest problem is the lack of non-US sources for 15ton-thrust engines.
Yes, Russia theoretically makes them, but sanctions and the traditional Russia-Turkey antagonism makes them a non-starter.
China may make them, but then you're tying yourself to China geopolitically. Or may be running into legal cases from Russia, if the core designs are still based off the Russian IP (I'm not clear on that).
It'd be doable, I think. though you'd need the Kaan to be built around the same accessory layout as the engines used in F-16s.How feasible is it to modify F-110 from existing stocks for F-16s for this purpose?
Biggest hurdle will probably be political (US cutting off support due to user agreement violation) but if things get very dire I think it is doable as a last resort.It'd be doable, I think. though you'd need the Kaan to be built around the same accessory layout as the engines used in F-16s.
I think it could be snuck through under the prototype-and-testing clauses currently in use for Kaan.Biggest hurdle will probably be political (US cutting off support due to user agreement violation) but if things get very dire I think it is doable as a last resort.