Turkish Govt Approves First Unmanned Helicopter Project Approves First Unmanned Helicopter Project

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The Turkish government will assist the country’s maiden unmanned helicopter project, the Alpin, its manufacturer Titra reported.

Ankara has put the project on its “regional priority investment list,” ensuring subsidies and incentives, the Ankara-based firm added.

The government has promised to buy the dual-use platform following field trials, and could export it to friendly countries once it is battle-proven, Defense News quoted a procurement official as saying.

Based on Italian Manned Chopper

The aircraft’s development goes back to 2019 when Titra signed an agreement with the US-based drone “specialist” UAVOS to turn the manned Heli-Sport CH-7 ultralight Italian chopper into an unmanned helicopter with military and civilian usages, including rescue missions.

Titra is planning to produce 10 aircraft annually.

Features

The 340-kilogram (750 pounds) aircraft is 7 meters (23 feet) long, 1.5 meters (5 feet) wide and 2.35 meters (7.70 feet) in height. 

Its rotor has a diameter of 6.28 meters (20.6 feet) and a maximum payload capacity of 200 kilograms (441 pounds), including fuel.

The Alpine is powered by a Rotax 914 UL engine, generating an output of 115 horsepower.

Multiple Payloads

The rotorcraft can cruise at a maximum speed of 160 kilometers (100 miles) per hour with a range of up to 840 kilometers (522 miles) and 5,000 meters (16,404 feet) altitude. It can operate for seven hours at a stretch and two hours fully loaded.

The Alpine can carry multiple payloads, including “hyper-spectral, synthetic aperture radar and electro-optical/infrared cameras.”

It can transmit real-time information to operators, including in remote areas, through a wideband satellite communication channel.

SOURCE: thedefensepost.com

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