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Lockheed Martin and Korea develop new Trainer T-50 Golden Eagle
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South Korea Rolls Out First T-50 Supersonic Trainer. By AviationNow.com Staff 01-Nov-2001 10:56 AM U.S. EST
The first T-50 Golden Eagle aircraft -- an advanced, supersonic trainer designed to prepare student pilots to fly such next-generation military aircraft as the Joint Strike Fighter -- was rolled out Oct. 31 in Sachon,South Korea. The T-50 (depicted in image) was developed by Korea Aerospace Industries (KAI) with help from Lockheed Martin Aeronautics of Fort Worth, Texas, and was completed in mid-September, 100 days ahead of schedule. "The T-50 is the first supersonic jet aircraft developed by our rapidly growing aerospace industry," South Korean President Kim Dae-jung said at the ceremony at the KAI plant. "This aircraft is expected to not only serve the advanced training needs of the Korean Air Force, but also a number of other major air forces around the world. We fully expect to be an exporter of advanced aerospace products.'' Korean officials expect the T-50 to be the mainstay of KAI's production operations for the next 10 years or more. KAI is the prime contractor for the T-50, paying 70% of the aircraft's $2 billion development program costs. Lockheed Martin is the principal subcontractor, paying 30%, and is responsible for general technical consulting, the wing, avionics and the electronic flight control system. The T-50 that was rolled out is the first full-scale development aircraft and is scheduled for its first flight in mid-2002. In all, four such aircraft will be test flown through 2005 with the first production T-50 expected in late 2005. South Korea intends to acquire 94 of the advanced trainers and the derivative A-50 fighter lead-in trainer/light combat aircraft. With a top speed of Mach 1.5 and a range of 1,400 nautical miles, the T-50 will have the maneuverability, endurance and systems to prepare future pilots to fly current and next-generation fighters like advanced F-16s, the F-22 and the Joint Strike Fighter. The T-50 will replace South Korea's aging T-38 trainers and TF-5B aircraft. Features on the T-50 include relaxed static stability, digital fly-by-wire flight control, side-stick controller, selectable flight control performance, triple redundant electrical system, on-board oxygen generation system and modern cockpit (head-up display,color multifunction displays, hands-on-stick and throttle). The A-50 includes integrated armament/fire control avionics. Analysts say the world market for jet trainer and light attack aircraft could reach 3,300 aircraft, with the T-50 expected to capture up to 25% of that. |
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T-50
Looks like a F-18 got up the tail pipe from a slick F-16....
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NEW JETTT????
Let's see, looks like an F-5 Nose and Canopy, F-18 Strakes and F-16 tail. Pretty Original. It looks like it would make a nice Flying scale jet for R.C.
Turbulence |
T-50 3-Views?
I've been trying to get a set of 3-views through Pat Fernandez' bro who works for Lock-Mart. If anybody lurking out there who has or can obtain 3-views ... that would be awesome! The jet appears to be a natural for an RC scale project.
Mike |
T-50
It's more like an 80% scale F-16 with a bifurcated inlet.
Another neat model project that's similar to this one is the Ching Kuo, the Indigenous Defense Fighter (IDF) that Ft. Worth did with Taiwan a few years ago. Very similar, but a twin design and inlets that are even more like an F-18A's. |
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