X
    Categories: 2022

Turkey and Ukraine to coproduce TB2 drones

DefenseNews


By Burak Ege Bekdil
Feb. 4, 2022

ANKARA, Turkey — NATO member Turkey and its Black Sea ally Ukraine
have agreed to coproduce an increasingly popular Turkish-made drone at
a production site in Ukraine.

A top Ukrainian official said Feb. 3 that the two countries would sign
a coproduction agreement which would be ratified by parliaments in
Turkey and Ukraine.

Ukrainian Defence Minister Olesii Reznikov told reporters in Kyiv that
the coproduction compound would also include a training center where
Ukrainian pilots would be trained.

In 2019, Baykar Makina, a privately owned Turkish drone maker, won a
contract to sell six Bayraktar TB2 UAVs to Ukraine. The $69 million
contract also involved the sale of ammunition for the armed version of
the aircraft.

In September, the Ukrainian government announced that it was planning
to buy 24 more Turkish unmanned combat aerial vehicles in the coming
months.

Use of the TB2 by Ukrainian forces against Russian-backed separatists
in eastern Ukraine has irked Moscow. As U.S. officials claimed to have
intelligence of Russian officials working on a staged video of
Ukrainian forces attacking Russians as a pretext for war, the
Washington Post cited an unnamed U.S. government official on Friday
saying a TB2 drone could be pictured in such a film to implicate NATO.

The Bayraktar TB2 is a medium-altitude, long-range tactical UAV
system. It was developed by Kale-Baykar, a joint venture of Baykar
Makina and the Kale Group. The UAV operates as a platform for
conducting reconnaissance and intelligence missions.

Reznikov said that the aircraft to be coproduced would be dubbed the
Turkish-Ukrainian Bayraktar.

He said the drone would be powered by a Ukrainian engine. In earlier
talks Turkish sources said that the engine would be supplied by the
Ukrainian producer Motor Sich.

Bayraktar TB2 features a monocoque design and integrates an inverse
V-tail structure. The fuselage is made of carbon fiber, Kevlar and
hybrid composites, whereas the joint segments constitute precision
computer numerical control (CNC) machined aluminum parts.

Each Bayraktar TB2 system consists of six aerial vehicles, two ground
control stations, three ground data terminals, two remote video
terminals and ground-support equipment.

The Bayraktar TB2′s maximum payload exceeds 55 kilograms. The standard
payload configuration includes an electro-optical camera module, an
infrared camera module, a laser designator, a laser range finder and a
laser pointer.

Ukraine was the first export market for the TB2, with the sale of six
systems in a $69 million contract in 2019. Baykar has also won
contracts to sell batches of the TB2 to Qatar, Azerbaijan and Poland.


 

Greg Madatian: