TheKAI KT-1 Woongbi(Hangul:KT-1 웅비) is a South Korean single-engined turboprop, basic training aircraft. It was jointly developed byKorea Aerospace Industries(KAI) and theAgency for Defence Development(ADD).

KT-1 Woongbi
KT-1 during a demonstration
General information
TypeBasic trainerand lightattack aircraft
National originSouth Korea
ManufacturerKorea Aerospace Industries
Designer
StatusIn service
Primary usersRepublic of Korea Air Force
Number built186
History
Manufactured1999–present
Introduction date2000
First flightNovember 1991

Development

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Origins

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The origins of the KT-1 can be found within theKTXprogramme, which had been launched during 1988 on behalf of theRepublic of Korea Air Force(ROKAF). The programme, which sought to develop an indigenously designed trainer aircraft, was a joint effort between aircraft manufacturerKorea Aerospace Industries(KAI) and government bodyAgency for Defence Development(ADD); the latter was responsible for overseeing the project, while the former performed the detailed design work as well as the majority of manufacturing activity.[1]

A series of nine prototypes were constructed, the first being complete during June 1991. During 1995, the aircraft was officially named 'Woongbi'. In 1998, it was announced that the final test flight had been performed.

Further development

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During 2002, KAI revealed that they were working on the production of an upgraded and armed version of the KT-1 basic trainer.[2]This variant, designatedKO-1,was intended to be used in theforward air controlandcounter-insurgency(COIN) roles. Development was conducted in cooperation with theAgency for Defence Development(ADD) and had been undertaken in response to an existing RKAF requirement for 20-40 aircraft.[2]According to a KAI representative, the KO-1 is ideally suited fordrug interdictionoperations and that the company was pitching the variant towards countries inLatin America.[3]

On 8 March 2006, a KAI spokesperson announced that the company intended to export more than 150 improved versions of the KT-1 to various countries across bothCentral AmericaandSoutheast Asia.During 2005, KAI had begun marketing the KT-1 as one element of an integrated training package, having paired it with their newerjet-poweredKAI T-50 Golden Eagletrainer.[4]The company also stated that it believes a partnership withAmericanaerospacecompanyLockheed Martinshall encourage confidence in its training platforms.[5]

Design

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The KT-1 can be equipped with either ananalogor'glass' cockpitconfiguration.[6]Some variants feature additional avionics and systems, such as anight vision goggles(NVG)-compatible cockpit,head-up display(HUD),multi-function displays(MFD),GPS/inertial navigationsystem, mission computer, onboardoxygengeneration system, a vapour-cycleenvironmental control systemandhands-on-throttle-and-stick(HOTAS)-compatible controls.[2]Avionics are provided by various foreign companies, includingElbit,Flight VisionandThales.[6][7][8]

For light attack missions, the aircraft can carry various types ofguns,bombs,rocketsandmissilesdependent upon customer requirements. Other equipment can include external fuel tanks, a centrally mountedforward-looking infrared(FLIR) sensor and alaserrange finder.[2][6]

Operational history

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ROKAF 8th Fighter Wing KA-1

TheRepublic of Korea Air Force(ROKAF) is the primary customer for the type. During 2000, the first KT-1 Woongbi was handed over to the ROKAF; deliveries had originally been scheduled to commence two years earlier.[9]By the end of that year, eight aircraft had been delivered to the service; reportedly, a rate of production of two aircraft per month had been achieved by this point.[10]By November 2003, the assembly line was reportedly about to be put on hold following the completion of the ROKAF's order; however, KAI aimed to restart production within two-three years based upon follow-on orders.[11][12]However, a follow-on ROKAF order for 20 aircraft was received that same month.[13]The majority of the ROKAF's fleet can be armed with bothgun podsandrockets,which are intended to be used for weapons training.[14]

One of the first export customers for the KT-1 wasIndonesia.During early 2001, Indonesia exchanged 8CASA/IPTN CN-235transport aircraft for 12 KT-1 trainers.[15][16]On 25 April 2003, the first KT-1 was delivered to Indonesia, a move which represented the first Korean aircraft export; commenting at the time, KAI stated that it was presently in negotiations for a 13-trainer follow-on order.[17]During early 2011, reported emerged that Indonesia was interested in further acquisitions, but South Korean officials denied that any further barter deals had been agreed.[15]During November 2018, three additional KT-1B aircraft were ordered for theIndonesian Air Force(IDAF).[18]

In addition to its use as a basic trainer, theIndonesian Air Forcehave equipped theirJupiter Aerobatic Teamwith the KT-1. On 15 March 2015, a serious midair collision occurred during a practice session for Malaysia'sLangkawi International Maritime and Aerospace Exhibition.Initial reports stated that all four pilots survived the collision.[19][20]

During June 2007, South Korea andTurkeysuccessfully negotiated a500 billion (equivalent to ₩626.09 billion orUS$553.86 million in 2017)[21]contract for 40 (+15) KT-1s; this exchange involved the modular armor technology of theK2 Black Panthermain battle tank(MBT), which Turkey hopes to use upon its own future indigenousAtlayMBT.[22][23]The last of these aircraft, which were designatedKT-1Tand jointly manufactured by the two nations, was delivered during late 2012.[24]During April 2015, it was announced that Turkey would procure a further 15 KT-1Ts as a stop-gap measure until development of its indigenousTAI Hürkuştrainer aircraft could be completed.[25][26]

On 6 November 2012, KAI and thePeruvian Air Forcesigned a contract for 20 KT-1Ps, comprising ten KT and ten KA versions as well as someoffsetandtechnology transferarrangements, for an approximate amount of US$208 million. KAI was to provide the first four aircraft by the end of 2014, while the remainder were to be locally assembled by SEMAN, the maintenance air wing of the Peruvian Air Force.[27][28]The type shall progressively replace the aging fleets ofAermacchi MB-339andEmbraer EMB 312 Tucanoaircraft. During April 2015, the first locally manufactured KT-1P was delivered to the Peruvian Air Force.[29]

During November 2018,Spainproposed abarterdeal to South Korea'sDefense Acquisition Program Administration(DAPA) involving the KT-1 and other Korean aircraft, potentially involving up to 30 planes, which Spain wished to exchange for up to 6Airbus A400M Atlastransport planes. If completed, this deal would be first export of the KT-1 to aEuropean Unioncountry.[30]

Variants

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KT-1 Woongbi on display at theWar Memorial of Korea
KTX-1 Yeo-myung
Prototype primary trainer each with a different engine fitted, six built.[31]KTX-1 turboprop trainer in 1988, and the first prototype flew in 1991. The first two prototypes were powered by the 550-shp. Pratt & Whitney Canada PT6A-25A turboprop.
KT-1
KT-1 is the basic trainer of theROKAF.Compared to the KTX-1 prototype, the KT-1 is bigger, heavier, the tail surfaces are relocated and it has a more powerful P&W Canada PT6A-62.(950-shp)[32]
KA-1 atOsan Air Base,2010.
KA-1
An armed advanced trainer with light-attack and forward air control capabilities. Several new features unique to the KA-1 are a head-up display and up-front control panel, MFD panels, and five hardpoints, two under each wing and one under the fuselage. Thehardpointsmay be equipped withrocket launchers,gun podsorAIM-9 Sidewindermissiles.
KT-1B
Indonesian Air Force KT-1B Woongbi
Export version for Indonesia. Main differences are in terms of avionics, some of which have been excluded or have hadcommercial off-the-shelf(COTS) alternatives used instead.[6]
KT-1C
Improved, armed export version equipped with a centrelineforward looking infraredpod. The KT-1C may also be equipped with a 12.7 mmgun pod,chaffes,flares,training missiles,rocketsorunguided bombs.
KT-1T
Export version for Turkey.
KT-1P
Export version for Peru.
KA-1P
Armed export version for Peru.
KA-1S
Armed export version for Senegal.

Operators

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Peruvian Air ForceKAI KA-1P
Turkish Air ForceKAI KT-1 Woongbi
Indonesia
Republic of Korea
Peru
Senegal
Turkey

Accidents

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On 13 November 2003 aKAI KT-1crashed shortly after takeoff from theSacheon Air Force,the instructor ejected safely while the trainee was killed.[36]

On 9 April 2021, a KT-1 trainer aircraft had crashed to theAegean Sea.Both pilots were recovered by search and rescue teams tasked by theTurkish Air Force.While one of the pilots had ejected himself, the remaining pilot managed to crash-land the KT-1 and preserved the structural integrity of the aircraft.[37][38]

On 1 April 2022, four ROKAF pilots were killed after a pair of KT-1s crashed into each other over a mountain northeast ofSacheon.[39]

On 26 December 2022, a KA-1 crashed soon after takeoff after being dispatched in response to North Korean drones violating South Korean airspace. The crew escaped unharmed.[40]

Specifications (KT-1)

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Data fromKorea Aerospace Industries[41]andJane's All The World's Aircraft 2004–2005[42]

General characteristics

  • Crew:2
  • Length:10.3 m (33 ft 10 in)
  • Wingspan:10.6 m (34 ft 9 in)
  • Height:3.7 m (12 ft 2 in)
  • Wing area:16.01 m2(172.3 sq ft)
  • Aspect ratio:7
  • Airfoil:root:NACA 63-218;tip:NACA 63-212
  • Empty weight:1,910 kg (4,211 lb)
  • Gross weight:2,540 kg (5,600 lb)
  • Maximum fuel weight:408 kg (899 lb)
  • Max takeoff weight:3,311 kg (7,300 lb) (and Maximum Landing Weight)with external stores
3,205 kg (7,066 lb) training/utility
2,540 kg (5,600 lb) aerobatic
  • Fuel capacity:551 L (146 US gal; 121 imp gal) in two wing tanks with provision for two 189 L (50 US gal; 42 imp gal) drop-tanks on the inboard pylons
  • Powerplant:1 ×Pratt & Whitney Canada PT6A-62turbopropengine, 708.4 kW (950.0 hp)
  • Propellers:4-bladedHartzellHC-E4N-2/E9512CB-1, 2.44 m (8 ft 0 in) diameter constant-speed fully feathering reversible propeller

Performance

  • Maximum speed:644 km/h (400 mph, 348 kn) at 4,570 m (14,993 ft)
  • Stall speed:132 km/h (82 mph, 71 kn) flaps down
  • Never exceed speed:648 km/h (403 mph, 350 kn)
  • Range:1,333 km (828 mi, 720 nmi) at 7,620 m (25,000 ft) with max internal fuel (30 minutes reserve)
  • Ferry range:2,070 km (1,290 mi, 1,120 nmi) at 6,100 m (20,013 ft) with max internal and external fuel (30 minutes reserve)
  • Endurance:<4 hours at 6,100 m (20,013 ft) with max internal fuel (30 minutes reserve)
  • Service ceiling:11,580 m (37,990 ft)
  • g limits:+7-3.5 (aerobatic, clean)
+4.5-2.3 (with external stores)
  • Rate of climb:17.78 m/s (3,500 ft/min) at sea level, clean
  • Wing loading:206.8 kg/m2(42.4 lb/sq ft) with external stores
200.2 kg/m2(41 lb/sq ft) training/utility
158.7 kg/m2(33 lb/sq ft) aerobatic
  • Power/mass:0.2137 kW/kg (0.1300 hp/lb)with external stores
0.221 kW/kg (0.134 hp/lb) training/utility
0.2785 kW/kg (0.1694 hp/lb) aerobatic

Armament

  • provision for practice bomb carriers on four underwing pylons

See also

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Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

References

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Citations

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  1. ^Doyle, Andrew."State body to lead South Korean helicopter effort."Archived2019-06-17 at theWayback MachineFlight International,13 August 2002.
  2. ^abcd"KAI arms trainer for new role."Archived2019-06-17 at theWayback MachineFlight International,5 March 2002.
  3. ^Sobie, Brendan."KAI offers upgraded versions of KT-1 in bid to extend production."Archived2019-06-17 at theWayback MachineFlight International,25 April 2006.
  4. ^"Italian challenge."Archived2019-06-17 at theWayback MachineFlight International,28 June 2005.
  5. ^2005-10-11T00:00:00+01:00."Golden moment".Flight Global.Retrieved2024-04-09.{{cite web}}:CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  6. ^abcdDoyle, Andrew."Avionics deal arms KT-1 for export."Archived2019-06-17 at theWayback MachineFlight International,28 January 2003.
  7. ^Warwick, Graham."KT-1 deal bolsters CMC's upgrade market position."Archived2019-06-17 at theWayback MachineFlight International,4 February 2003.
  8. ^"Asian Aerospace 2004 - KAI picks ISIS."Archived2019-06-17 at theWayback MachineFlight International,2 March 2004.
  9. ^Doyle, Andrew."KAI Aims High."Archived2015-12-08 at theWayback MachineFlight International,9 October 2001.
  10. ^"KAI closes on Indonesian KT-1 trainer order."Archived2019-06-17 at theWayback MachineFlight International,14 November 2000.
  11. ^Sobie, Brendan and Nicholas Ionides."United ambition."Archived2019-06-17 at theWayback MachineFlight International,4 November 2003.
  12. ^Sobie, Brendan."KAI aims to drum up KO-1 orders to prolong KT-1 line."Archived2019-06-17 at theWayback MachineFlight International,4 November 2003.
  13. ^"Korean Air Show - Air force gives cautious approval to buy K0-1s."Archived2019-06-17 at theWayback MachineFlight International,11 November 2003.
  14. ^"KAI targets region for new trainer exports."Archived2019-06-17 at theWayback MachineFlight International,26 February 2002.
  15. ^ab"Seoul: No barter deal for T-50 jet trainer."Archived2019-06-17 at theWayback Machinespacewar,21 April 2011.
  16. ^"KT-1 trainer deal is a first for South Korea."Archived2019-06-17 at theWayback MachineFlight International,6 March 2001.
  17. ^Sobie, Brendan."South Korea exports first military aircraft."Archived2019-06-17 at theWayback MachineFlight International,6 May 2003.
  18. ^Grevatt, Jon (9 November 2018)."Indo Defence 2018: KAI wins Indonesian air force deals".IHS Jane's 360.Jakarta.Archivedfrom the original on 2018-11-10.Retrieved10 November2018.
  19. ^Rogoway, Tyler (15 March 2015)."Horrific Midair Collision During Air Show And Arms Expo In Malaysia".foxtrot Alpha.Archivedfrom the original on 2015-03-16.Retrieved2015-03-16.
  20. ^Horswell, Ian."Planes collide and crash in practice for Langkawi International Maritime and Aerospace Exhibition, Malaysia."Archived2019-06-17 at theWayback MachineNews Corp Australia Network,16 March 2015.
  21. ^1906 to 1911:Williamson J.(1999),Nominal Wage, Cost of Living, Real Wage and Land Rent Data for Korea 1906-19391912 to 1939:Mizoguchi, T. (1972).Consumer Prices and Real Wages in Taiwan and Korea Under Japanese Rule.Hitotsubashi Journal of Economics, 13(1), 40-56. Retrieved May 21, 2021. Afterwards, consumer price index fromStatistics Korea.Consumer Price Index by year.Retrieved 3 April 2018
  22. ^"Daily News in English About Korea".Digital Chosunilbo. 5 May 2008. Archived fromthe originalon 5 May 2008.
  23. ^Sung-ki, Jung."S. Korea Signs Trainer Deal With Turkey."Korea Times,8 June 2007.
  24. ^"Turkey set to complete Korea trainer plane program."Archived2019-06-17 at theWayback MachineHurriyet Daily News,17 September 2012.
  25. ^Bekdil, Burak Ege."Turkey Confirms Trainer Deal with South Korea."Defense News,12 April 2015.
  26. ^Bekdil, Burak."Turkey looks to speed up trainer aircraft initiatives."Archived2019-06-17 at theWayback MachineHurriyet Daily News,7 April 2015.
  27. ^ab"Korea to export KT-1 trainers to Peru".The Korea Herald.7 November 2012.Archivedfrom the original on 8 November 2012.Retrieved8 November2012.
  28. ^"Peru receives first Korean-made pilot trainer planes."Archived2019-06-17 at theWayback MachineUPI,12 November 2014.
  29. ^Hoyle, Craig."Peru accepts first locally-assembled KT-1P trainer."Archived2019-06-17 at theWayback MachineFlight International,29 April 2015.
  30. ^"Korea, Spain to negotiate aircraft swap contract."Archived2018-12-27 at theWayback MachineKorea Herald,12 November 2018.
  31. ^Taylor 1996, pp. 58-59.
  32. ^"Directory: military aircraft."Archived2014-07-26 at theWayback MachineFlight Global,25 May 2004. Retrieved: 24 July 2014.
  33. ^"KAI starts peruvian production of KT-1 / KA-1".Archived fromthe originalon 2016-09-24.Retrieved2016-09-24.
  34. ^Martin, Guy (2017-04-11)."Senegal parades new military hardware - defenceWeb".defenceweb.co.za.Archivedfrom the original on 2018-01-15.Retrieved2017-06-13.
  35. ^"Turkish air force to receive first KT-1 trainers."Archived2013-03-26 at theWayback MachineFlight Global,27 October 2010. Retrieved: 28 May 2012.
  36. ^"Chronological Listing of South Korean Losses & Ejections".Ejection-history.org.uk. Archived fromthe originalon 4 June 2012.Retrieved23 June2013.
  37. ^"Pilots rescued after aircraft crashes off Turkey's Aegean coast".Daily Sabah.2021-04-09.Retrieved2021-04-12.
  38. ^"Turkish military trainer jet crashes into Aegean sea, 2 pilots rescued - Xinhua | English.news.cn".xinhuanet.Retrieved2021-04-12.
  39. ^"South Korean air force planes collide in midair".Deutsche Welle.2022-04-01.Retrieved2022-04-01.
  40. ^"North Korean drone reaches north of Seoul".BBC NEWS.2022-12-26.
  41. ^"KT-1 기본훈련기".Korea Aerospace Industries.Archived fromthe originalon 5 August 2024.Retrieved5 August2024.
  42. ^Jackson, Paul, ed. (2005).Jane's all the World's Aircraft 2004-05(95th ed.). London: Jane's Publishing Group. pp. 339–342.ISBN0-7106-2614-2.

Bibliography

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