Sozusagen brühwarm, gestern fertig geworden. Sieht aus wie eine IFA Pucará, ist aber keine... Auch hier darf man raten, wer die Eltern sind.
1:72 ASTA A-31 Mk. 2 'Baza', aircraft A31-06 of 79 Squadron, Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF); Williamtown AB, Australia, late 2007 (Whif/kitbashing) by
dizzyfugu, on Flickr
Some background:The ASTA (Aerospace Technologies of Australia, formerly Government Aircraft Factories) Baza development was started in 1995 when the Royal Australian Air Force was searching for a two-seat training aircraft that would allow the transition from initial training on piston-engined aircraft to jets, and could also be used for weapon training and CAS/reconnaissance duties.
ASTA responded with a low-wing two-turboprop-engined all-metal monoplane with retractable landing gear, capable of operating from unprepared strips when operationally required. The aircraft, internally coded “A-31”, was of conventional, all-metal (mainly duralumin) construction. The unswept cantilever wings have 3° of dihedral and are fitted with slotted trailing-edge flaps.
1:72 ASTA A-31 Mk. 2 'Baza', aircraft A31-06 of 79 Squadron, Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF); Williamtown AB, Australia, late 2007 (Whif/kitbashing) by dizzyfugu, on Flickr
1:72 ASTA A-31 Mk. 2 'Baza', aircraft A31-06 of 79 Squadron, Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF); Williamtown AB, Australia, late 2007 (Whif/kitbashing) by dizzyfugu, on Flickr
The A-31 had a tandem cockpit arrangement; the crew of two was seated under the upward opening clamshell canopy on Martin-Baker Mk 6AP6A zero/zero ejection seats and were provided with dual controls.
Armor plating was fitted to protect the crew and engines from hostile ground fire. The aircraft was powered by a pair of Garrett TPE 331 engines, driving sets of three-bladed propellers which were also capable of being used as air brakes.
The A-31 was designed for operations from short, rough airstrips.[The retractable tricycle landing gear, with a single nose wheel and twin main wheels retracting into the engine nacelles, is therefore fitted with low pressure tires to suit operations on rough ground, while the undercarriage legs are tall to give good clearance for underslung weapon loads. The undercarriage, flaps and brakes are operated hydraulically, with no pneumatic systems.
Two JATO rockets can be fitted under the fuselage to allow extra-short take-off.
Fuel is fed from two fuselage tanks of combined capacity of 800 L (180 imp gal; 210 US gal) and two self-sealing tanks of 460 L (100 imp gal; 120 US gal) in the wings.
1:72 ASTA A-31 Mk. 2 'Baza', aircraft A31-06 of 79 Squadron, Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF); Williamtown AB, Australia, late 2007 (Whif/kitbashing) by dizzyfugu, on Flickr
1:72 ASTA A-31 Mk. 2 'Baza', aircraft A31-06 of 79 Squadron, Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF); Williamtown AB, Australia, late 2007 (Whif/kitbashing) by dizzyfugu, on Flickr
Fixed armament of the A-31 consisted of two 30mm Aden cannons mounted under the cockpits with 200 rounds each. A total of nine hardpoints were fitted for the carriage of external stores such as bombs, rockets or external fuel tanks, with one of 1,000 kg (2,200 lb) capacity mounted under the fuselage and the remaining two pairs of 500 kg (1,100 lb) capacity beneath the wing roots and wings inside of the engine nacelles, and two more pairs of hardpoints outside of the engines for another 500 kg and 227 kg, respectively. Total external weapons load was limited to 6,800 lb (3,085 kg) of weapons, though.
Onboard armaments were aimed by a simple reflector sight, since no all weather/night capabilities were called for – even though provisions were made that external sensors could be carried (e. g. a TISEO or a PAVE Spike pod).
Severe competition arose through the BAe Hawk, though: the Royal Australian Air Force ordered 33 Hawk 127 Lead-in Fighters (LIFs) in June 1997, 12 of which were produced in the UK and 21 in Australia – and this procurement severely hampered the A-31’s progress. The initial plan to build 66 aircraft for domestic use, with prospects for export, e. g. to Sri Lanka, Indonesia or Turkey, was cut down to a mere 32 aircraft which were to be used in conjunction with the Australian Army in the FAC role and against mobile ground targets.
1:72 ASTA A-31 Mk. 2 'Baza', aircraft A31-06 of 79 Squadron, Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF); Williamtown AB, Australia, late 2007 (Whif/kitbashing) by dizzyfugu, on Flickr
1:72 ASTA A-31 Mk. 2 'Baza', aircraft A31-06 of 79 Squadron, Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF); Williamtown AB, Australia, late 2007 (Whif/kitbashing) by dizzyfugu, on Flickr
This extended role required an upgrade with additional avionics, an optional forward looking infrared (FLIR) sensor and a laser ranger in an extended nose section, which lead to the Mk. II configuration - effectively, only five machines were produced as Mk.I types, and they were updated to Mk. II configuration even before delivery to the RAAF in August 1999.
Since then, the ASTA A-31 has been used in concunction with RAAF's Pilatus PC-9 and BAe Hawk Mk. 127 trainers. Beyond educational duties the type is also employed for Fleet support to Navy operations and for close air support to Army operations.
1:72 ASTA A-31 Mk. 2 'Baza', aircraft A31-06 of 79 Squadron, Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF); Williamtown AB, Australia, late 2007 (Whif/kitbashing) by dizzyfugu, on Flickr
The 'Baza' (christened by a small sized bird of prey found in the forests of South Asia and Southeast Asia) has even seen serious military duty and already fired in anger: since August 2007, a detachment of No. 114 Mobile Control and Reporting Unit RAAF has been on active service at Kandahar Airfield in southern Afghanistan, and a constant detachment of six A-31's from RAAF 76 Suqadron has been assigned to armed reconnaissance and protection of approximately 75 personnel deployed with the AN/TPS-77 radar, assigned the responsibility to co-ordinate coalition air operations.General characteristics Crew: 2
Length (incl. Pitot): 14.69 m (48 ft 1 ½ in)
Wingspan: 14.97 m (49 ft)
Height: 3, 75 m (12 ft 3 in)
Wing area: 30.30 m2 (326.1 sq ft)
Aspect ratio: 6.9:1
Airfoil: NACA 642A215 at root, NACA641 at tip
Empty weight: 4,020 kg (8,863 lb)
Max takeoff weight: 6,800 kg (14,991 lb)
Internal fuel capacity: 1,280 L (280 imp gal; 340 US gal)
Powerplant: 2 × Garrett TPE 331-11U-601G turboprop engines, 820 kW (1.100 hp) each
Performance Maximum speed: 515 km/h (311 mph; 270 kn) at 4.570 m (15.000 ft)
Cruising speed: 430 km/h (267 mph; 232 kn) at 2.500 m (8.200 ft)
Stall speed: 143 km/h (89 mph; 77 kn) (flaps and undercarriage down)
Never exceed speed: 750 km/h (466 mph; 405 kn)
Range:1.611 km (1.000 mi; 868 nmi), clean and internal fuel only
Ferry range: 3,710 km (2,305 mi; 2,003 nmi) max internal and external fuel
Service ceiling: 10,000 m (32,808 ft)
g limits: +6/-3 g
Rate of climb: 6.5 m/s (1.276 ft/min)
Armament 2× 30 mm ADEN cannons in the lower nose
Up to 6,800 lb (3,085 kg) of weapons on nine external hardpoints
1:72 ASTA A-31 Mk. 2 'Baza', aircraft A31-06 of 79 Squadron, Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF); Williamtown AB, Australia, late 2007 (Whif/kitbashing) by
dizzyfugu, on Flickr
1:72 ASTA A-31 Mk. 2 'Baza', aircraft A31-06 of 79 Squadron, Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF); Williamtown AB, Australia, late 2007 (Whif/kitbashing) by
dizzyfugu, on Flickr
1:72 ASTA A-31 Mk. 2 'Baza', aircraft A31-06 of 79 Squadron, Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF); Williamtown AB, Australia, late 2007 (Whif/kitbashing) by
dizzyfugu, on Flickr