Anacom Aerospace AC-82

Jump to navigation Jump to search
AC-82
IŁ-102 NTW 3 95 1.jpg
AC-82
Role Ground-attack aircraft
National origin  Orun Redisus
Manufacturer Anacom Aerospace
Designer Regerus Felius
First flight 30 August 1981
Introduction 1982
Status Active
Primary user  Orun Redisus
Produced 1981-1993
Number built 89

The Anacom Aerospace AC-82 is a ground-attack aircraft designed for close air support (or CAS) developed in the Empire of Tarsas. It first flew in 1981 and was approved for production in 1982. The aircraft currently still serves in the Air Legion and represents the backbone of the Tarsan close air support fleet.

Development

Design

Variants

  • XAC-82 - Initial prototype aircraft. Successfully survived the testing stage and secured production for the design. '
  • AC-82A - First variant that entered production in 1982 at the Anacom-Alderia Aircraft Factory in XXX.
    • AC-82At - Variant that mirrored the 82A in all but crew. A second seat was added so it could serve as a trainer variant.
  • AC-82B - Introduced in 1988 as a more advanced base model. The B included a slight increase in reliability and service life of the engines as well as a slightly greater payload.
  • AC-82C - Final variant introduced in 1991 to build upon prior improvements. The frame received additional reinforcement around the cockpit and wings to permit the aircraft to be able to take greater damage and remain in the air.
  • AC-82S - Service life extension introduced in 2010 and to be retrofitted to 40 aircraft. The SLE includes a significant upgrade to avionics capability and places the avionics on par with far newer counterparts. All upgraded aircraft with worn engines will receive a comprehensive rebuild in order to extend service life to at least 2030.
    • AC-82St - Training variant of the S introduced in 2013 to familiarize pilots with S models. 10 aircraft are to be converted.

Operational History

Operators

Specifications

General characteristics

Performance

Armament

  • Guns:
    Unguided rocket pods aboard an aircraft
  • 1 × 30mm Viper cannon externally mounted under fuselage
  • 1 × 20 mm Reaper cannon in remotely controlled tail turret
  • Bombs: 7,200 kg (15,873 lb) external stores in six wing bomb bays and eight external pylons (six under wing and two under fuselage)
    Under-wing bomb bays of an AC-82