KaF-35
This article is incomplete because it is pending further input from participants, or it is a work-in-progress by one author. Please comment on this article's talk page to share your input, comments and questions. Note: To contribute to this article, you may need to seek help from the author(s) of this page. |
KaF-35 | |
---|---|
File:KaF-35.jpg | |
General information | |
Type | Fighter aircraft |
Manufacturer | NAT Kaminski |
Designer | |
Status | Active |
History | |
Manufactured | 1983 - present |
Introduction date | 1983 (KaF-37 introduced in 2001) |
The Kaminski KaF-35 Orao (Serbian:"Орао", "Eagle") is a fourth generation fighter aircraft designed in Nikolia. It has been developed by the Kaminski design bureau along with KaF-40 as an air superiority fighter to counter the modern aircraft which were the products of the arms race between GHawkins and the Blackhelm Confederacy.
While originally oriented towards combat against any enemy aircraft, some of the KaF-35's were modernised and furnished to multirole fighters capable of performing different kinds of tasks, both air-to-air and air-to-ground missions. There are two main variants of the aircraft, naval version, the KaF-35K and the heavily modernised version, KaF-37.
Development
In the late 1960s during the arms race, when the relations between GHawkins and the Blackhelm Confederacy were the coldest, the Nikolian Ministry of Defense saw that the existing KaF-32 aircraft could not compete with newer foreign aircraft. The ministry sent its new tactical and technological requirements to Kaminski.
Tactical and technological requirements
Users
- Hutanjian Air Force - Hutajian Air Force has updated 32 of their MiG-29M's into KaF-37 standard.
- Royal Scottopian Air Force - Royal Scottopian Air Force uses 125 KaF-37's produced in Scottopian Isles under license renamed to SAF-25 Typhoon.
- New Pangus Air Force - the New Pangus Air Force currently operates 180 KaF-35's, refurbished from Nikolia, and is the nation's main fighter aircraft, accounting for roughly half of its aircraft.