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The Owj (Persian: اوج, Apex) is an Iranian advanced turbojet engine developed by the Iran Aviation Industries Organization (IAIO). It is a reverse-engineered and enhanced version of the General Electric J85, showcasing Iran's ability to develop cutting-edge technology and its self-sufficiency in producing high-performance military engines, and demonstrating its capability to create advanced ...
The engine is a copy of the French Microturbo TRI 60 engine and is used in Noor anti-ship cruise missiles as well as UAVs. [3] [4] It is a three-stage axial design with a length of 1.3m that can produce 3.7 kN of thrust at 29,500 RPM and weights 54.7 kg. [1] A throttleable and more durable version named Toloue-5 is also in development. [5]
Over time, SAHA became an important part of Iran’s aviation industry. In 1998, Iranian scientists and experts started designing, engineering, and manufacturing complex engine parts, airplane parts, and manufacturing turbine engines like Toloue-4. SAHA is currently working on turbo prop engines called TV-3 for IrAn-140 planes. Accomplishments:
In 2016, Iran unveiled its first "national turbojet engine" dubbed "Owj" (Apex). [26] Manufactured with more than 14,000 parts, it is capable of flight at 50,000 feet and can be mounted on planes with a maximum takeoff weight of ten tons. [26] Iran says that superalloys and
Aside from the known uses listed below, it is widely speculated that Iran illegally purchased many TRI 60 engines from Microturbo to assemble C-802 cruise missiles purchased from China. It is unclear which variant was purchased. [3] [4] Iran also reverse-engineered this engine as the Toloue-4 turbojet engine.
Iran: Advanced Trainer: 1+ HESA Yasin (formerly known as Kowsar 88) is a light aircraft and advance training aircraft designed and manufactured by Iran Aircraft Manufacturing Company at the request of the Air Force of the Islamic Republic of Iran. Yassin uses two 7,000-pound turbojet engines and is on par with the Russian MiG-AT jet. 1 crashed ...
In January 2004, Iran announced that it has started manufacturing the DM-3B mono pulse radar for the Noor missile. [5] According to Iranian officials, DM-3B is a millimeter-wave active radar used in the last stage of missile flight to find the target and home-in the missile on it. [ 6 ]
The primary engine is an unlicensed copy of the PBS TJ100 turbojet produced by PBS Velká Bíteš in Czechia. [ 10 ] [ 11 ] A "Quds cruise missile" was amongst the long-range unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV) the Houthis displayed to the media in July 2019.