sits in a prototype at rollout
Advanced Jet Trainer Program The Advanced Jet Trainer Program (AJT) began in the early 2000s as the
Republic of China Air Force sought a replacement for its fleet of
AIDC AT-3 and
Northrop F-5 advanced trainers with 66 newly built aircraft. Three designs were proposed, a modernized, upgraded version of AT-3 branded as the AT-3 MAX, an evolution of the
AIDC F-CK-1 Ching-Kuo combat aircraft to be called the XAT-5, or the Italian
Alenia Aermacchi M-346 Master. In 2014 AIDC signed a memorandum of understanding with Alenia Aermacchi to assemble the M-346 in Taiwan. The engines of all M-346 are assembled in Taiwan by
International Turbine Engine Company (ITEC), a joint partnership of
Honeywell and AIDC. The MOD also evaluated the South Korean
KAI T-50 Golden Eagle aircraft. In 2017 it was announced that the XAT-5 had won the tender with development and production to be undertaken by a partnership of AIDC and the
National Chung-Shan Institute of Science and Technology with delivery scheduled to begin in 2026. Four prototypes are to be produced and the total program cost is projected to be TWD68.6 billion (US$2.2 billion).
Naming AIDC had used Blue Magpie, for the
Taiwan blue magpie, as the project name. However in 2018 the
Ministry of National Defense announced a contest to pick an official name for the aircraft. Taiwanese citizens were invited to submit a name with a short proposal with the winner receiving a NTD 30,000 prize. On 24 September 2019, the president
Tsai Ing-wen officially named the new aircraft "Brave Eagle" (
Yǒngyīng) during first prototype aircraft roll-out ceremony.
Production In 2017, the United States approved the export of components for 132
Honeywell/ITEC F124 engines for the XAT/AT-5. In 2018, AIDC announced that the first prototype would be rolled out in September 2019 with flight tests to start in June 2020. In 2019 Taiwan’s Ministry of National Defense testified to the country’s legislature that the maiden flight is scheduled for June 2020, small scale production is to start in November 2021, and mass production is scheduled to commence March 2023. In September 2019 A1, the first of four prototypes, was rolled out by Taiwanese President
Tsai Ing-wen. In March 2021 AIDC announced that they had completed internal flight tests and that testing of the two prototypes and the two initial aircraft due to be delivered by the end of the year would be conducted by the Taiwanese Air Force from then on. A number of internal and operational test flights were completed in July 2021 from Taitung Air Base with some operations occurring over the Pacific Ocean. The first production model T-5 had its first flight on October 21, 2021. The first production model has the serial number 11003. == Design ==