dark light

BlackArcherRedux

Forum Replies Created

Viewing 15 posts - 151 through 165 (of 233 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • in reply to: Military Aviation News 2 #2084499
    BlackArcherRedux
    Participant
    in reply to: Military Aviation News 2 #2084540
    BlackArcherRedux
    Participant
    in reply to: Military Aviation News 2 #2084541
    BlackArcherRedux
    Participant
    in reply to: LCA Tejas and derivatives news and discussion (reincarnated) #2084542
    BlackArcherRedux
    Participant

    Sorry, my bad..I don’t know how I got that simple calculation wrong- Rs 310 crore per Tejas (including spares, support and simulators) works out to $ 44.2 million.

    Nevertheless, still a bargain. Out of the 83 contracted jets, 73 Mk1A will be single seaters and 10 will be Tejas Mk1 trainers at the FOC level.

    So after the 16 FOC jets are delivered, HAL will begin work on the 18 trainers. After that, the single seat Mk1A deliveries will begin.

    My guess is that the reason for the deliveries being spread out till 2028 is to give adequate time for the Tejas Mk1 MWF to finish flight testing and be ready for production. The same line will transition to delivering Mk2 MWF jets after the Mk1A deliveries are complete.

     

     

    in reply to: Helicopter News & Discussion #2084545
    BlackArcherRedux
    Participant
    in reply to: Military Aviation News 2 #2084548
    BlackArcherRedux
    Participant
    in reply to: Military Aviation News 2 #2084553
    BlackArcherRedux
    Participant

    Wonder which fighter design they’re referring to..perhaps FC-31 ?

    China developing new fighter aircraft

     

     

    in reply to: LCA Tejas and derivatives news and discussion (reincarnated) #2084558
    BlackArcherRedux
    Participant

    And in other more important news, the MoD, IAF and HAL have finalized negotiations on the price for the 83 Tejas Mk1A fighters. The price of the contract is Rs 26,000 crores, which works out to Rs 310 crore per fighter.

    So basically the Tejas Mk1A will cost ~$35 million. Damn cheap for what will be one of the most sophisticated light fighter jets in the world.  But I’m disappointed that the delivery schedule will drag on till 2028 at 16 jets per year. Really hope for more – like 20 or 24 per year.

    Rs 26k crore order for Tejas Mk1A to open door for Mk2

    Indian Air Force (IAF) and Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd (HAL) have fixed the price of the Tejas Mark 1A light combat aircraft (LCA) at about Rs 310 crore per fighter, say Ministry of Defence (MoD) sources involved in the negotiations.
    Now HAL is awaiting a formal contract, worth some Rs 26,000 crore for building 83 Tejas Mark 1A fighters that the MoD has already green-lighted for purchase. According to the agreed schedule, delivery of the Mark 1A will begin 36 months after the contract date. If the order is placed at the start of 2020, Tejas Mark IA deliveries will start in 2023.
    With 16 fighters to be delivered each year it would take another five years to deliver all 83 fighters – that is by 2028.

    “We should be signing the contract very soon”, IAF boss, Air Chief Marshal RKS Bhadauria, had said on October 4. That is now imminent.

    Girish Deodhare, chief of the Aeronautical Development Agency (ADA) – the Defence R&D Organisation (DRDO) agency responsible for the Tejas programme – spoke exclusively to Business Standard about the Tejas Mark 1A fighter. He described it as a bridge between the current Tejas Mark 1 and the Mark 2 fighter that ADA is developing. He says the latter will be, from the standpoint of size, sophistication and capability, far superior to the Mark 1 fighter.

    “Initially the Tejas Mark 2 was planned to be just a re-engined Mark 1 (with a more powerful engine). However, with the advent of the Mark 1A, it was decided that Tejas Mark 2 would be configured with significantly higher capabilities. While the ‘all up weight’ (maximum take-off weight, with fuel and weapons) of Tejas Mark 1 is 13.5 tonnes, the Mark 2 will be 17.5 tonnes, taking it into the medium weight category. It will also carry an 85 per cent higher weapons load,” said Deodhare.

    While ADA is developing the Mark 2 fighter, HAL is building the Mark 1A, with ADA contributing its expertise in avionics, flight controls, aerodynamics and structural analysis.

    While the Tejas Mark 2 will be almost a generation ahead of the Mark 1 fighter, even the interim Tejas Mark 1A will be far more capable. The IAF has demanded five new capabilities in the Mark 1A, including “active electronic scanned array” (AESA) radar, with multi-tasking capability that would give it a clear combat edge over Pakistan’s entire fighter fleet, and most of China’s as well.

     “The initial batches of the Tejas Mark 1A may field an imported AESA radar, but the DRDO is developing its indigenous Uttam AESA radar. As soon as it is proven, the Uttam will start equipping the Tejas Mark 1A,” said Deodhare.

    The Uttam AESA radar is already flying on a Tejas prototype and has completed 11 successful test flights. “We need to do a couple of more years of flight testing before it is certified and ready for production. Thereafter, all Tejas Mark 1A will incorporate the indigenous radar”, he said.

    This incremental approach is also evident in the “digital flight control computer” (DFCC) – a fighter aircraft’s brain – that ADA has designed and qualified for the Tejas Mark 2. The upgraded DFCC is ready and qualified, but it could not go into the Mark 1A because it was built bigger to allow easier maintenance access in the larger Mark 2 fighter.

     “We took the upgraded cards from the Tejas Mark 2’s DFCC and installed them into the smaller Mark 1 DFCC chassis, effectively upgrading it for the Mark IA.  The new Mark 1A DFCC will have significantly higher processing power allows us to add many more advanced capabilities in the FCS,” said Deodhare.

    In addition, the Tejas Mark IA is being upgraded with a “self-protection jammer” (SPJ), also supplied by Elta, which the IAF has demanded in order to confuse incoming missiles. Each Mark 1A fighter will carry a SPJ on a pod under its wing, sharing a mounting station with an air-to-air missile.

    Giving the Tejas Mark 2 the contemporary look of the Rafale and Eurofighter, it will be built with canards on the front of the fuselage.  These fin-like structures serve to make the aircraft unstable, and therefore more manoeuvrable. Deodhare says ADA decided to fit canards after discovering that increasing the Mark 2’s internal fuel capacity to 3300 kilogrammes (from 2400 kg in the Mark1) made the fighter excessively stable. Placing canards near the nose of the aircraft regained its manoeuvrability.

    “We are targeting the first flight of the Tejas Mark 2 by 2023. We are confident of this since most of the technologies that will go into it are already matured through LCA Mark 1,” said Deodhare.

    BlackArcherRedux
    Participant

    I don’t know where you got the bit that all 16 FOC Tejas Mk1 fighters were to be delivered by March 2020.

    The target is 4 fighters before March 2020. The remaining 12 will be delivered over the next year, and then the 8 Tejas Mk1 trainers will have to be delivered.

     

     

    in reply to: Military Aviation News 2 #2084582
    BlackArcherRedux
    Participant
    in reply to: Military Aviation News 2 #2084586
    BlackArcherRedux
    Participant
    in reply to: Military Aviation News 2 #2084594
    BlackArcherRedux
    Participant
    in reply to: Military Aviation News 2 #2084597
    BlackArcherRedux
    Participant
    in reply to: Military Aviation News 2 #2084601
    BlackArcherRedux
    Participant
    in reply to: Military Aviation News 2 #2084605
    BlackArcherRedux
    Participant
Viewing 15 posts - 151 through 165 (of 233 total)