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First Tejas fighter squadron expected by 2017-18

Suman

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NEW DELHI: Days after the government auditor questioned the delay in producing the indigenous Tejas light combat aircraft (LCA), a defence ministry official said the first squadron of 18 aircraft will be delivered by 2017-18 - a good 17 years after it first took to the skies.

"The initial operational clearance was obtained in December 2013 and the production of Tejas has commenced. The first squadron is expected to be delivered by 2017-18," a defence ministry official told IANS on condition of anonymity as he is not authorized to speak to the media.

"Efforts are underway to enhance the production capability," the official added.

However, the full operational clearance for the LCA is still pending and is now expected by December 2015.

A report of the comptroller and auditor general (CAG) tabled in the just-concluded budget session of parliament said that due to the delay in the manufacture and supply of the LCA, the IAF forced force to take alternative and temporary measures such as upgrading its MiG-21s, MiG-29s, Jaguars, and Mirage aircraft at a cost of Rs 20,037 crore (over $3 billion) and revise the phasing out of the Soviet-era MiG-21s.

The LCA programme was sanctioned in 1983 with a development schedule of eight to 10 years against the IAF's requirement of induction by 1994.

Subsequently, the project missed many deadlines, mainly on account of design changes necessitated due to changes in weapon requirements, non-availability of the indigenous Kaveri engine, delay in completion of work packages and the like.

The CAG report also criticized LCA for its limited "operational capabilities" and being "overweight", largely due to the 53 concessions/permanent waivers the project had undergone.

In a written reply in the Rajya Sabha last week, defence minister Manohar Parrikar had blamed factors like "non-availability of trained manpower, non-availability of infrastructure and test facilities, unanticipated technical complexities faced in structural design and non-availability of critical components, equipment, or material and denial of technologies" by the advanced countries.

He also blamed "enhanced user's requirements or change in specifications during development", "increase in the scope of work", and "inadequate production facilities at HAL (Hindustan Aeronautics Kimited)" for the delays.
 
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NEW DELHI: Days after the government auditor questioned the delay in producing the indigenous Tejas light combat aircraft (LCA), a defence ministry official said the first squadron of 18 aircraft will be delivered by 2017-18 - a good 17 years after it first took to the skies.

"The initial operational clearance was obtained in December 2013 and the production of Tejas has commenced. The first squadron is expected to be delivered by 2017-18," a defence ministry official told IANS on condition of anonymity as he is not authorized to speak to the media.

"Efforts are underway to enhance the production capability," the official added.

However, the full operational clearance for the LCA is still pending and is now expected by December 2015.

A report of the comptroller and auditor general (CAG) tabled in the just-concluded budget session of parliament said that due to the delay in the manufacture and supply of the LCA, the IAF forced force to take alternative and temporary measures such as upgrading its MiG-21s, MiG-29s, Jaguars, and Mirage aircraft at a cost of Rs 20,037 crore (over $3 billion) and revise the phasing out of the Soviet-era MiG-21s.

The LCA programme was sanctioned in 1983 with a development schedule of eight to 10 years against the IAF's requirement of induction by 1994.

Subsequently, the project missed many deadlines, mainly on account of design changes necessitated due to changes in weapon requirements, non-availability of the indigenous Kaveri engine, delay in completion of work packages and the like.

The CAG report also criticized LCA for its limited "operational capabilities" and being "overweight", largely due to the 53 concessions/permanent waivers the project had undergone.

In a written reply in the Rajya Sabha last week, defence minister Manohar Parrikar had blamed factors like "non-availability of trained manpower, non-availability of infrastructure and test facilities, unanticipated technical complexities faced in structural design and non-availability of critical components, equipment, or material and denial of technologies" by the advanced countries.

He also blamed "enhanced user's requirements or change in specifications during development", "increase in the scope of work", and "inadequate production facilities at HAL (Hindustan Aeronautics Kimited)" for the delays.

Kindly provide source for this.....................
 
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The mistake they did was to commit to unachievable deadlines in the first place, which in turn created a negative sentiment against the plane.

The first TD-1 flight took place in 2001 and the first prototype in 2003 - you need 10-12 years to finalise the design and achieve FOC, so 2015 for commencement of delivery is in fact not a bad timeline

Just for context, Rafale from TD first flight (1985) to induction (2000) was 15 years. Even the gripen, which benefited from a much higher level of technological support, was close to 10 years.

The issue was not 2001-15, the issue was the period prior to that, which was a decade of very little work between 1985-95 (partly because India didn't have any infrastructure to begin with) and then a few years delay because of the sanctions.

Hopefully they ramp up production to 16+ within 1-2 years though - that should be enough for close to five squadrons by 2022, which is when LCA mk 2 comes in
 
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Post reported: Insulting religion, trolling
post reported for reporting my post

The mistake they did was to commit to unachievable deadlines in the first place, which in turn created a negative sentiment against the plane.

The first TD-1 flight took place in 2001 and the first prototype in 2003 - you need 10-12 years to finalise the design and achieve FOC, so 2015 for commencement of delivery is in fact not a bad timeline

Just for context, Rafale from TD first flight (1985) to induction (2000) was 15 years. Even the gripen, which benefited from a much higher level of technological support, was close to 10 years.

The issue was not 2001-15, the issue was the period prior to that, which was a decade of very little work between 1985-95 (partly because India didn't have any infrastructure to begin with) and then a few years delay because of the sanctions.

Hopefully they ramp up production to 16+ within 1-2 years though - that should be enough for close to five squadrons by 2022, which is when LCA mk 2 comes in
There is nothing better than an indeginous defence product, i hope you succeed...
 
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This is the Indian culture Tareekh pe Taarekh, look at all the government institutions. 10 yrs for Rafale, 17 years for LCA, Judiciary too take a lot of time.
Nothing got to with the culture, possibly that is the way neighboring country is brought up, immoral people, don't know how to talk, how to argue, R.I.P
 
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