banvanaxl
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Oscar, I'm not sure I follow the analogy either. India bought the MKI to gain knowledge and to enhance their local aerospace industry (I'm assuming for the price they're paying, they better be building it locally). I'm sure they'd have bought 300 or more of the latest MIG's if the MKI's weren't on the table. On the other hand, the Chinese won't use the JF17's because it offers them very little advantage over their rust-bucket relics. The proof is in the pudding.
If the JF-17 were a capable 4.5 generation aircraft @ 15 million a piece, don't you think the Chinese would spend the extra 4.5 billion or so to replace their 300 or so old relics still lying around? 4.5 billion dollars for the Chinese is like pocket change.
Not quite so. You see an aircraft is a base platform and you add in building blocks to it as you upgrade them. I can quote the example of the McDonnell Douglas AV-8Bs. The congress wanted to know why all the active harriers in the USMC was being refitted to McDonnell Douglas AV-8B II standards at the cost of $23 mill a pop when you could buy a spanking new AV8B II for $30 mill sometime back in 97.
The decision to stick with the older airframe was upheld by pentagon and the refit went on as planned. Even Spain put off its plans to buy the new planes and underwent the same refit programme then being run by Boeing who had acquired McDonnell Douglas during negotiations of the refit programme.
Buying a newer airframe does not necessarily confirm the superiority or inferiority of a platform. Individual countries acquire platforms based on their threat matrix and strategic and tactical goals. All of which has little to do with the business of selling weapons.
cheers
And that will give you a profitable airline?
Who said AI was profitable ?
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