rockstarIN
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The current safe maximum speed achieved is around Mach 1.8 at high altitude and might go up to mach 2.0 for the FOC obtained Tejas Mark 2(due to aerodynamic refinements et all)Sorry to deviate, but, what's the maximum flight speed achieved on the tejas with the f404 engines? By how much is it expected to go up after the GE F414 gets installed?
Realistically speaking, what role would the iaf use it in ? and How does it compare to the Jf-17 And f-16 blk52 used by the paf , with special emphasis on bvr capability.?
The current safe maximum speed achieved is around Mach 1.8 at high altitude and might go up to mach 2.0 for the FOC obtained Tejas Mark 2(due to aerodynamic refinements et all)
IAF would use the Mark 1 as Trainers(majorly) and as interceptors(with some A2G capabilities) and the Mark two would be a all out Multi role aircraft and we might even see them replace MiG21's at Srinagar AFB(FOB's)
Purely my ignorant opinions:-(Not tryin' to measure P**** lengths')
Individually speaking,the Tejas Mark 1 might have higher availability rate compared to the JF(Russian Engines....a bit modified than the ones on our MiG29 SMT) and it might have similar availability rates compared to the Falcon.But the falcon has better A2G and A2A capabilities(Aim 120 C5,AGM 65 Maverick and JDAM's) and it has better EW suites and the V9 of the AN/APG 68 RADAR has better range and can operate in hostile EW environments,while the info on the MMR Hybrid on board the LSP3 and others is still scarce!
I stand corrected!!!Thanks. Would you happen to have a link for the 1.8 mach though?. All i've found on the net is 1.6 methinks
Tejas won't become fully operational before 2013
NEW DELHI: The largely homegrown Tejas fighter is still to fight its way out of the doldrums. The jet will not become fully-operational anytime before 2013, a full three decades after the LCA (light combat aircraft) project was first sanctioned in 1983.
IAF chief Air Chief Marshal N A K Browne, responding to questions on Monday, remarked the Tejas LCA's operational clearance had been delayed by almost a year, without elaborating any further.
This indicates the actual induction of the first 40 Tejas jets will begin only towards end-2013 at the earliest, and the first two squadrons will be up and running at the Sulur airbase (Tamil Nadu) only by 2015 or so.
As per revised timelines drawn up after several cost and time-overruns, Tejas was to get the initial operational clearance (IOC) in December 2010, which basically signifies the aircraft is fully airworthy.
This was to be followed by an "intermediate clearance stage'' by December 2011. And finally, the fighter was to get the final operational clearance (FOC), when all weapon and other systems are fully-integrated into the platform, by December 2012.
Defence ministry sources on Tuesday admitted there had been slippages in the intermediate clearance stage for the lightweight, multi-role fighter after it got the IOC last January. "It will not be possible before May-June 2012 now, which in turn is likely to delay the FOC beyond December 2012. The LCA prototypes could not fly much over the last four-five months due to some technical reasons as well as monsoons,'' said a source.
DRDO, however, contends Tejas, which has "all the features of a fourth-generation fighter'', will cross the FOC barrier as planned. "Certification is a long-drawn process. It does not mean there are delays. We are very hopeful Tejas will get the FOC in December 2012,'' said a senior DRDO official.
India certainly needs to develop its own advanced weapon systems like fighters, instead of being yoked to foreign imports which make it strategically vulnerable. But the LCA project underlines the fact that a complete rethink is needed on how to run critical indigenous defence projects.
Its overall developmental cost, including the naval variant and trainer as well as the Kaveri engine, for instance, will go up to Rs 17,269 crore by 2018 from the initial Rs 560 crore earmarked for it in 1983. With each Tejas to cost around Rs 200 crore over and above this, India will eventually end up spending well over Rs 25,000 crore on the programme.
Moreover, Tejas is still only around 60% indigenous. The fighter, for instance, is powered by American GE engines, with the indigenous Kaveri engine failing to pass muster for it despite Rs 2,839 crore being spent on it since 1989.
India has inked a $822 million contract for 99 General Electric's F-414 engines, with an option to go for another 49 engines at a later stage, to power the Tejas Mark-II version. While the first 20 Tejas will be powered by GE-404 engines, the next six Mark-II squadrons (16-18 jets in each) will have the new more powerful GE F-414 engines.
Tejas won't become fully operational before 2013 - Times Of India
guys, here's the trade register for indo-israel arms sales 2007-2010......
proves that elta el/m-2052 is indeed the radar on the lca
(100) Python-4 BVRAAM (2005) 2007 (100)
EL/M-2052 Aircraft radar (2009) For Tejas (LCA) combat aircraft produced in India; bought after Indian development of radar delayed
I do not think EL2052 will fit into LCA, its a small fighter.