indushek
SENIOR MEMBER
- Joined
- Apr 6, 2010
- Messages
- 3,732
- Reaction score
- -1
- Country
- Location
Usually mid air refuellers are for long term flightsCan’t they be used during a war? Corollary - if they can’t be used during a war, then what is the use of these.
A valid question would be - feasibility of refuelling each and every aircraft, meant for missions across. That would be a logistical nightmare. Resources required would be phenomenal and it would also expose them to an adversary with decent surveillance capabilities.
If the Chinese use the bases which are under 500 Km in distance to our borders, these assets can be targeted by long range missiles. I guess that's what he means
However given the terrain target acquistion will be hard for both sides. So they technically can use them, further in war one doesn't hold back danger as well to achieve mission objectives.
The below part is something only a veteran can confirm but
Typical ceiling of a fighter aircraft is about 50000 feet or around, and your average SAM range in height is 30000 feet (S400 has same range in height). So technically a aircraft with full load can reach that height, refuel and then dive down for its operation.
So many parameters are involved to pull this off, and for this means the threat is credible and real. Depends on how ready we are for it.
Exactly and see how late we are to the party, current regime also started infra building along with military buildup only post 2020.Isn’t IACCS meant to achieve that? China is a formidable adversary. We can’t hope to achieve plausible defence without taking the game to the highest levels.
We need variety of platforms. AWACS, drones with long on station times, small radars to fill the gaps and a robust net-centric network with adequate redundancies to ensure that we know, what exactly is happening across the border. It would be still not possible to fill all the gaps.
A layered AD at all possible likely targets should be able to neutralise any leakers.
At present we have a little of everything and not enough of anything. Our AWACS capability is dismal. Number of aircraft to get airborne and be available 24 x 7 is a grave concern.Communications are weak and not yet secure. It was exposed during Balakot.
Wishlist is long but ……..
The Chinese on the other hand have built up so many airbases and are bringing their rocket force as well close to us. We are depending on US for sat coverage, which is not good always.
Many platforms are needed for us to be war ready
Geo politics plays a key role in escalation
With their economy going down and internal problems rising, the Chinese will look for a external point to lash out on. This is exactly what happened in 1962
I just hope and pray we don't slow down our build up or be indecisive anymore
It's time that we ditch this MMRCA drama and go for a G2G like the 36, and get 114 more. These are needed for the Eastern front badly.the IAF will not see it that way.
The range/payload and endurance of the MRFA platform (Rafale is what I'm referring to) is greater than that of the Tejas M1kA (which is a light fighter after all) and the Tejas Mk2 (a Mirage-2000 class medium weight fighter).
And they are right in the sense that the Rafale is proven and extremely capable. I would not mind one bit if the IAF got another 90 odd of those.
Also, the existing 83 Tejas Mk1As were to be delivered till 2029. If this 90-100 more Tejas Mk1A order comes through HAL will have it's work cut out to churn out 24-36 per year. No excuses will work when the customer backs them.
There is also a rumor that Dassault may land a huge order from Saudi Arabia. If that happens, expect Dassault to set up a new assembly line in India with a new JV with a new Indian partner. Otherwise they simply won't be able to meet the massive backlog that will be in their lap.