MiG-21
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Most people are unaware of Indian Navy's Sea Harriers, even though they are serving the IN from 1983 to 2012, and they will be retired around 2014-2015. That's 32 years of service for the Indian Armed forces!! So I hope this topic will help improve awareness about this fine fighter.
The Royal Navy Operated the FA2's while the Indian Navy Operated the FRS.51 Variant. Both of them are more or less the same except in the avionics department.
However the Harriers crash record is not very praise worthy. Of the 29 Harriers bought by the Indian Navy, 17 crashed or were seriously damaged while landing. So there are only 12 Harriers jets in the IN as of Today. That's a crash rate more than the IAF MiG-21s.
In any case, here are some of the Basic Facts of the Indian Navy Harriers-
Empty Weight - 6374kgs
Maximum thrust - 9730kgf(non-Afterburner)
Payload - 3630kgs
Max Speed - Mach 0.96
Service Ceiling - 16,000 m
Ferry range: 3,600km
Compare that with LCA's Specs
Empty Weight - 6560kgs
Maximum thrust - 8660kgs(Afterburner), 9160kgf(Emergency Afterburner) - F404-GE-IN20
Payload - 4000kgs
Max Speed - Mach 1.6 (target Mach 1.8)
Service Ceiling - 15,000 m (target 16km)
Ferry range: 3,000km
Mind you, those are the specs of the Airforce variant, the LCA MK1. The Naval Variant is much heavier and its specs will be spectacularly lower than what is given above. The Harrier's engine doesn't have afterburner and so that speed is the maximum speed with dry thrust, not afterburner. The Airforce's LCA first flew in 2001 whereas the Airforce varient of Harrier flew in 1967! Not to mention the fact that Harriers are VTOL jets, while the rest are CTOL jets.
Just to make it fair, here is the JF-17's Specs
Empty Weight - 6586kgs
Maximum thrust - 8300kgs(Afterburner), 8700kgf(Emergency Afterburner) - RD-93
Payload - 3629kgs
Max Speed - Mach 1.6
Service Ceiling - 16,700 m
Ferry range: 3,480km
The Harriers were upgraded with Elta EL/M-2032 radar with a range of 150km(sorry no accompanying RCS). The aircraft is BVR capable with Israeli Derby missile(range of 50km).
Like the JF-17 and J-10, the harrier too most probably can't fire the BVR missile from its inner most wing Hardpoint. But to compensate that, the Harrier like the J-10, carriers 2 Derbys on a dual rack, so it can carry a total of 4 BVR missiles, just like the J-10. However this capability of J-10 has entered operational service after testing is completely over is still not known. The JF-17 can only carry 2 BVR missiles at the moment. But is the BVR integration of JF-17 fully complete is still not known. The Dual racks most probably will make its way to JF-17 but it will surely take some time.
Harrier with Dual racks
So with just 3 years to go for retirement after 30 years of service, Harriers are still a worth opponent after all these years, and most definitely not something to be taken lightly.
The Royal Navy Operated the FA2's while the Indian Navy Operated the FRS.51 Variant. Both of them are more or less the same except in the avionics department.
However the Harriers crash record is not very praise worthy. Of the 29 Harriers bought by the Indian Navy, 17 crashed or were seriously damaged while landing. So there are only 12 Harriers jets in the IN as of Today. That's a crash rate more than the IAF MiG-21s.
In any case, here are some of the Basic Facts of the Indian Navy Harriers-
Empty Weight - 6374kgs
Maximum thrust - 9730kgf(non-Afterburner)
Payload - 3630kgs
Max Speed - Mach 0.96
Service Ceiling - 16,000 m
Ferry range: 3,600km
Compare that with LCA's Specs
Empty Weight - 6560kgs
Maximum thrust - 8660kgs(Afterburner), 9160kgf(Emergency Afterburner) - F404-GE-IN20
Payload - 4000kgs
Max Speed - Mach 1.6 (target Mach 1.8)
Service Ceiling - 15,000 m (target 16km)
Ferry range: 3,000km
Mind you, those are the specs of the Airforce variant, the LCA MK1. The Naval Variant is much heavier and its specs will be spectacularly lower than what is given above. The Harrier's engine doesn't have afterburner and so that speed is the maximum speed with dry thrust, not afterburner. The Airforce's LCA first flew in 2001 whereas the Airforce varient of Harrier flew in 1967! Not to mention the fact that Harriers are VTOL jets, while the rest are CTOL jets.
Just to make it fair, here is the JF-17's Specs
Empty Weight - 6586kgs
Maximum thrust - 8300kgs(Afterburner), 8700kgf(Emergency Afterburner) - RD-93
Payload - 3629kgs
Max Speed - Mach 1.6
Service Ceiling - 16,700 m
Ferry range: 3,480km
The Harriers were upgraded with Elta EL/M-2032 radar with a range of 150km(sorry no accompanying RCS). The aircraft is BVR capable with Israeli Derby missile(range of 50km).
Like the JF-17 and J-10, the harrier too most probably can't fire the BVR missile from its inner most wing Hardpoint. But to compensate that, the Harrier like the J-10, carriers 2 Derbys on a dual rack, so it can carry a total of 4 BVR missiles, just like the J-10. However this capability of J-10 has entered operational service after testing is completely over is still not known. The JF-17 can only carry 2 BVR missiles at the moment. But is the BVR integration of JF-17 fully complete is still not known. The Dual racks most probably will make its way to JF-17 but it will surely take some time.
Harrier with Dual racks
So with just 3 years to go for retirement after 30 years of service, Harriers are still a worth opponent after all these years, and most definitely not something to be taken lightly.