Yaduveer
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Just to see a picture of this beauty i opened the thread--
Same here
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Just to see a picture of this beauty i opened the thread--
No no.. read the my previous posts and also the upgrade package detailed in that red pic posted by someone above. MiG-29UPG will not have Topsight.
@MiG-21 I've just got it from a friend who works for a rival comapny to Thales- the MIG-29UPGs are/were slated to get the TOPSIGHT HMDS but for certain reasons this delivery has been delayed by the IAF until the majority of the MIG-29UPGs are in service and the M2K UPGs have begun. The M2K UPGs will have the same TOPSIGHT HMDS also btw. Shchel-3UM-1 HMS is an interim measure and such a systme has been in use on the IAF's MIG-29Bs for some time already.He claims PAF changed that order and used that money for 2005 earthquake victims. He is your hero for boosting the range of your JF-17's radar from 85km for 5m2(as reported in janes) to 105km for 5m2. Atleast give him some credit. Even the chinese 50centers didn't get that info.
Even KUB will get Topsight AFAIK.
"This decisive phase marks the end of qualification for the Topsight-E HMSD, which is now fully integrated to the MiG-29K/KUB cockpit, including ejection seat and weapon delivery and navigation system."
"Thales will supply the IAF's MiG-29 fighter aircraft with 'TOTEM-3000' new generation Inertial Navigation and Global Positioning System.Thales, in addition line-fit, supplies the Indian Navy's newly built MiG-29KUB aircraft with the Topsight E helmet-mounted sight and display (HMSD), for which it successfully completed integration phase in November 2009."
Weapon and Technology: IAF MIG-29 Upgrades
You meant UPG but typed KUB by mistake?
Anyway:
MiG-21 Bis : No HMS
MiG-21 Bison : Sura-K HMS
Su-30MKI : Sura-K HMS
MiG-29B : Shchel-3UM HMS
MiG-29UPG : Shchel-3UM-1 HMS
MiG-29K : Topsight-I HMDS
Mirage-2000H : No HMS
Mirage-2000UPG : Topsight-I HMDS
Only MiG-29K has HMDS as of now. Mirage Upgrade is only now beginning and not even a single aircraft has been upgraded.
"As per the proposal, French firms Dassault and Thales will upgrade the aircraft, which will add 20-25 years to the life of the Mirages, inducted by the IAF in the mid-80s."I hope you just were kidding here. The Mirage 2000 was procured pretty much at the same time as the Mig 29, around 1986, so is already 26 years old and you really expect IAF to keep it in service till it's 50? That's not going to happen and they will be replaced in numbers by FGFA in the next decade, just like the upgraded Mig 27 and 29s with an age of 35 to 40 years. That's the normal lifecycle that IAF takes to account for their fighters and you see at the Mig 21s what happens when you keep them longer.
Sancho, I also read that these upgrades will extend the mig-29s service life to another 25-30 years,
"As per the proposal, French firms Dassault and Thales will upgrade the aircraft, which will add 20-25 years to the life of the Mirages, inducted by the IAF in the mid-80s."...
As can be seen from the cost, MiG-29 Upgrade is 63 fighters for 964 million dollars. Or 15 million dollars for each fighter.
The Mirage-2000 upgrade costs 2.4 billion dollars for 49 jets. That's 49 million dollars for every jet, more than 3 times costlier than the MiG-29 Upgrade!
Also french weapons are extremely costly with 490 Micas procured for 1.24 billion dollars in a separate contract, or each missile costing a whopping 2.5 million dollars.
Plus, Mirage-2000 costed 25 million dollars back in 1980s while the twin engined MiG-29 costed just 11 million dollars.
MiG-29 gives more bang for the buck.
Yes, in theory IAF can extend the life of Bisons beyond even 2050 if they fly for 10 hours a year. That's not the point. The point is Mirage-2000 has a lot of life left, while the MiG-29 doesn't. MiG-29 will not fly often and take part in training, while the Mirage very well can. If they fly the Mirage-2000 more often than the MiG-29 then Mirage-2000 can even retired early than the MiG. Getting a new HMDS while junking a working HMS on a fighter which will be used very rarely is not a good investment. IAF made a wise choice.Extending the life of the fighter airframe but not in IAF service! Again, IAF calculates the normal lifecycle of a fighter for 30 to 40 years, as often stated for MMRCA or MKI, it was forced to keep the Mig 21s for longer, but that is not their normal lifecycle.
The plan is to phase the Migs and M2Ks out and that will be between 2020 and 2025, with their replacement FGFA already under development.
See the post above, you are confusing the airframe life with the operational lifecycle in IAF. In theory we can further extend the life of BISON airframes beyond 2025, but that doesn't mean IAF will use them so long right?
They simply don't have the capability anymore to be useful after a certain time period and that's what we already can see for Jags as well. The last once were produced in 2008, with a theoretical maximum life till 2048, but they will be useless by 2020!
250 million dollars more for the 120 engines. Not a huge amount and still the the price comes to only 19 million. The other third party systems are very minor. Even if we add a whole million to it it will still be around 30 million dollars less than the Mirage Upgrade.- the 964 million millions are not the total price for the upgrade, since they don't include the engines or foreign systems that will was done in extra deals
- In any role, with 2 x fuel tanks the M2K will carry up to 6 x BVR capable MICAs, while the Mig 29 will mainly carry a mix of 2 x WVR and 2 X BVR missile with 2 fuel tanks and weapons.
Getting a new HMDS while junking a working HMS on a fighter which will be used very rarely is not a good investment.
BTW, where does it say the IAF will retire MiG-29, Jaguar and Mirage-2000 fighters in the years which you said? I need links on that, no speculations.
Referred to as the Fifth Generation Fighter Aircraft (FGFA), the IAF is expected to get around 250 (14 squadrons) with induction beginning in 2017. This fleet will in due course replace the 17.5 squadrons of third generation aircraft that have been in service with the IAF for over 25 years. These include the MiG-27, MiG-29, Jaguar and the Mirage 2000. With midlife upgrade at phenomenal cost underway, these aircraft may continue in service up to 2025. Beyond this date, the combat fleet of the IAF will comprise the upgraded Su-30MKI, the MMRCA, the FGFA and the Tejas MkII.
Written by Air Marshal B K Pandey
In the fighter category, the most significant change should be the completion of the development of the Indian Fifth Generation Fighter Aircraft (FGFA) from the Sukhoi T-50/ PAK FA baseline by the end of this decade and the commencement of induction of FGFAs into service starting about ten years hence against a total order of 250 or more. Older aircraft types would be retired in a phased manner so that the available numbers of aircraft to the IAF does not fall excessively until the force level required has been built up with new inductions. This could see the MiG-21 Bison, MiG-29 and Mirage 2000 upgrades continue in service well into the 2020s, with carefully staggered retiring of these fleets commencing from 2025.
And who told you IAF has a 30-40 year life time as NORMAL?
In March 2008, a contract for mid-life upgradation of 63 single seaters was undertaken with RAC-MIG, Russia , for a total value of USD 964 million. The MLU project will extend the life of the airframes by another 15 years or a 1000 hours. The new Total Technical Life of the MiG-29s will be 40 years / 3500 hours.
The 62 upgraded MiG-29SMTs are expected to remain in service for 10-15 years, with their flight-hours lifetimes extended from 25 years/2,500 hours to 40 years/ 3,500 hours.
The other third party systems are very minor.