vnomad
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The Erieyes will identify aircraft at large ranges but its not going to provide a radar lock. Nor will it provide mid-course updates to a launched missile. All that has to come from the aircraft. The AMRAAM's no escape envelope is similar to that of the Adder though it is better in the terminal stage but has a lower speed I think.MKI's radar would help and matter if all PAF was relying on was Air-Intercept radars of its own fighters like the APG-66 on the existing F-16s or the Grifo M3 (same class as APG-66). However this will not be the case in the near future with Erieyes being inducted. The mid-course linking is something that is of importance however the existing BVR weaponry on both sides cannot even come close to the ranges at which the aircraft will be detected (even the in-the-works AIM-120 with the 100+ km range or the Russian counterparts cannot be used at the excessive ranges that some of the newer radars offer....also keep in mind that the farther away you are, the harder it is to effectively lock-on a target. There is an effective kill zone and it does not extend to the max range of the BVR AAM).
The MKI will get a radar-lock at a greater range and will launch salvos at intervals of 10-15 seconds (I'm repeating someone else's scenario) which means that they don't have to dodge the AMRAAMs unless the F-16s decide to go for a suicide attack. I realise that every engagement cannot follow this pattern but it is the most likely one. That said, the F-16s are capable of pulling a surprise on the MKIs, but one shouldn't be counting on it.
I agree but most engagements are likely to be headon. Neither AF has a poor situational awareness thanks to the AWACS.There are very many other factors involved in an AWACS managed airspace which render the benefits of extended range AI radars curtailed greatly. You do not have a 360 view of the airspace...all you see is what is in front of you (The MKI has a radar in the rear too but that too cannot look up down all the way) so its a matter of how adversary aircraft are employed to handle the threat of detection at extended ranges...this is something that IAF and PAF will have to be mindful about and as such even aircraft like the older airframes with a barebone BVR capability become a threat.
Saying its not been proven, is a poor argument. The Raptor isn't proven either. We're well past that stage today where every aircraft has to be tested in actual combat before we can certify it as a capable one. The IAF trains with the MKI for ground attack. I'm sure they know what they are doing.Well MKI has never been proven in these roles [for that matter no Russian aircraft has been proven in these roles aside from the Frogfoot (but not in precision role)...PGMs were first mated to the SU-30 in this decade] so nobody can speak with surity....what has been tried and tested and seen in combat is the western hardware including the F-16s
They are massively outnumbered. The F-16s for example will not take the Su-30MKI on one on one. It'll probably be something like 6 MKIs against 4 F-16s. By 2015 the IAF will have 350-400 4.5 generation aircraft and a probably a smaller number of 5 gen. or quasi 5 gen aircraft.When has PAF ever tried to overcome the number's deficit? Its been the case throughout the history of PAF...IAF has always spent more than triple the amount that PAF spends yet we maintain a credible deterrance...the same logic continues...actually with the induction of JF-17, upgraded F-16s, and possibly even J-10s, the deterrance against the IAF would be the best ever that PAF could muster (surely better than what we had against the IAF in 65 and 71)....this is the logic behind PAF force upgradation...
As of now yes. F-22 is impossible but the F-35s are a contender for the ADS to be inducted in 2011-12. The US has shown indications of allowing such a sale to India. The IN chief (now ex-chief) also clearly stated his preferrance for it. Lockheed Martin made comments to the same effect.your AF is not inducting an aircraft in the class of F/A-22 or even JSF so whatever PAF will be fielding in the near future would be enough to make IAF's planning all the more difficult.
Precisely why I went into the budget thing. Which 4.5 gen. aircraft does the PAF have today? A budget of $2 billion for the PAF compared to $6 billion for the IAF. How will the PAF afford the best in the sub-continent? You're dismissing the AESA as a minor thing. Every AF in the world isn't clamoring for AESAs for nothing. It is the reason why the F-18 today has a major advantage over the Rafale. The F/A-18 E/F also comes with stealth features reducing the RCS considerabily. The MRCA has been fast-tracked which means it could be inducted completed by 2012.The best in the sub-continent is debatable as you do not know what PAF would be fielding by the time you are done inducting F/A-18s (at least 7-8 years out)...also aside from AESA, there is no capability on the F/A-18 that PAF would not be fielding with the blk-52 F-16s.
The MiG-35 isn't just a MiG 29 variant. I'll let it go now and put a thread about the MiG-35 on the aviation sub-forum.Theoretical from the point of what capabilities IAF would like in the aircraft...also its not a production version, one of the many variants put forward by the Russians....I do see IAF with this aircraft...maybe split half an half with F/A-18 but forget about Typhoon or Rafale.
It did. :banana2:I hope the letter worked...