It's simple. The French have managed to put in over 1100 T/R modules on a very, very small aperture while the F-35 has 1400-1600 on a very large aperture, twice as big. The quality of radar depends on how many T/R modules you manage to fit in. So the Americans have not done such a good job there compared to the French. The F-35 should have 2200 T/R modules to be the equivalent of the Rafale.
The reason for this is the Rafale's T/R module design is at least 10 years ahead. The F-35's radar design is much older, since it is simply a modification of the F-22's radar, which was designed back in the 80s.
The Americans have since developed a new radar as an interim radar for the F-22 which is the equivalent of the Rafale's radar, but they are now working on an even more advanced one for the F-22 MLU.
As it stands today, the F-22 and Rafale have pretty much the same detection range, just 10 or 20 Km short on Rafale. So, even though the F-22's radar is 2.5 times bigger than Rafale's, both radars have more or less the same detection range because the Rafale's T/R modules are much more closely packed.
Quality of software comes next, and this can go either way. But the French claim their software is better. I don't know if it's true, but the Rafale's radar is obviously developed 20 years later than the F-22's radar, so the benefit of the doubt should obviously go to the French.
Completely wrong. The Rafale is as capable at high altitudes as any other air superiority aircraft, with the exception of the F-22.
Due to the way the Meteor functions, the Rafale has no need for a two way link. The downlink only confirms radar lock, which the Rafale doesn't need since the final leg of the flight after radar lock is just 10 seconds. But a two way link can be added upon customer's request. Due to the above reason, the French didn't bother with one. Meteor functions the same way on the Rafale as it does on the Gripen and Typhoon. Meaning, its ability to kill is not compromised in anyway.
The quality of sensors on Rafale is far superior to Gripen and Typhoon anyway. Rafale has AESA radar while Gripen and Typhoon have old gen MS radars.
Don't see the point of not bringing it up. We will have Brahmos-M by the time the 36 Rafales are inducted. All the India specific customisations will become active only after 2022 anyway.
There is no need to "finalise". Construction of facilities have already begun. The first Indian made Falcon will fly out of India in 2022. The same facility will be extended to Rafale also. Dassault plans to produce the next batch of 36 Rafales in India. And they will be clubbing a lot of other export orders to it. DRAL has discovered that producing Rafale in India is 20% cheaper than in France. So the French will make a 20% higher profit for the same order if they make export orders also in India.
Construction of all the facilities necessary have begun months ago.
That hangar in the distance has already started producing Falcon and Rafale parts.
Why doesn't it count? The capability will be added alongside deliveries. Once delivery is complete, capability will become active.
All the software needed for Brahmos is entirely Indian, including seeker. No Russian help is required. And the French will be transferring all the source codes needed for integration of weapons, it's part of the contract.
IAF MMRCA tender decided Rafale is the best fighter in class. That's why it was shortlisted. And no, the main criteria for selection of Rafale was air superiority capability. That's where all the points were centered around. That's also why only Typhoon and Rafale made the shortlist. Typhoon has very limited strike capability even today, so why does that make you think IAF was interested in strike?
Nuclear delivery capability was a separate process. It wasn't part of MMRCA or else the Americans and Swedes wouldn't have participated. It just worked out for us that Rafale does it. Had the Typhoon won, we would still have bought Rafales later on for the nuke mission, separate from the MMRCA process. The Rafale GTG had nothing to do with MMRCA, it was a parallel process initiated by the PMO and later hijacked by Parrikar, which Parrikar used as an excuse to shut down MMRCA.
As for the new MMRCA program, no shortlist, no soup.
Rafale induction is a high priority project.