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APG 79 AESA ; AIM 9X ; AIM 120 D
Obsolete; obsolete; obsolete.
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APG 79 AESA ; AIM 9X ; AIM 120 D
In the eyes of many folks, the F18 ASH much touted the EWB in enclosed centerline provides semi stealthy feature along with certain reservations which has been highlighted.
Some of these points are
But IAF as i said above will always put an emphasis on these parameters with a very special emphasis on maneuverability, acceleration and aerodynamic superiority
- IAF emphasis on aerodynamic superiority in equal proportion with sensors, the offensive and defensive EW package, avionics and weapons
- The 18 original rejection was based on 4 points
- Maturity of its engine design, - which is now rectified and proven
- the growth potential of its engine, - very very limited
- assorted performance shortfalls, - energy bleed, limited G's
- issues related to special preventative maintenance.
- The 18s engine especially the EPE even though is now a much matured platform and a advanced design, IAF evaluation at original MMRCA with the EPE engine showed that the plane actually did benefit with 20 percent thrust additions in the following fields
- 18s climb performance,
- its transonic acceleration,
- its maximum sustained G,
- its maximum sustained turn rates, and
- its top-end speed all improved considerably,
- with beneficial impact on its performance in both the A2A and the A2G missions
- The IAF’s judgment about the limited growth potential of the Ge 414 EPE is actually correct bcz even with every new upgrade and advancement of sensors and weapons, the overall weight of the aircraft increases slowly but surely. A case in example is between F3 and present Rafale and proposed F3R the actual weight addition by some estimations is almost 700 kgs which necessitates the case for engine to have future developmental scope too.
- Most significantly, the F/A-18E/F was perceived to have fallen short in aerodynamic performance, especially with respect to those parameters that distinguish the nimblest of fighters from the rest.
- These assessments are not surprising.
- Although F18s remains one of the most carefree aircraft in the world where handling is concerned,
- with a high alpha performance to boot,
- it has traditionally been hampered by weaker energy addition compared to its contemporaries.
- Further, it still remains qualified only for maneuveres up to 7.5G - Raffy does 9G and even 11G
- The bleed is a little bit offsetted by the increased thrust EPE engine but still the whole aircraft does not change with just the engine enhancement.
- In contrast to the IAF’s ASQRs will specify a criterion of 9G unless its relaxed to 7.5G
- The limitations make the 18s have a disadvantage in turning fights but with sensors and weapons it mitigates these issues.
- Its emphasis on its radar, sensor and weapons places it more suitable for longer range combat but if it has to engage in WVR then again its weapons package sees it through inspite of an unfavourable hostile zone of engagement
As for cost part
- The original F18SH with 404 engine was USD60 Mn approx
- The one with 414 and EWB is around USD 70-75 Mn
- The original Rafale as per MMRCA was USD 85 Mn
- The customization and other considerations will be the key here in understanding whats the cost in package form.
Rafale will be better suited bcz of the fact that it addresses on these issues front which we have discussed a lot..
btw Boeing also tried showing a replacement design for the 18s
But then it did not progress much
IMHO , the 18s being a true carrier based fighter with a land variant, its highly unsuitable for interceptor, dog fighting and most critically the missions of SEAD/DEAD where i forsee in future a more of low altitude close to mid range engagement to the max of 60 kms range..
In this particular aspect, Rafale has a unique capability to automatically follow the ground using both numeric maps and SAR radar capabilities, limited at 100 feet, 540 Knots or 1000 km/hr or 0.8 Mach and 5.5 G
The whole package to survive such a mission probability for 18s , I am sure will be less than Rafale... when you get such a capability and performance in a low altitude flight it changes the perspective and scope of battles..
What i am keen is the weapons and customization part and the package cost... if the negotiation terms are similar, we should see apple to apple comparison..
and I am confident the GOI/MOD/IAF/IN would choose the optimum aircraft based on every variable we might have discussed or outside of what we have known so far surely..
Obsolete; obsolete; obsolete.
Obsolete; obsolete; obsolete.
So you are saying f3r would better than ash. But with all weapons and training package ash will still cost 40 to 50% less than rafale. We know that French weapons are exorbitant whereas Americans are cheapest in west.
One favourable aspect of 18 are its growlers unmatched ew capability and engine tot.
If ash cost even 30% less than rafale we should go for it.
How are they obsolete.
So after all the articles, hype and everything else is these statements
View attachment 299845
View attachment 299852
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and some more on LSA..
Tue Apr 12, 2016 2:10pm IST
Related: TOP NEWS
India, U.S. "agree in principle" on sharing military logistics - Aston Carter
NEW DELHI | BY YEGANEH TORBATI AND TOMMY WILKES
India and the United States have agreed in principle to share military logistics, U.S. Defense Secretary Ashton Carter said on Tuesday, as both sides seek to counter the growing maritime assertiveness of China.
Washington has been urging New Delhi to sign the Logistics Support Agreement that allows the two militaries to use each other’s land, air and naval bases for resupplies, repair and rest.
But after years of dithering, the two sides said an agreement was in hand, although not yet ready for signing.
"We have agreed in principle that all the issues are resolved. We now need to finalise the draft," Carter said after talks with his Indian counterpart, Manohar Parrikar.
New Delhi has had concerns that the logistics agreement will draw it into a military alliance with the United States and undermine its traditional autonomy.
But Prime Minister Narendra Modi's administration, faced with an assertive China expanding its influence in the South China Sea and into the Indian Ocean, has signalled its desire to draw closer to the United States. China is also a close ally of India's arch rival, Pakistan.
New Delhi is keen to access U.S. technology for Modi's "Make in India" plans to build a domestic defence industrial base and cut expensive arms imports.
Carter said the two countries would also soon conclude a commercial shipping information exchange agreement.
(Writing by Sanjeev Miglani; Editing by Nick Macfie)
India, U.S. agree in principle on sharing military logistics - Ashton Carter | Reuters
++
BOTTOM LINE
I said before.. nothing will change.. even LSA is not agreed.. I said right DM MP is a man who is blocking all such foundation agreements inspite of what he says in public,,
There is no mention of so called what could be offered as pre guaranteed technology transfer point under MII..
Thats why i said before inspite of what media claims, its the french side which is not using any PR activity at all and is facing the flak and bashing from US,Russian,Swedish and Indian parties/people/journalist/analysts to Defense reporters .. and yet they are slowly doing what they do best.. quietly try and finish the deal with MOD and sign it ..
@Abingdonboy
Is it not the case where media over hyped US-India relationship whereas ground realities and realistic expectation meant if such cooperation has to come it will take more like 5-10 years what media and folks like Ajay Shukla is trying to say will come in days and months..
+++
@Stephen Cohen @Abingdonboy @zebra7 @Ankit Kumar 002 @dadeechi
You know i did not write before one small point,,
we have to be hypocrites really if we do agree for F18s case of 7.5G when we have actually manhandled, harassed and shown step son treatment to our LCA and has been insisting higher Gs as part of its FOC....
Its indeed a shame that doing so we created such a mess of delaying our own homegrown jet which by now we could have then inducted by increasing its productivity per year to a higher number..
The nation needs to be told why we have higher ASQRs for Tejas and relaxed ones for F18s if we really agree for 18s.. Perhaps MOD themselves needs to say that..
Or may be defense reporters or even like Mr Shukla should explain how its acceptable for 18s to have 7.5G versus Tejas 8.5Gs....
You know i did not write before one small point,,
we have to be hypocrites really if we do agree for F18s case of 7.5G when we have actually manhandled, harassed and shown step son treatment to our LCA and has been insisting higher Gs as part of its FOC....
Its indeed a shame that doing so we created such a mess of delaying our own homegrown jet which by now we could have then inducted by increasing its productivity per year to a higher number..
The nation needs to be told why we have higher ASQRs for Tejas and relaxed ones for F18s if we really agree for 18s.. Perhaps MOD themselves needs to say that..
Or may be defense reporters or even like Mr Shukla should explain how its acceptable for 18s to have 7.5G versus Tejas 8.5Gs....
New Recruit
Your evidence is public opinion? Oh my.
No one doubts that, but is there really hard data to prove that those aboard the F-18 outclasses what PLAAF has?
Exactly right, Israel speaks with one voice and calls its enemies just that and acts accordingly, India on the other hand has no clear narrative vis a vis Pakistan. One moment it is calling them enemies, the next minuet talks are going on, their singers/artists/designers etc are coming to India.Yes you are absolutely right. Whether it is bombay blasts or 26/11 US has a hand in that. But why blame them , when we dont treat enemy as an enemy? India does not walk the talk, it is not like Israel whose political class is full of patriots.
As such there is no need for US to take India seriously.
We have a rogue political class who are more hell bent on grabbing power and enjoying the luxuries.
Is it only me who thinks Parrikar is succumbing to US sugar coating ? I am amazed how the rejected planes F-16 and F/A 18 are making news into India now. Add to that LSA, CISMOA, BECA ! Are we competing with KSA and other US allies when it comes to collecting fancy equipments ? I understand we need cooperation for EMALS since our IAC-2 will be a CATOBAR and we may be needing F/A 18 for carrier borne operations, but if it's meant for airforce then it's smack on the face of IAF and its long trial runs.
1)The F-18 has no ability to operate from STOBAR carriers- it doesn't have the TWR or the aerodonamic performance to take off from short runways.Actually, there are two small catches..
Source says Indian Navy has put a very specific requirement that it wants aircrafts on-board its carrier to take off under 1 minute versus present 4 minutes plus take off time..
This essentially puts the case in clear perspective that MII for any jet has to have a navalised version capable of such capability.
In essence, inspite of what all newspaper are quoting and have been discussed the much touted game of survival wont happen between F18 vs Rafale.
I am not yet aware if F18 can be operating from STOBAR specially since 15 years timeline makes me see 2 new Stobars ACC coming in surely of IAC1 class.. Not sure about IAC2 but may be possible... Rafale does claim of stobar capability but needs to demonstrate..
No.Can f 18 fly from stobar.
If we get F 18 ; then our present Mig 29 K can be transferred to the IAF
There is absolutely zero chance of that.on G2G level is not happening which would have ensured delivery from '17.
No, this is incorrect for a number of reasons.36 are done, there is no way to backtrack without penalties. MoD had hoped to stop it there as the budget does not allow for the numbers required. The slack would have been picked up by US jets which were coming at much more value proposition to Rafale along with unbelievable promises of ToT which even the French hadn't offered. This however did not materialize.
ALL INDIAN MEMBERS - Get ready for MMRCA 2.
New Recruit
The 300 fighters would be over the RAFALE deal.
India would procure at least 200+ fighters under DTTI.
126 - RAFALEs
108 - Tejas MK1As
160 - F-16s
108 - F/A-18
312 - Super Sukhois
===========================
816 - Total (51 Squadrons)
Obsolete; obsolete; obsolete.
Exactly right, Israel speaks with one voice and calls its enemies just that and acts accordingly, India on the other hand has no clear narrative vis a vis Pakistan. One moment it is calling them enemies, the next minuet talks are going on, their singers/artists/designers etc are coming to India.
Unless you are willing to call a spade a spade and act accordingly India deserves the pain it gets.
Not just Parrikar but the entire GoI- look at Modi's bootlicking of the US, his entire foreign policy (where Pakistan is concerned) seems to have been dictated to him by Washington DC. It's mose bizzare that the self proclaimed "nationalists" would be the ones who sell out the most.
1)The F-18 has no ability to operate from STOBAR carriers- it doesn't have the TWR or the aerodonamic performance to take off from short runways.
2) Seriously, who else would even think about buying F-18s from 2020 onwards? Boeing have already moved on to their 6th gen fighters and have no future roadmap for the F-18, from the next decade all F-18 opertors will operate the F-35 as their frontline fighter. The Rafale on the other hand will be the frontline aircraft of all current (and future) Rafale operators for the forseeable future and has a clear and funded roadmap (F4+) for the forseeable future that India would be able to contribute to (industrial benefits).
No.
The F-18 can't operate from STOBAR carriers so the IN will still require the MIG-29Ks, have no doubt those will remain with the IN for the duration of their lives- the IN and IAF don't just transfer assets.
There is absolutely zero chance of that.
No, this is incorrect for a number of reasons.
1) Dassualt has already submitted their proposal to make 90 Rafales in India- Boeing is about 4 years away from being in such a position (if they ever get the ToT clearances from the USG which is doubtful in itself)
2) There is but a marginal price difference between the Rafale and F-18ASH
3) The emphasis is on rapid induction now, no one has time for a "MMRCA 2" that would take 5 years just to select a winner and thus 7-8 years from now to induct the first jets. The time for that has long since passed.
126 Rafales are assured and I am certain this figure will inflate to 250+ (easily) when taking account of the IAF's needs and the IN's needs.
The "budget constraints" are such nonsense when you consider the IAF has budgeted for the MMRCA since 2012 (and returned unspent CAPEX every year for as long as I can remember). With 50% offsets and a payback period that is >10 years this deal is more than affordable. Consider that by the time India finishes paying for its first batch of Rafales (in 2026) it will have the 3rd largest economy in the world and spending >$120BN/year on defence.