Frankly, i believe that we should do both. Work with RR and also do a parallel program on the side. Work with RR to build a 132KN Engine for AMCA and try to build our own Engine for the Bomber which we would have to start working by 2030.Prem Kumar wrote:There is another risk with the RR JV approach. That could be a nice way for the West to sabotage our native engine program:
1) Offer "full TOT/IP"
2) String along for half a decade before India wakes up and realizes nothing of value is going to get transferred
3) We pay hard cash for this runaround & some screwdriver tech
4) Come 2026, we are back to square one with the realization that, we have to do the hard work ourselves
5) We buy proven engines off the shelf
6) West funds dalals to say that we are incapable of building own engines, even with foreign help. The Kaveri saga will also be flogged ad-nauseum
7) Scuttle the engine program forever due to negative press
We shouldn't repeat the FGFA mistake. We spent a crapload of money & wasted half a decade, before waking up one morning to the realization that we need to be the masters of our own destiny. Ever since that clarity, the AMCA project has been progressing well.
The right thing to do is to give the middle finger to RR and be ready to invest 1 decade & $10B to build our own engine - on a national mission mode (just like the Tejas or the AMCA or the Cryogenic engine)
This is so critical that I wouldn't even mind of PM Modi gives a clarion call for this project, under the Atmanirbharta scheme. Bring the entire national will & resources to bear!
Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft: News & Discussion - 30 August 2019
Re: Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft: News & Discussion - 30 August 2019
Re: Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft: News & Discussion - 30 August 2019
AMCA cockpit with the LAD
Re: Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft: News & Discussion - 30 August 2019
SK displayed this radar for KFX, however not known if they proceeded further with it. Took me a while to dig got the image source.
It is an vivaldi AESA antenna. Very TFTA and used for wide bandwidth design. I am expecting something similar for our AMCA.
Before we loose heart vivaldi designs are used on our AESA jammers and AESA missile seekers
Edit:
That X band seeker, gentlemen, is AMCA radar in small form.
Vivaldi antenna running through 9-9.8Ghz. It will only get better.
Re: Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft: News & Discussion - 30 August 2019
South Korea seems to have made a fairly weird trade with their radar. They don't have a slick RCS optimized aircraft yet the radar seems to be sized quite conservatively. The first prototype that was C-130 tested had just a tad over 1,000 T/R modules and ultimately they want to work up to 1,200. Given that there will literally be dozens of KF-X that will never have an IWB, and thus no VLO configuration, they should have tried to size the antenna closer to their F-35 or F-15 fighters. That said, there are probably electrical and thermal margin limitations at least in the initial versions. Given the primary high end targets are going to be the Chinese J series, and the Japanese fighters, those both will likely have a significantly larger radar so even as a limited interim capability they'll be at some disadvantage. This should be avoided on the AMCA. They should size the radar in the 1500-2000 T/R module class so that power and performance can be improved as electrical and thermal margins are increased in successive iterations.
Re: Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft: News & Discussion - 30 August 2019
In our case, we have the Su30 upgrade to try out the any large radar, that we want on AMCA.
I was wondering if SK wants to go with GaN based radar, explaining the lower TRM count. However I guess, lower TRM even with GaN might effect the number of beams that can be formed, there by effecting the tracking counts.
There is also the issue of the vivaldi antenna size, which may not allow compact TRMs. F35 antenna seems to be different and more compact than vivaldi.
I was wondering if SK wants to go with GaN based radar, explaining the lower TRM count. However I guess, lower TRM even with GaN might effect the number of beams that can be formed, there by effecting the tracking counts.
There is also the issue of the vivaldi antenna size, which may not allow compact TRMs. F35 antenna seems to be different and more compact than vivaldi.
Last edited by nam on 13 Mar 2021 17:31, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft: News & Discussion - 30 August 2019
brar_w wrote:South Korea seems to have made a fairly weird trade with their radar. They don't have a slick RCS optimized aircraft yet the radar seems to be sized quite conservatively.
the later iterations do look quite stealthy , but then you would know better
Re: Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft: News & Discussion - 30 August 2019
The decision b/w GaA or GaN shouldn't have any impact on what size radar you should be able to accommodate. What is driving your design trades is going to be the overall aircraft design, internal RCS targets (this impacts how much sensors have to hold the advantage) cost, SWaP, threats (among other things) and their sensor suites. South Korea of late has bought fighters with fairly substantial radars. Their F-15's currently lack an AESA but the upgrade will give them a 1500+ module radar eventually, and their F-35A's have a 1676 module antenna. The KFX seems to have been sized closer to the F-16/F-18 level than contemporary 5th gen fighters. How large a radar you can accommodate is usually locked into the basic design and is always something you build around when it comes time to upgrade the sensor (as opposed to re-designing the base design to support a given future radar) which means its difficult to retrofit.nam wrote:In our case, we have the Su30 upgrade to try out the any large radar, that we want on AMCA.
I was wondering if SK wants to go with GaN based radar, explaining the lower TRM count. However I guess, lower TRM even with GaN might effect the number of beams that can be formed, there by effecting the tracking counts.
There is also the issue of the vivaldi antenna size, which may not allow compact TRMs. F35 antenna seems to be different and more compact than vivaldi.
Looking through the documents that their design team has published (they've published a few papers on their initial testing of the first prototype of the radar), I don't see much around mostly electric architecture work or even test beds to de-risk this aspect ahead of the KFX. They are either doing it and not writing about it or they haven't invested a lot upfront and part of the KFX roadmap will invest into this over time. I suspect that, combined with their engine choice (no 5th gen engine with the higher power capacity) is probably why they've been conservative with this though I don't think it is the right way to go - You're not a true 5th gen IMO if you can't generate 2-3 x the electrical output relative to the aircraft you are replacing. Same for an increased thermal margin than the aircraft you are replacing (this is important for both subsystems and signature). They are fielding a Super Hornet engine with a roughly Super Hornet sized radar. I don't know if they are going aggressive in terms of EHAS implementation etc but they haven't published a lot on what electrical architecture or margins they are using on the KFX and there is certainly not been published work in terms of de-risking for the same.
Yes for sure. They have iterations on their roadmap that will have an IWB, more RCS enhancements etc. But those aren't retrofittable to the initial aircraft fielded in the next 10 or so years. So those will be at a disadvantage just like they'll be at a performance disadvantage because of the design and external weapons (designed to have an IWB but has no IWB thus you get the higher drag and perf. degradation but no advantage). So some of this could have been mitigated by just giving them higher sensor performance. For a post 2030 IOC fighter, you aren't really competing with the MSA equipped fighters of the world (or that shouldn't be the goal)...the threats (I assume these are China and japan for S. Korea) would have mostly migrated to 1st or 2nd gen. AESA's for the most part.kit wrote:
the later iterations do look quite stealthy , but then you would know better
Re: Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft: News & Discussion - 30 August 2019
Satwik
@i_m_satwikk
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The Dark Lord
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The Dark Lord
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Re: Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft: News & Discussion - 30 August 2019
Interesting rear design... More similar to the ruski layout with big boom between engines than eurocanard layout with engines tightly spaced together.
Re: Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft: News & Discussion - 30 August 2019
Modi Govt's CCS may approve AMCA design and development program with an estimated Rs 15,000 investment required for the program including prototype development and testing.
Link
Link
Bengaluru: With a view to modernising the Indian Air Force and giving it more teeth, the Union government may approve indigenous fifth-generation fighter programme, the advanced medium combat aircraft (AMCA).
To be designed and developed at a cost of Rs 15,000 crore, the production of these aircraft might start in the next 7-8 years.
...
Re: Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft: News & Discussion - 30 August 2019
Tweet below says cockpit of Tejas Mk2, but drag & drop the picture into a new browser window and look at the bottom right of the Large Area Display
https://twitter.com/DefenceDecode/statu ... 8159666179 ---> Tejas MK2 flight simulator cockpit.
https://twitter.com/DefenceDecode/statu ... 8159666179 ---> Tejas MK2 flight simulator cockpit.
Re: Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft: News & Discussion - 30 August 2019
Maan gaye apki paarkhi nazron ko!!!
Re: Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft: News & Discussion - 30 August 2019
As much as I would like to take credit for "paarkhi nazron"....I was not the one who caught thisIndranil wrote:Maan gaye apki paarkhi nazron ko!!!
https://twitter.com/ButaliaEshan/status ... 86886?s=20 ---> It's AMCA, I guess.
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Re: Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft: News & Discussion - 30 August 2019
the prototype woudl be a sight to watch
Re: Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft: News & Discussion - 30 August 2019
AMCA technologies are going into LCA-mk2.Rakesh wrote:As much as I would like to take credit for "paarkhi nazron"....I was not the one who caught thisIndranil wrote:Maan gaye apki paarkhi nazron ko!!!
https://twitter.com/ButaliaEshan/status ... 86886?s=20 ---> It's AMCA, I guess.
[img]https:%20//pbs.twimg.com/media/Exe7qboUYAULoOJ?format=jpg&name=large[/img]
Whatever being developed for AMCA is meant for LCA-mk2 too. In other words, LCA-mk2 act as test bed to proof technologies being developed for AMCA. You will see them implemented first in LCA_mk2 before going into AMCA.
This could be one such incident.
Re: Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft: News & Discussion - 30 August 2019
Indranil! Got a question saar
Is there any particular reason for the additional smaller head down display. Personally i quite like it. It looks at first glance a classic RWR display readout to my eyes. Would be curious to understand the rationale....could also be for a backup of some sort?
Is there any particular reason for the additional smaller head down display. Personally i quite like it. It looks at first glance a classic RWR display readout to my eyes. Would be curious to understand the rationale....could also be for a backup of some sort?
Re: Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft: News & Discussion - 30 August 2019
hopefully this is allowed but someone did a AMCA 3d model, you can rotate it 360 degree etc. Extremely cool.
AMCA 3D
AMCA 3D
Re: Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft: News & Discussion - 30 August 2019
m_saini wrote:hopefully this is allowed but someone did a AMCA 3d model, you can rotate it 360 degree etc. Extremely cool.
AMCA 3D
Nice , Gives me some SR-71 vibes tbh ,especially when viewed from below
Re: Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft: News & Discussion - 30 August 2019
https://twitter.com/dfi_pk/status/13802 ... 43393?s=20 ---> AMCA Internal Weapons Bay (IWB)
Features:
1. Serrated edges of IWB for low RCS during weapons release
2. Four hardpoints for different payload config
3. Two piece folding door mechanism
Features:
1. Serrated edges of IWB for low RCS during weapons release
2. Four hardpoints for different payload config
3. Two piece folding door mechanism
Re: Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft: News & Discussion - 30 August 2019
https://twitter.com/dfi_pk/status/13802 ... 24805?s=20 ---> The bomb seen in the AMCA IWB picture in my previous tweet could be a new long range winged PGM under development. It has a single piece pivoting wing which adds the small possibility that the PGM might be self-powered. Prominent blunt nose cone possibly for IIR or other seekers.
https://twitter.com/dfi_pk/status/13803 ... 90657?s=20 ---> Credibility to the above winged PGM is added by the fact that in all possibility ADA will only include confirmed weapons for AMCA's internal weapons bay or external carriage aerodynamic studies/stimulations, etc because such exercises are time consuming & require lot of effort.
https://twitter.com/dfi_pk/status/13803 ... 90657?s=20 ---> Credibility to the above winged PGM is added by the fact that in all possibility ADA will only include confirmed weapons for AMCA's internal weapons bay or external carriage aerodynamic studies/stimulations, etc because such exercises are time consuming & require lot of effort.
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Re: Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft: News & Discussion - 30 August 2019
That is a backup display to take you home if the LAD fails. MK1 have a small 3.5" display made by DP.andy B wrote:Indranil! Got a question saar
Is there any particular reason for the additional smaller head down display. Personally i quite like it. It looks at first glance a classic RWR display readout to my eyes. Would be curious to understand the rationale....could also be for a backup of some sort?
AMCA and MK2 have a lot common.
Re: Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft: News & Discussion - 30 August 2019
Aah many thanks Dileep saar. This is a very interesting arrangement. I wish you and your company the very best in the domestic aerospace endeavor! May your tribe grow a 1000x!!Dileep wrote:That is a backup display to take you home if the LAD fails. MK1 have a small 3.5" display made by DP.andy B wrote:Indranil! Got a question saar
Is there any particular reason for the additional smaller head down display. Personally i quite like it. It looks at first glance a classic RWR display readout to my eyes. Would be curious to understand the rationale....could also be for a backup of some sort?
AMCA and MK2 have a lot common.
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Re: Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft: News & Discussion - 30 August 2019
Thanks Andy. Things looks great currently.
Re: Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft: News & Discussion - 30 August 2019
Heartening to hear that Dileep! Is your team also involved in the Tejas Mk2 program? If so, how are things on that front?Dileep wrote:Thanks Andy. Things looks great currently.
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Re: Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft: News & Discussion - 30 August 2019
We are working on stuff that is common to both. It is difficult to figure which platform is where from the view we get.
Covid isn't helping. Can't do in person visits anymore, so can't meet chaiwalas and get juicy nuggets.
Covid isn't helping. Can't do in person visits anymore, so can't meet chaiwalas and get juicy nuggets.
Re: Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft: News & Discussion - 30 August 2019
AMCA brochure from Aero India 2021..was looking for this one in good size, found it. Can compare all the CG renditions with what we see here, the official AMCA layout.
<removed harami link>
<removed harami link>
Last edited by hnair on 21 Apr 2021 23:16, edited 1 time in total.
Reason: please dont link stuff from a URL that has defense.pk
Reason: please dont link stuff from a URL that has defense.pk
Re: Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft: News & Discussion - 30 August 2019
India’s Next Generation Fighter Aircraft, The AMCA
https://flyingdaggers45.medium.com/indi ... d7e51bf841
15 April 2021
https://flyingdaggers45.medium.com/indi ... d7e51bf841
15 April 2021
Re: Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft: News & Discussion - 30 August 2019
1. I am slightly disappointed with only 4 internal hard points. Could we not fatten the air intake area and accomodate hard points ( similar to silent eagle solution) as a last ditch effort so as to increase the overall payload in pure stealth mode ? Would it affect the RCS significantly?
2. How about all moving vertical stabilizers ? Please advise or guide on the advantages and disadvantages of it. It would have surely contributed in shortening the height of the vertical stabilizers (and thereby the RCS overall).
3. I am in awe of F4.1 features mentioned by Rakesh saar many moons back in Rafale dhaaga .viewtopic.php?f=3&t=7266&p=2370767&hili ... e#p2370767. Can we expect similar level of maturity in AMCA/TEDBF when it rolls out in next decade ?
4. Lot of real estate is unused in the cockpit, probably because the displays are same as that of Tejas Mk2 (narrower cockpit) . Could it be improved upon ?
Additionally we are planning to use framed HUD. Would have loved frameless HUD as in Rafale.
Sincere apologies for sounding like being suffering from brochuritis.
_/\_
2. How about all moving vertical stabilizers ? Please advise or guide on the advantages and disadvantages of it. It would have surely contributed in shortening the height of the vertical stabilizers (and thereby the RCS overall).
3. I am in awe of F4.1 features mentioned by Rakesh saar many moons back in Rafale dhaaga .viewtopic.php?f=3&t=7266&p=2370767&hili ... e#p2370767. Can we expect similar level of maturity in AMCA/TEDBF when it rolls out in next decade ?
4. Lot of real estate is unused in the cockpit, probably because the displays are same as that of Tejas Mk2 (narrower cockpit) . Could it be improved upon ?
Additionally we are planning to use framed HUD. Would have loved frameless HUD as in Rafale.
Sincere apologies for sounding like being suffering from brochuritis.
_/\_
Re: Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft: News & Discussion - 30 August 2019
1. You can make the internal bay fatter, but you have to push it through air. So, it is a case of use sometimes, but pay always. There is no right answer. For a medium aircraft, IAF and ADA sat down and chose the balance between aerodynamic performance and stealth.
2. All moving vertical stabilizers certainly helps. I think ADA is doing some risk mitigation by limiting the number of new things that it is trying.
3. You are suffering from brochurities of F4.1. I don't blame you. Those brochures are written really well.
4. Filling up empty space to look busy is not a good thing. One of the principle cockpit design elements is how much does the pilot have to move his/her head to operate the switches and read the dials. Lower is better. HUD design is not finalized.
2. All moving vertical stabilizers certainly helps. I think ADA is doing some risk mitigation by limiting the number of new things that it is trying.
3. You are suffering from brochurities of F4.1. I don't blame you. Those brochures are written really well.
4. Filling up empty space to look busy is not a good thing. One of the principle cockpit design elements is how much does the pilot have to move his/her head to operate the switches and read the dials. Lower is better. HUD design is not finalized.
Re: Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft: News & Discussion - 30 August 2019
WSO from the rear cockpit is going to rule the aerial combat of the future, as Mission Commander of the MUM-Team.
Harsh Vardhan Thakur
·
May 5
Tentatively, five aircraft in a MUM-team, but only two cockpits. That's a healthy ratio. Therefore, Yes. There would a rear cockpit on the Mothership of a MUM-team.
Harsh Vardhan Thakur
·
May 5
Tentatively, five aircraft in a MUM-team, but only two cockpits. That's a healthy ratio. Therefore, Yes. There would a rear cockpit on the Mothership of a MUM-team.
Re: Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft: News & Discussion - 30 August 2019
# of hard point is not the correct metric to measure but volume of IWB should be. One way to maximize the volume is to miniaturize the effectors. Miniaturization of kill solutions is the way to go to increase capacity of IWB.Avinandan wrote:1. I am slightly disappointed with only 4 internal hard points. Could we not fatten the air intake area and accomodate hard points ( similar to silent eagle solution) as a last ditch effort so as to increase the overall payload in pure stealth mode ? Would it affect the RCS significantly?
The reason for this is with LO platforms, one can reach nearer to the target than with conventional platforms, reducing the need for effectors to be launched from a larger distance.
Re: Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft: News & Discussion - 30 August 2019
NOOOO.brar_w wrote:South Korea seems to have made a fairly weird trade with their radar. They don't have a slick RCS optimized aircraft yet the radar seems to be sized quite conservatively. The first prototype that was C-130 tested had just a tad over 1,000 T/R modules and ultimately they want to work up to 1,200. Given that there will literally be dozens of KF-X that will never have an IWB, and thus no VLO configuration, they should have tried to size the antenna closer to their F-35 or F-15 fighters. That said, there are probably electrical and thermal margin limitations at least in the initial versions. Given the primary high end targets are going to be the Chinese J series, and the Japanese fighters, those both will likely have a significantly larger radar so even as a limited interim capability they'll be at some disadvantage. This should be avoided on the AMCA. They should size the radar in the 1500-2000 T/R module class so that power and performance can be improved as electrical and thermal margins are increased in successive iterations.
The Korean radar has 1000 radiating elements, the number of TRMs is exactly half of that. They paired two radiating elements to one TRM.
Re: Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft: News & Discussion - 30 August 2019
This has be a first Brar_w is usually never wronglakshmanM wrote:NOOOO.brar_w wrote:South Korea seems to have made a fairly weird trade with their radar. They don't have a slick RCS optimized aircraft yet the radar seems to be sized quite conservatively. The first prototype that was C-130 tested had just a tad over 1,000 T/R modules and ultimately they want to work up to 1,200. They should size the radar in the 1500-2000 T/R module class so that power and performance can be improved as electrical and thermal margins are increased in successive iterations.
The Korean radar has 1000 radiating elements, the number of TRMs is exactly half of that. They paired two radiating elements to one TRM.
Re: Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft: News & Discussion - 30 August 2019
I was basing my numbers on what the radar design team has published so it is possible that they may have changed things around after those papers were published.