Cyrano wrote:The Gripen (Legacy and NG) has many export orders, the KF-50 too
Please check who ordered, how many, what type of contract and if they fit the two criteria above.
BTW anyone evaluating LCA can also evaluate
gripen no? Much as I love our Tejas and it may be quite ok for our neighborhood wrt the width of north Pakistan or Andamans to Malacca, and costal defense, for anything more it has to be in
Gripen's weight and range class. That's why Mk2 is so important. Will expand safe and sure mission envelopes further.
Any country evaluating Tejas Mk1 should have the kind of mission envelopes I cited as _their worst case scenario_ in their neighborhood threat perceptions. When you add all that up, the Tejas export probability function tends towards "infinity" let's say.
Not dissing our bird at all, but that's the reality as I see it.
just look at the FA-50 sales and you'll get your answer.
Gripen C/D has flat lined as far as export sales go due to a higher price tag and
Gripen E/F has failed to find any new buyers after Brazil and that has nothing to do with the engine being American. It has much more to do with the politics of each country and how that dictates whom to buy from. Sweden being a political lightweight with little geostrategic importance hurts Saab much more than the capability of it's fighters.
SoKo has succeeded with the FA-50 due to the affordable price versus a safe reliable lightweight fighter trainer powered by an American engine. That is in fact an advantage, given how reliable the F-404/F-414 engine family has been.
PS- Poland just ordered 50 FA-50s and they're a NATO partner.
Tejas Mk1 and
Gripen C/D are in the same weight, range and payload class. Not sure what you mean by "
Gripen's weight and range class". If you're referring to the
Gripen E/F then be specific. Obviously the Tejas Mk1 can't compete with the
Gripen E/F which is a bigger and newer bird. For that , the Tejas Mk2 will be in the same class as the
Gripen E/F.