indranilroy wrote:Wickberg,
I have been speaking out the most in favour of Gripen for MMRCA. But I can't make head or tail out of your mix and match thing.
You say the air intakes are modular, allow me to ask a few questions:
1. So you mean there is an universal join from where you could join forward intake part of different size without any modifications at this join and behind it to the engines? (if not, then there is no difference between Gripen and others in respect to this)
that is what he implied, and then clarified with his IKEA example.
that too without an enlarging of the air channel after the intake channel itself. And that too for an engine with a 10% higher airflow requirement. How does that sound ?

Either the Gripen C/D's RM12 was being fed too much air or changes were made to the intake and the air channel on the Gripen Demo.
2. So you say Gripen will get the G414 without any changes? mounts, Cg balancing et al out of the window? (if not then it will be the same as Tejas Mk II). Tejas Mk II would have more refined airframe which need to be validated for other reasons. You can easily google it or read thread.
Indranil, Saab itself said that "minor" changes were required to fit the GE F-414. So as much as some person might like to spin the news into appearing that no changes were required, it is IMO, nonsense.
3. Tejas MkII won't be a Gripen. Gripen seems to be sleeker through the air. That's a given with it's huge canards and long slender body. Also it is definitely ahead of the Tejas by 10 years in terms of operational deployment. But them touting around MTOW and more hard points is clearly not the smartest arguments. Clearly having more hardpoints gives more flexibility. But loading the Gripen NG to MTOW with just 100 KN of thrust can/will only be done in strike roles. In A2A it will be a sitting duck with that TWR.
join the keypubs forum- there is a Gripen thread, where you'll see
this Saab document- and some poster basically exposes the spin that Saab puts on figures to make the Gripen NG look better than it is against Rafale/Typhoon types.
I'm not suggesting that the NG is a bad fighter, quite the opposite and I personally really like it, but Saab's PR is really something to be envious of. We Indians really need to learn a thing or two from Saab in that PR aspect as well, along with Program Management, Risk Management and who knows, maybe engineering and aerodynamics too.