SriSri wrote:I'm just jealous no one offered me a flight.. :-(



SriSri wrote:I'm just jealous no one offered me a flight.. :-(
I predict there would be at least one one-engined plane in that shortllist to try and lower the price of the two-engined planes. Does that make sense?shukla wrote:AERO INDIA: Uncertainty over MMRCA time-frame
Flightglobal
A Boeing official sparked debate among the competitors at the show by predicting that three twin-engine aircraft will make the shortlist. Lockheed Martin and Saab were both quick to promote the through-life cost benefits of a single-engine design.
Cheeky..
Thats a good point. But I think all these costs are already included in the maintenance cost. At least spare parts/radars/IRST etc. is. I also think that the ground crew maintenence work is included in the cost.Singha wrote:more a/c however mean more ground and aircrew...quite costly in that, more parking areas, more housing, more logistics for spare parts, more radars/engines/IRST/LDP/EW to keep in shape constantly...its not a clean cut deal.
My money is on atleast one single engined plane and one American in the final shortlistHenrik wrote: I predict there would be at least one one-engined plane in that shortllist to try and lower the price of the two-engined planes. Does that make sense?
Man, I guess it is never really enough...SriSri wrote:PS: I'm just jealous no one offered me a flight.. :-(
Good job doddel.Doddel wrote:I made a follow up from my one of my last post on unit price and maintenance cost to compare the mmrca contenders.
Unit cost:
Rafale: ~US$84.48 million
EF: ~US$83.16 million
F-16IN: US$50 million
F/A-18E/F: US$58 million
Gripen NG(IN): US$48 million
MiG-35: US$38.5 million
.......
For 10 000 hours it will be (Divided by gripens price in brackets) [Divided by Rafale]
Rafale: 274 500 000 USD (3.5) [1.0]
EF: 233 000 000 USD (3.0) [0.85]
F-16IN: 100 000 000 USD (1.3) [0.36]
F/A-18E/F: 238 000 000 USD (3.05) [0.87]
Gripen NG(IN): 78 000 000 USD (1.0) [0.28]
MiG-35: 218 500 000 USD (2.[0.80]
I thought you were supposed to put spokes in wheels. Perhaps he meant to say "put a spanner in the spoke". I know people say this all the time but it's a bit like saying "things falling in between the cracks" when they mean "between the boards".Vipul wrote:India to award $11 bn fighter jet deal.
......Naik said "unless dissatisfied vendors put spokes", which may involve getting clearances from the Central Vigilance Commission or legal proceedings, the deal would be finalised by September -- in the next fiscal.
Selling fighter jets to India would violate weapons-export guidelines, say members of the German opposition, who are criticizing a trip by Defense Minister Guttenberg to India this week. New Delhi has dangled a fat contract for a fleet of jets, but critics say Berlin should not export weapons to a crisis zone.
Yours is one of six firms shortlisted by India for the purchase of medium multi-role combat aircraft (MMRCA). What do you expect from this year’s Aero India show?
It’s different this year. It has emerged as a larger platform to display our capabilities and also (an opportunity to) look for commercial interactions. Usually, there were only aircraft at such shows but this time we also have subsystems on display. We have, for the first time, brought missile systems, the RBS-170 next generation one. It is an air defence missile system which we have offered to India. We are going to display this primarily for all the three armed forces. In communication systems we are going to display the capabilities of the Carabus which is an anti-foliage radar and head-up display for the helicopters. On the civil aviation side we have brought civil aircraft, Saab 2000 and 340 to the show for the first time.
What kind of offset opportunities will Saab’s deals throw up? (Under the offset policy, defence contractors such as Saab that win deals from India will have to source components or systems worth a certain proportion of the deal from Indian companies.)
The defence procurement policy of 2011 gives us an opportunity to work in dual aerospace domains. We can leverage both civil and military areas as far as offsets are concerned. We are into both spaces and that will help us go a long way in fulfilling our offset contracts. On the MMRCA front, we are offering complete technology transfer, which means we will share the latest technology on Gripen NG. It will be complete, with system and subsystems, including source codes. So it will be an Indian Gripen that is inducted into the Indian Air Force (should India choose the aircraft). And on the political front we are (from) a neutral country (Sweden), non-aligned like India and we don’t have any bars, and that is why we are ready to share complete technology with India.
Officials of the European contenders mocked Lockheed Martin's apparently recent bid to let the F-35 Fifth Generation fighter among the contending Fourth Generation fighters, saying that it was a sign of the F-16IN losing altitude in the contest. The world’s largest military equipment maker, they alleged, has sought to confuse Indian decision-makers by putting out talk of the F-35. Worse, they alleged, the Fifth Generation tag is a marketing gimmick, because “Lockheed Martin has put out a self-serving definition of what constitutes a Fifth Generation jet,” EADS officials said.
“If you are saying stealth is a defining 5G characteristic, then the greater the capabilities of the electronic scanning (AESA) radar, the other must-have, the more questionable stealth becomes”, the officials said. “Also, designing a fighter for stealth means compromising on agility and lethality. Stealth is a survivability concern. You can sneak in on an enemy, but you will still need to have a good punch to take out the enemy. Also, stealth works so long as you are not detected, but once detected, stealthy aircraft lack agility to escape. Stealth and survivability can be ensured in more than one way. The Eurofighter relies on agility, the F-22 relies on agility to survive. So, is India prepared to sacrifice weapons carriage, supercruise, agility for stealth”.
Asked about concerns over America's willingness to transfer technology, Mr. Prins said, "The IAF's request for proposal stipulated technology transfer in five categories in four phases. Our proposal is fully compliant. There's no requirement for 100 per cent technology transfer in the RFP. The final proposal was submitted by the US government. So, there should be no problem on the ToT front". "Other contenders have US technology in their fighters. In offering ToT, they will have to go through the same US government requirements as we do", he added.
Doesn't the Swedish foreign policy mandate the same --> No exports to a warzonesourab_c wrote:Interesting development regarding Eurofighter's future in India:
Germany Will 'Contribute to an Arms Race,' Charges Opposition
Selling fighter jets to India would violate weapons-export guidelines, say members of the German opposition, who are criticizing a trip by Defense Minister Guttenberg to India this week. New Delhi has dangled a fat contract for a fleet of jets, but critics say Berlin should not export weapons to a crisis zone.
dogfight translation into punjabi kutte khanishukla wrote:Dogfight over $10b fighter deal
Electrifying aerospace vendors at Aero India 2011 in Bangalore, Indian Air Force chief, Air Chief Marshall PV Naik, announced today that New Delhi would decide within two weeks about which medium multi-role combat aircraft (MMRCA) it would buy, and actually sign the US $10 billion contract by September.
Executives from these companies say they are baffled by Naik’s announcement. Asked in late-2010 to rework their offset bids, and with no date yet given for resubmission, the MoD does not have a key element needed to decide a winner.
“Is the MoD going to decide the contract winner without examining the offset bids?” asks a bemused executive, from one of the competing aircraft manufacturers.
It most probably does. However, India is not a warzone or a "crisis zone" as the Germans like to call it. It reflects just how narrow their scope is towards the world. It seems the Germans are still stuck in the past. I never fully understood their foreign policy anyways. They are foolish enough to stand their "fictional" moral high ground and willing to compromise a real business deal with such statements. At least the French and the Americans know how to pick sides when there is money involved.SriSri wrote:
Doesn't the Swedish foreign policy mandate the same --> No exports to a warzone
sourab_c wrote:Interesting development regarding Eurofighter's future in India:
Germany Will 'Contribute to an Arms Race,' Charges Opposition
Selling fighter jets to India would violate weapons-export guidelines, say members of the German opposition, who are criticizing a trip by Defense Minister Guttenberg to India this week. New Delhi has dangled a fat contract for a fleet of jets, but critics say Berlin should not export weapons to a crisis zone.
Die Grunen (German Green party) is same as Indian communist parties.. they got to cry every now and then to keep there relevance, to get there name poping up in news so that people don't forget them.India's long-simmering border conflict with neighboring Pakistan has made Guttenberg's two-day trip something of a controversy. Both countries have nuclear arsenals, and German Green Party chief Claudia Roth told SPIEGEL ONLINE that a sale of military gear to any crisis region was "an open departure from the principles of German weapons-export policy."
I don't think its wise to consider opinion of a party with just 10% voter-base, as the opnion of all Germans.sourab_c wrote:It most probably does. However, India is not a warzone or a "crisis zone" as the Germans like to call it. It reflects just how narrow their scope is towards the world. It seems the Germans are still stuck in the past. I never fully understood their foreign policy anyways. They are foolish enough to stand their "fictional" moral high ground and willing to compromise a real business deal with such statements. At least the French and the Americans know how to pick sides when there is money involved.SriSri wrote:Doesn't the Swedish foreign policy mandate the same --> No exports to a warzone
I am willing to bet that if the German opposition does come into power, it will seriously compromise the Eurofighter program in India if selected. I hope GOI realizes that.
But if there was a war, would Sweden embargo India?sourab_c wrote:It most probably does. However, India is not a warzone or a "crisis zone"SriSri wrote:
Doesn't the Swedish foreign policy mandate the same --> No exports to a warzone
Only if they don't love SAABGeorgeWelch wrote:But if there was a war, would Sweden embargo India?SriSri wrote: Doesn't the Swedish foreign policy mandate the same --> No exports to a warzone
If Pakistan or China attacked India? No, Sweden wouldn't because all countries have the right to defend themselves. But if India were to conduct an illegal sneak-attack on Thailand for no obvious reason, probably and so would probably the rest of the world too.GeorgeWelch wrote:SriSri wrote:
Doesn't the Swedish foreign policy mandate the same --> No exports to a warzone
But if there was a war, would Sweden embargo India?
First, Sweden believes in the right for self-defence. Second, Sweden does not view India as a "warzone".SriSri wrote:Doesn't the Swedish foreign policy mandate the same --> No exports to a warzone
A lot has changed in Swedish foreign policy since then.SriSri wrote:@Henrik, I hope what you say is true. But I do remember some hooplah among Swedish opposition parties during the Kargil conflict in '99 regarding sale of Bofors ammo and spares.
Where is the shortlist then? One yank and One single enginned and there you are back to 4 candidates you were seriously considering. There is no such constraint to include one yank fighter. The blame squarely lies on them for their reluctant stand about EUMA waiver and ToT issues. We can only compare the comparables.anirban_aim wrote:My money is on atleast one single engined plane and one American in the final shortlistHenrik wrote: I predict there would be at least one one-engined plane in that shortllist to try and lower the price of the two-engined planes. Does that make sense?
I hope they shortlist beginning first with terms and conditions and whose offsets are of critical tech. Narrow down cannot begin with money it only ends with moneynits wrote:IAF chief’s googly on wrapping the MMRCA deals
“Is the MoD going to decide the contract winner without examining the offset bids?” asks a bemused executive, from one of the competing aircraft manufacturers.
Doddel wrote:I made a follow up from my one of my last post on unit price and maintenance cost to compare the mmrca contenders.
Unit cost:
Rafale: ~US$84.48 million
EF: ~US$83.16 million
F-16IN: US$50 million
F/A-18E/F: US$58 million
Gripen NG(IN): US$48 million
MiG-35: US$38.5 million
Maintenance cost per flight hour
Rafale: 19 000 USD
EF: 15 000 USD
F-16IN: 5 000 USD
F/A-18E/F: 18 000 USD (have seen figures of ~£85000 but that seems insane)
Gripen NG(IN): 2 500-5000 USD (3000 USD ackording to Swedish Air Force)
MiG-35: 18 000 USD
Such as?Sancho wrote:The Eurocanards are more costly, but also offers more techs that are on offer on the F18SH only as options, or not at all.
Thatz the point I wanted to make.Henrik wrote: There's no reason to fly the NG-Demo to India again. After all, remember that it is a Demo and it's nothing you perform airshows with and it's quite risky even bringing it to India.