India selects Typhoon and Rafale for MMRCA shortlist

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Re: India selects Typhoon and Rafale for MMRCA shortlist

Post by manum »

Singha wrote:Italy spain and uk will use quick escape route and buy more jsf. France for good or bad is stuck with rafale only and has to make it work properly not trickle fund and dilly dally leaving it half baked like the ef abandoned by its parents and now looking to be adopted by rich folks like ksa and needy ones like india
I guess this is exactly the reason, why we can own EF...if its headache for them...EF has great possibility to not only bring its price tumbling down, but also being a fighter having immense possibility of upgrade...Look at nose and you know, they have considered extra space...I am also biased towards the Eurojet...

They want to defend the technology, but I know by UK history, they'll burn even the unfinished airframe of the aircraft...I am recalling how they cancelled the TSR2, of which Typhoon is legacy ahead...I need to dig German history also...
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Re: India selects Typhoon and Rafale for MMRCA shortlist

Post by Kakkaji »

If the F-18 engine performance was deficient in high altitude and desert, why was this engine chosen for the LCA?
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Re: India selects Typhoon and Rafale for MMRCA shortlist

Post by manum »

Kakkaji wrote:If the F-18 engine performance was deficient in high altitude and desert, why was this engine chosen for the LCA?
It was not the engine, its intake design and more...remember for LCA we are using the General Electric F404-GE-F2J3 afterburning turbofan , and LCA did well at Leh...Problem lies in cook not in vegetables...
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Re: India selects Typhoon and Rafale for MMRCA shortlist

Post by negi »

Kakkaji wrote:If the F-18 engine performance was deficient in high altitude and desert, why was this engine chosen for the LCA?
I don't know if the root cause was traced back to the engine per se; F-18 SH has the highest wing loading figures amongst the MMRCA candidates and that would adversely affect it's take off performance.
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Re: India selects Typhoon and Rafale for MMRCA shortlist

Post by suryag »

I went to wiki chacha and found that the M88-2 is almost of the same dimensions as Kaveri, so i think Rafale can house the Kaveri in later variants. Btw, it says the rafale my uncle also says that it can supercruise at 1.4 M, so would we get this tech too(i.e., m88-2's ability to supercruise) ? I also tried to find out how supercruising engines are different from regular afterburner engines but couldnt find it, can anyone please throw some light please ?
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Re: India selects Typhoon and Rafale for MMRCA shortlist

Post by Austin »

RCS of Rafale or Eurofighter helping it in any way is greatly exaggerated , if its a clean configuration and on head on flight that would present lower RCS compared to F-16 or MKI.

But a loaded Rafale/EF is no better then a loaded MKI/F-16 as you cannot control how RF will bounce off various external payload , neither Rafale/EF/MKI or F-16 has any done any thing significant on shaping to reduce its RCS , they tend to use RAM on some hot spots and some have they engine hidden from direct exposure but that wont help much unless they are flying clean and level.

If you load 2 external drop tanks on JSF/PAK-FA/F-22 the entire RCS of a well designed fighter will go for a toss.

Its the conventional low altitude flight below the radar horizon with GIS/Terprom capabilities with good mission planning of these conventional fighters that would add to its stealth ingress and LPI capability.

Karan M good post.
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Re: India selects Typhoon and Rafale for MMRCA shortlist

Post by rohitvats »

Rahul M wrote:rohit, from my reading of past air wars, most dogfights have taken place at 10,000 m or lower. modern fighters have a very wide band of altitude and velocity where they are effective, and a specific zone where they are most effective. starting from a few 100 m off the ground (remember the maneuvers at airshows which take place within visual range of land-lubbers)
most of these would however be far less maneuverable at higher altitudes. it was the 2nd gen of jet fighters, which were meant to be straight flying interceptors which had very good acceleration at altitude but poor turning performance.
Thanx.
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Re: India selects Typhoon and Rafale for MMRCA shortlist

Post by Singha »

perhaps a constant diameter 'plug' can be put into rafale nose without too many aerodynamic hacks kind of like how rbe2 was accomodated into the M2K testbed nose iirc.
for the rest of the a/c the rafale nose does look tiny...its more a nose for a F16-block40 type slim fuselage.

its upto IAF to put its foot down and demand certain hard yardsticks from the new AESAs...if the vendors can accomodate it in existing airframe then fine, else they need to work on structural changes and make it happen.

it MUST be better than the apg80 performance (F16 block60) and match the APG79 - in what way I dont know, but make it happen. its quite likely the MRCA will have to deal with aesa radars in the noses of J-10/J-11/J-15...all plenty big planes.
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Re: India selects Typhoon and Rafale for MMRCA shortlist

Post by Pratyush »

Dassult, has been saying for some time that the Rafeal can be fitted with Kaveri.
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Re: India selects Typhoon and Rafale for MMRCA shortlist

Post by sohels »

Karan M wrote:BTW a gent from Brazil had shared some facts on the net - he is a Brazilian parliamentary officer and journalist who had the chance to interact with IAF officers when they visited Brazil to discuss Brazil's FX-2 offer.
What else did he say?
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Re: India selects Typhoon and Rafale for MMRCA shortlist

Post by Gagan »

Britain close to clinching £7.2billion fighter-jet deal with India
Quoting a part of the article
...

If New Delhi picks the Typhoon, which is made by BAE Systems and partners in Europe, it could open the way for a supersonic jet capable of landing on aircraft carriers because BAE has given India detailed plans for a ‘marinised’ version that could be built as a joint venture.

This would interest the Ministry of Defence, which is committed to buying American Joint Strike Fighters for two superaircraft carriers that are due to be built by 2018. Each jet is expected to cost £100 million – far higher than a £60million Typhoon.

If the Typhoon is selected, India will fund most of the conversion work.

But with India said to be looking for off-setting deals, including supplying nuclear power stations – an area where the French are superior – it is not certain BAE will win
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Re: India selects Typhoon and Rafale for MMRCA shortlist

Post by shiv »

indranilroy wrote:shiv sir, the planes engines do not lug the weight around except in the case the altitude gain. The lift does that. The thrust produced by the engine in leveled flight is proportional to the drag. And in that repect, I suspect that at transonic sorties the Su-30MKI will be 1.5 times the MMRCAs.

Anyways even if you considered the differential in fuel consumption, it will not make up for differential of around 100 million between the life-cost of a typical medium and heavy weight fighter.
Indranilji - lift=drag. So if the mass to be kept in the air is higher the lift required is higher and the drag is higher.

I did not understand the 100 million life cost differential comment. What units are you talking about and where did the figures come from.
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Re: India selects Typhoon and Rafale for MMRCA shortlist

Post by shiv »

Some random thoughts. About the "atitude of air combat" - Jasjit Singh's article on Air Dominance in a recent issue of Vayu was very illuminating.

What happened in air warfare was that long distance shoot down capability quickly developed as better missiles became available like Sidewinder, R-60, R-73, Magic, AMRAAM, R-27, R-77 etc. Because of missiles the ability to shoot down aircraft at distances of over 5 - 10 km became possible.

But air to ground weapons had not developed so much and until very recently (Kosovo/Gulf war 1) aircraft necessarily had to come down within 1 to 1.5 km of the target to hit accurately and typically also had to overfly the target. This also meant that there were hostile aircraft flying within a range of 1000 meters or so from the ground. When you have attacking aircraft flying so low - and you have to shoot them down from another aircraft the closeness to the ground affords protection because of terrain masking and ground clutter makes shoot down algorithms much more complex. That means dogfights close to the ground. So if a dogfight is going to be "close to the ground" - how high up is "the ground"? In Rajasthan the ground is practically at sea level. In Tibet the ground is 5000 meters up in the sky. So a dogfight at 6000 meters (20,000 feet) in Tibet is still "close to the ground". An aircraft can have significant change/degradation in performance from sea level to 6000 meters - and that could get worse as planes jockey for height in a dogfight and climb say to 7 or 8000 meters. I am not sure that there will be any dogfights at 10,000 meters simply because that is not where planes will need to be tackled in a dogfight. A plane flying at 10,000 meters should become visible on radar and be tackled by an AAM. It is only when they come closer to the ground that the AAMs might start failiing (or detection may fail) creating the opportunity for a dogfight.

My guess is that an ability to dogfight well at heights from sea level to 8000 meters should do the trick. Fighter maneuverability above 8000 meters may not be such an important requirement especially if the trade off is worse maneuverability at sea level. A low wing loading is great for high altitude maneuverability but there may be a penalty at sea level.
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Re: India selects Typhoon and Rafale for MMRCA shortlist

Post by Gaur »

shiv wrote:<snip>

There is a good chance that some of these Euro engines have a better fuel consumption figure and MTBF than Russian engines. The presence of TV is added weight, complexity and fuel consumption anyway. Even if TV is not used in 80% of routine flights - the extra weight is lugged around.

The number of pilots required is also decreased somewhat because the MKI must fly with two.<snip>
Just a small nitpick. MKI has TVC enabled all the time.

BTW, as I have said in my previous post, even though I do not consider it to have any advantage over MKI, Rafale is the best among the MRCA contenders.

But I would really be disappointed if EF gets selected. EF has huge potential but sadly even the consortium Nations are not interested in it. The orders are being cut and the commitment to future tranche upgrades is minimum. On the other hand, Rafale has a better future simply because France is not going for F-35.

This also brings me to MKI. People are greatly emphasizing on avoinics advantage . As I had pointed out in my previous post, MKI already is better than either Eurocanard in that department (TERPROM's absense is hardly an issue). However, think of the future upgrade possibilities with MKI. Su-35 is serving as an avionics testbed for PAK-FA. So, you can just imagine what is in store for MKI in future upgrades (especially MLU). I doubt any other MMRCA fighter can match that.

PS: However, if fuel consumption is being given priority, then I can understand the rationale behind MMRCA. Regarding the MTBF and service hours, we will never know the details.
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Re: India selects Typhoon and Rafale for MMRCA shortlist

Post by D Roy »

This will not remain a 10.4 billion dollar deal. it will become a 20 billion plus deal because I think we'll end up with more MMRCA than just the 126 initial buy.

this deal will also kick-start a truly large scale aerospace sector in India via offsets and industrial partnership.

Also the IAF wants to completely shut off Chicom in Tibet and Typhoon is the best Flanker killer we can procure.

450 odd MKI and Typhoon will ensure that the two front war never happens. And if it still happens, then we are gonna kick some serious ass. Once sanitization of the air has taken place Floggers and re-engined jaguars are more than adequate for pounding enemy ground forces. but the war in the air must be won decisively.
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Re: India selects Typhoon and Rafale for MMRCA shortlist

Post by suryag »

Guys not that i am going to utter a truth that was unknown until now in this thread I think we will become bakras if we buy typhoon. I mean italy and spain are down the drain and not long before uklistan goes that way and the first thing that socialist politics(who will come in after the crisis/default) do is to cut military spending and the EF will be hit first. I think the spares supply chain will be worse than the russian chain
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Re: India selects Typhoon and Rafale for MMRCA shortlist

Post by D Roy »

that spares supply chain may end up being "outsourced" to India. consider that as well.
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Re: India selects Typhoon and Rafale for MMRCA shortlist

Post by Dilbu »

suryag wrote:Guys not that i am going to utter a truth that was unknown until now in this thread I think we will become bakras if we buy typhoon. I mean italy and spain are down the drain and not long before uklistan goes that way and the first thing that socialist politics(who will come in after the crisis/default) do is to cut military spending and the EF will be hit first. I think the spares supply chain will be worse than the russian chain
Cutting military spending does not mean shutting down production facilities. OTOH they will be happy to keep it running to protect jobs since money is coming from India for the spares. But it may be a cause of concern if they reduce funding for further R&D and development of the programme in which case we will have to spend more from our pocket to keep it alive.
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Re: India selects Typhoon and Rafale for MMRCA shortlist

Post by Samay »

Since IAF has completed its job of technical evaluations, now the strategic-political dimension will come into play .. ie french have in their kitty submarines,nukeplants,mirage upgrade,etc Americans have other deals and more to come, its time that EU ,specifically UK will get its pie out of this weapons budget that we intend to spend.

It justifies the strategic angle that will not be missed and also the margin money that is never mentioned amongst all other T&C,ie more money spend= more margins for all those who call themselves as 'shareholders' of this mega deal ,which includes politicians,MNCs,media groups etc.Since media in these few days had proven that this deal seems to be cleaner amongst all other deals, these shareholders will be looking after how to justify this ongoing process and its result.

It should be noted that none of these aircrafts have an active aesa ,which included amongst all other things will require even more spending to get the final product that we wish to have.

So that means we will be spending even more in customization than we would have on american jets . It doesnt means that the exit of the teens was wrong but it also doesnt mean that the order should go 'Euro'fighter , which seems to be winning the ultimate game .

Technically speaking , the L1 that is Rafale should win because it is technically acceptable and less costly than typhoon,then it would be a fair gamme both technically and commmercially. Bu,t if the deal goes to typhoon,which seems possible ,due to political reasons, then it will provoke others crying foul, then the deal would be delayed even more.

Therefore,the rafale as most us had already realised in this forum, through these years of painful discussions ,should win .
Last edited by Samay on 01 May 2011 12:35, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: India selects Typhoon and Rafale for MMRCA shortlist

Post by rajanb »

This was very depressing reading:

http://grendelreport.posterous.com/euro ... than-we-th
RAF pilots won't be ready to do bombing missions until 2016 – by which time we'll be throwing away planes expensively modified for use as bombers.
Quite a detailed article. Can someone comment on its authencity? My apologies if it has been posted before.
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Re: India selects Typhoon and Rafale for MMRCA shortlist

Post by Prabu »

We have rejected Uncles 'mal'. So all these reports are only to be expected !
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Re: India selects Typhoon and Rafale for MMRCA shortlist

Post by rajanb »

http://www.abovetopsecret.com/forum/thread188667/pg1
Dassault engineers claim that they have been able to reduce the signature of the Rafale cross section by a factor of 20 to the Mirage 2000-5.
Am sure the IAF would have verified this.

Once again, apologies in advance, if posted before.
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Re: India selects Typhoon and Rafale for MMRCA shortlist

Post by Karan M »

Gaur wrote:Karan M,
I feel that you are overestimating the advantage that TERPROM will give to Rafale. I mean, passiveness aside, the radar altimeter is good enough for low altitude flying. Even in baseline Su-27, flying at low altitude was never a problem. In Su-27, when switched to Basic or NAV mode, the radar altimeter reading is effortlessly visible in the middle right of HUD. So, that was no problem even in baseline Su-27.
But MKI has perhaps the best SAR out there. Add to that the excellent payload capacity, range and Brahmos integration, MKI is as good as Rafale in strike role.
Gaur - why should passiveness be kept aside. TERPROM is entirely passive! It does not rely on your radalt if the pilot/Weapons system so chooses. Radalt, even TACAN/any RF can be detected by today's passive detection systems - also referred to by some as "Passive Radars". This coupled with the Rafales minimized signature makes it the best bet to attack high end IADS with missiles like the Scalp. At medium-high alt, a Su-30 MKI is anyday the equal or even the superior of the Rafale given the number of weapons options integrated already, but at low altitudes the Rafale does have an edge. B
In A2A, Rafale is of no match. Leaving the maneuverability aside, the datalink and the gigantic BARS radar convert MKI practically into a mini AEWAC (and that's no exaggeration). Also, the Rafale's IRST is immature to say the least. Compare that with the OLS-30. There is not even a contest.
Again, you are comparing apples to oranges. The Rafale too has a datalink - the Link 16 (but the IAF will integrate its ODL) and its RCS is actually lower than that of the MKI which negates the effect of its lower powered radar somewhat. Even if the Bars detects the Rafale first (which is what should happen), its only now that there is an advantage in actually attacking the enemy, thanks to the RVV-AE outranging the MICA. Once the Meteor comes about, that advantage goes to the Eurocanards which can effectively outrange the MKI, thats a key decider. With the Su-30 MKI getting its AESA the sight advantage will remain, but until the Russians come up with a Meteor equivalent, ie a true LRAAM able to handle fighters as versus the telephone pole R-172 (useful against large aircraft or unwarned fighters, unlikely in an era of AWACS) or the mythical RVV-AE Ramjet (which never got developed or funded).

Now coming to the OLS-30, its a very capable system but that does not mean the others are pushovers. Its a ranging IRST with integrated LRF but without imaging capabilities. The Pirate reportedly has an Imaging sensor capability plus kinematic ranging, whereas the Rafale goes one step further and offers both TV and IRST channels. Its anything but immature - if anything, the reverse. The French AF dropped the Imaging IR sensor because the older one is obsolete or too mature & they want the latest one when its available. The French lead in terms of Imaging IR sensors, they are one of the leading countries in the world when it comes to thermal imaging - both Sagem & Thales source their key sensors from the same French Govt supported R&D firm.
The RCS reducing measures in Rafale and EF are nearly meaningless against powerful radars like BARS and APG-79. Surely, Dassault is not going to tell us that Rafale will be invisible to BARS even within a 100km radius! And you know that BVR shots are not taken even near that range. So, I am leaving a lot of extra room here.
Hardly meaningless. Every bit of RCS reduction helps because that allows for your jammers to work that much less. And for BVR shots, look up Meteor. With an integrated Ramjet, its NEZ is that much more. Plus with IIR Mica the Rafale has a totally passive missile to attack the enemy with at BVR ranges. Receives feed from AWACS, cues Spectra, fires missile, updates Mica-IIR towards the enemy who has no chance to escape unless he has a MAWS or AWACS telling him what to do. In a violent pitched battle, the other guy may well be taken by surprise. An analysis of aircombat showed majority of kills were scored when the opponent was taken by surprise. And before you mention, long burn Alamo-IR does not have a Mid Course datalink for BVR shots (>40 km)
The only thing in favour of Rafale is Spectra. If that indeed performs as per its hype, then R118 may not be good enough.
Lets not mix up things. Spectra is an integrated EW system. It includes passive missile warning, RF detection, RF jamming & chaff & flares are cued by the system. R118 is a RWR with sensor fusion capabilities that ties together the Israeli jammer & chaff & flares. But even that is not the "baseline" as to what India can do, since the MiG-29 Upg already incorporates the NG EW suite with integrated ECM & the LCA is getting a brand new EW suite with multi-threat handling system. So with the Su-30 MKI upgrade, we'll see what comes on it. However, what you must understand is that the smaller the base aircraft signature, the less work the ECM needs to do to protect it.
To make myself clear, I am not against Rafale. In fact, Rafale has always been my choice for MMRCA from the start. It is just that, like indranil, I was always mystified by the whole MRCA saga itself. Buying more Su-30s always seemed more a logical choice to me.
The IAF just wanted more Mirage 2000's initially but CAG said it should be a mulitvendor selection so it became this MMRCA. However, I am glad it happened. The Mirage 2000 would be challenged in a decades time against some of the newer Chinese aircraft and systems. We need fighters that can last 40 years

I really don't like the small radar on the Rafale, apart from that, I am fine with everything else. The Emiratis reportedly noted that they wanted higher radar power on their Rafales (to match the APG-80 on Super Vipers) and more powerful engines. I wish we too push for the same if we buy the Rafale. The APG-80 per Aviation Week is credited with a 70-80 nm range against a 1 Sq Mtr target, so thats quite capable.
Last edited by Karan M on 01 May 2011 13:54, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: India selects Typhoon and Rafale for MMRCA shortlist

Post by rajanb »

@Prabhu

The Typhoon Report is apparently from the UK's Government Accounting office (GAO)

Cheers
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Re: India selects Typhoon and Rafale for MMRCA shortlist

Post by rohankumaon »

To all the gurus here, I have a concern regarding the size of Rafale radar. The size is even smaller than LCA. How would the smaller size of radar affect the capability of Rafale? Further more, smaller size limits the extent of upgrades. So if we buy rafale in its current dimensions, will PLAAF flankers will over take rafale in terms of capabilities of radar..now or in future?
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Re: India selects Typhoon and Rafale for MMRCA shortlist

Post by shiv »

"Big radars" that see things far away are also seen from far away. It's one thing to have a difficult to detect AESA - but as discussed in other threads passive detection systems are essential for stealth. In that sense the Rafale's smaller radar may not be such a big disadvantage vis a vis the Typhoon's bigger dome.

The reports say that Typhoon scored higher than Rafale in IAF's assessment. I am guessing that the offsets that each is able to offer is what will clinch the deal. the technical parameters that we are discussing will probably not play a role any more.

Again (I suspect, I do not know) that the "offests" are going to be greatly dependent on what Indian industry is able to absorb. I think it was a French guy who complained that they are willing to give but India is not able to absorb. Maybe that is why there were noises that the offsets clause could be modified.
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Re: India selects Typhoon and Rafale for MMRCA shortlist

Post by Karan M »

shiv wrote:"Big radars" that see things far away are also seen from far away. It's one thing to have a difficult to detect AESA - but as discussed in other threads passive detection systems are essential for stealth. In that sense the Rafale's smaller radar may not be such a big disadvantage vis a vis the Typhoon's bigger dome.
Agreed, in some recent exercises, the Rafales scored some really lopsided BVR victories against the RAF pilots flying the Typhoon. Even so, I want a bigger radar (Oliver Twist syndrome!!)
The reports say that Typhoon scored higher than Rafale in IAF's assessment. I am guessing that the offsets that each is able to offer is what will clinch the deal. the technical parameters that we are discussing will probably not play a role any more.

Again (I suspect, I do not know) that the "offests" are going to be greatly dependent on what Indian industry is able to absorb. I think it was a French guy who complained that they are willing to give but India is not able to absorb. Maybe that is why there were noises that the offsets clause could be modified.
Agreed, offsets are the key.
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Re: India selects Typhoon and Rafale for MMRCA shortlist

Post by Karan M »

rajanb wrote:@Prabhu

The Typhoon Report is apparently from the UK's Government Accounting office (GAO)

Cheers
Sir thats Lewis Page, ex Navy does not like the AF. He is to Typhoon what Rajat Pandit/Rahul Bedi are to LCA. But even there he is a bit more honest than the latter two, and not as amenable to twisting facts, but still just something to keep in mind when he interprets GAO etc reports on EF
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Re: India selects Typhoon and Rafale for MMRCA shortlist

Post by rajanb »

Shivji,

Haven't the offsets been lowered to 30%?
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Re: India selects Typhoon and Rafale for MMRCA shortlist

Post by rajanb »

Thanks Karanji. Your posts are really informative.

Cheers
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Re: India selects Typhoon and Rafale for MMRCA shortlist

Post by rohankumaon »

Karan M wrote:
shiv wrote:"Big radars" that see things far away are also seen from far away. It's one thing to have a difficult to detect AESA - but as discussed in other threads passive detection systems are essential for stealth. In that sense the Rafale's smaller radar may not be such a big disadvantage vis a vis the Typhoon's bigger dome.
Agreed, in some recent exercises, the Rafales scored some really lopsided BVR victories against the RAF pilots flying the Typhoon. Even so, I want a bigger radar (Oliver Twist syndrome!!)
@Karan - When Rafales scored better in BVR then why do you insist on big radars? What possible advantage this can have?
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Re: India selects Typhoon and Rafale for MMRCA shortlist

Post by Gaur »

Karan M,
I understand what you are saying and I think we are on the same page on most things. It is only the importance of RCS & TELPROM on which we have only "slightly" different opinions.

Anyways, I am also hoping that Rafale wins. If it gets inducted in IAF, it would be amazing to get more details about its much touted sensor fusion. Also, photo ops of Rafale flying in Indian colours along with MKI will be mind blowing in its awesomeness. :mrgreen:
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Re: India selects Typhoon and Rafale for MMRCA shortlist

Post by Aditya G »

Gaur wrote:
shiv wrote:<snip>

.... Even if TV is not used in 80% of routine flights - the extra weight is lugged around.

The number of pilots required is also decreased somewhat because the MKI must fly with two.<snip>
Just a small nitpick. MKI has TVC enabled all the time.
.....
No, it has to be activated by a switch.
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Re: India selects Typhoon and Rafale for MMRCA shortlist

Post by arthuro »

http://www.deccanchronicle.com/channels ... -merit-126

Rafale n°1 in MMRCA technical evaluation :
Rafale, Typhoon score on merit

Just why has the Indian Air Force (IAF) short-listed the French Rafale and the Eurofighter Typhoon ahead of four other contenders, including the US F-16 and F/A-18 fighters, for the Rs 42, 000 crore medium multi-role combat aircraft (MMRCA) contract?

The down selection at the end of a prolonged evaluation of the six fighter jets was evidently based on the fact that the Rafale and the Typhoon were the most modern airframes and better equipped compared to F/A-18 Super Hornet and F-16 IN of the US, MiG-35 of Russia, and JAS-39 Gripen of Sweden.

The Rafale and the Typhoon met most of the 630 technical attributes mentioned in the request for proposal (RFP) by the ministry of defence, while the others lacked either in performance or had limitations in terms of future upgrades.

“Rafale figures a notch higher than Typhoon in terms of performance and involves easier adaptability as it is logistically and operationally similar to Mirage-2000, used extensively by our boys during the Kargil conflict in 1999. The French government has also cleared the technology transfer, including the AESA (active electronically scanned array) radar,” sources in the IAF told Deccan Chronicle.

The other discreet offering by Dassault Aviation too made sense: save on the $1.5 billion project to upgrade 52 Mirage-2000 jets by acquiring the Rafale.

Interestingly, all six fighters were in the race till April 17, the deadline for submission of modified offset proposals. The representatives of these firms were informed of the Union government’s decision to relax the offset policy mentioned in the request for proposal (RFP).

The original rider that half the value of the $ 10.5 billion contract be passed on to domestic firms was modified, fixing it at 30 per cent of the deal. “We were all expecting a word on extension of commercial proposals on the last day, April 28, but got to know that only Dassault Aviation and Eurofighter have been invited for discussions,” said a representative of Saab AB.

Those who lost out have made it known that they would raise issues concerning the price and other attributes of Rafale and Typhoon. The two aircraft are said to be the highest priced among those in the contest when looked at from a unit price point of view. Second, the Eurofighter’s AESA radar is still under development. Only the two US fighters have operational AESA radars on them.

If India finally picks the Rafale, it would be only the second air force after the French Air Force to induct these fighters into its fleet.

India has asked Dassault SA and Eurofighter GmbH to hold their price bids until the end of the year. The deal is expected to be signed by March 2012.

The Final Two

Eurofighter Typhoon – Germany/Britain/Italy/Spain

Dassault Rafale -- France

Out of the contest

Lockheed Martin’s F-16IN – USA

Boeing’s F/A-18 Super Hornet – USA

SAAB’s Gripen JAS-39 – Sweden

Mikoyan-Gureywich’s MiG-35 – Russia
Aditya_V
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Re: India selects Typhoon and Rafale for MMRCA shortlist

Post by Aditya_V »

arthuro wrote:http://www.deccanchronicle.com/channels ... -merit-126

Rafale n°1 in MMRCA technical evaluation :
Rafale, Typhoon score on merit

J
The other discreet offering by Dassault Aviation too made sense: save on the $1.5 billion project to upgrade 52 Mirage-2000 jets by acquiring the Rafale.
Same issue I raised earlier in the Thread.
Gaur
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Re: India selects Typhoon and Rafale for MMRCA shortlist

Post by Gaur »

Aditya G wrote:
Gaur wrote: Just a small nitpick. MKI has TVC enabled all the time.
.....
No, it has to be activated by a switch.
For the fear of derailing the thread even more, I have posted my reply in Su-30 thread.
http://forums.bharat-rakshak.com/viewto ... 9#p1080179
Gagan
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Re: India selects Typhoon and Rafale for MMRCA shortlist

Post by Gagan »

One of the possible reasons why the Rafale has such a small nose is that the french possibly think that modern fighters will as it is operate with an AWACS, and the fighter needs to have a radar only when it is actively attacking its target.
In a scenario where there is an AWACS around and enemy aircraft are monitored and infomation shared with datalinks, how valid are extended range and big apertures of the nose Radar.

More of an issue of philosophy and experience of the plane maker.

I dunno if a plug can be put on the Rafale's nose or if the French will be willing to put one.
Karan M
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Re: India selects Typhoon and Rafale for MMRCA shortlist

Post by Karan M »

rohankumaon wrote:@Karan - When Rafales scored better in BVR then why do you insist on big radars? What possible advantage this can have?
Two scenarios

Think about what happens when you are flying deep into enemy territory. For safety reasons your own AWACS is 100-150 km away from the border and can see 300-250 km deep into enemy territory. But you are flying radio silent & on passive feed only. What happens when you cross the line where your AWACS can feed you data? Or what if you are in a scenario where there is no AWACS coverage available - it is beyond LOS and you are flying along a valley in the NE where the mountains are in the way. Now, you are dependent purely on your own sensors. So you use the radar sparingly. Just one aircraft in the formation, occasionally does a super fast scan & datalinks it back to its peers. You slave the IRST on your aircraft to other areas whereas the passive EW suite has a 360 degree bubble. But you need your radar to be as capable as possible because you may come across aircraft like yours who too are not using active scans regularly or not at all. Now, the PRC is also making reduced RCS aircraft & if they are flying head on towards you, a lower powered radar may be a liability. Granted they may detect you thanks to the radar spike - but at least now you know they are where they are instead of rushing blindly into trouble.

Scenario two - you are now asked to intercept a flight of J-20s - reduced RCS fighters. In which case, every bit of power that you can call upon to support Meteor engagement is a plus. The missile may actually have to be guided closer as well, since its onboard seeker may lock on at reduced ranges. Suppose you are tangling with the improved Flankers. You can see them, they can see you, but they are using heavy jamming, reducing the range of your radar. The more powerful your set, the longer the range you can reach out to them at, despite their jamming.

My point is, its always better to have "more" and not have to use it, than having less and making do with it. Rafale with higher powered engines & a higher powered AESA - as an upgrade - now that would be the icing on the cake.
The Typhoon has better raw kinematic performance, but its payload layout (see the pylons) does not allow it to carry as high a load as the Rafale in A2G and plus, the partner countries have not been funding EADS adequately to speed up all the originally designed for capabilities. The French instead knocked off some aircraft from the production run and used the money to speed up upgrades and development. The UAE of course wants more than that, but the French have not committed funding to that end (higher power AESA and engines). Offsets, I guess EADS can offer more, so many partner nations and firms. But managing TOT & logistics will also be byzantine. Europe has often tended to poke where it shouldnt, especially on HR issues and what not (both France & Italy made a hue and cry about Orissa, taking very partisan positions) but I guess till we adequately fund and make our own fighters en masse, we will have to put up with these kind of pinpricks for boosting our capability.

I wonder if we should actually post now about what all is on the latest Typhoon tranche versus the latest Rafale. That should give us a good idea of what all each aircraft comes with. Both are formidable platforms and some ten years back, when I used to track these plane program news regularly - I never realized one day we would have one of these in the IAF.
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Re: India selects Typhoon and Rafale for MMRCA shortlist

Post by Karan M »

Gaur wrote:Karan M,
I understand what you are saying and I think we are on the same page on most things. It is only the importance of RCS & TELPROM on which we have only "slightly" different opinions.
Both EF and Rafale are amazing platforms - but when I look at the MKI, I am equally amazed at how quickly we added so many similar capabilities in so short a time. Only, the IAF, DRDO/HAL, Russia dont have such an effective publicity mechanism. Anyways, this is TERPROM. Originally made by Atlantic Inertial (BAE), then acquired by Goodrich (US). Both EF & Rafale do have US systems in them (eg actuators by Moog) and some other thingmajigs, but the vital things are (IMO), manufacturing the bulk of heavily used spares locally (after TOT) and getting TOT for key systems such as AESA radar including source codes, and source codes and customization/third party equipment integration capabilities. Andtjese are from European firms.
http://www.atlanticinertial.com/uploads ... d-Wing.pdf

I would request all of you to read this article as it brings out how a modern fighter platform is more than a sum of its parts.
http://www.flightglobal.com/articles/20 ... afale.html
Rafale software upgrades are scheduled to take place every two years, a complete set of new-generation sensors is set for 2012 and a full mid-life upgrade is planned for 2020.
The Rafale is designed for day or night covert low-level penetration, and can carry a maximum of 9.5t of external ordinance, equal to the much larger F-15E. With a basic empty weight of 10.3t, an internal fuel capacity of 4.7t and a maximum take-off weight of 24.5t, the Rafale can lift 140% of additional load, above its own empty weight, into combat.
Added to the "active" elements of the aircraft's design are Rafale's "passive" safety features, which protect the pilot in various ways. These include "carefree handling" and automatic loss of control/airframe overstress protection allowed for by the digital flight control system (DFCS); the visual and audio low speed warning system; the continuously computed "deck awareness/ground watch" system with audio warning and HUD guidance for pull-out; and the pilot-initiated "spatial disorientation" automatic recovery mode from both nose high and nose low situations. Dassault also plans to introduce an automatic "g-loc" recovery mode.

The aircraft has been designed from the outset to take on any role (air, ground, reconnaissance and strike), but still have the flexibility to rapidly switch roles effectively once the sortie is under way if operational requirements change. Dassault calls this concept "fight and forget", which means that the Rafale pilot can concentrate on the tactical situation and weapons delivery, secure in the knowledge that the aircraft's systems are continually guarding his/her back
From medium level, I descended to low level and engaged the autopilot and autothrottle into covert terrain-following mode along our pre-planned mission route at 450kt/500ft above ground level (for noise abatement), first over the sea and then over the rugged terrain south-west of Arles.
The covert mode used a GPS database, but it can also use TF Radalt or the RBE2 TFR mode as back-up. Low-level ride was excellent in the gusty Mistral conditions, as was the accuracy of the TF profile followed by the aircraft over the semi-mountainous terrain, including flying towards sharply rising cliffs. The "ground watch" system painted a constantly updated escape profile floor in the HUD. With the TF engaged, Nino explained to me some more of the "data fused" symbology in the tactical HLD and altered the flight planned route and the time over target, which was then followed by the autopilot and autothrottle in speed mode.

At the same time, with both of us completely head-in and on TF autopilot, Nino locked up and the FSO TV identified airliners 10,000ft above us, and used the Spectra RWR to cue the FSO TV to do the same against a passing Mirage 2000 on a low-level mission.
Approaching the target, the release envelope ground "bubble" for the AASM was displayed in the tactical HLD, and "shoot" in the HUD. When within the AASM envelope, target bomb track is largely immaterial and, with the weapon button depressed and held, the five simulated programmed AASMs released to individual targets in a 0.5s separated salvo.
Simply put, I like the EF because its a more brutal A2A platform (Meteor + Captor-E), but I cannot deny the Rafale is a premier strike fighter. Its really hard to figure out which one to go for.
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Re: India selects Typhoon and Rafale for MMRCA shortlist

Post by shyamd »

So is the article saying they'll exchange the Mirages for the Rafales?
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