Maruti-suzuki is perhaps a terrible example here. It's not like making consumer goods you know. IAF has only so many aircraft it can buy. Any extra aircraft we make helps reduce our own costs and goes towards the learning curve and not to forget that any contract we give to assemble takes away flexibility in design/customization addition of sensitive new weapons, a loss of innovative capability, and leads to higher overhead price per piece cost of our own designed and manufactured units.sudeepj wrote:It is integrating India into a global military industrial complex. At a very high level, Indian problems lie in manufacturing, as much as technology. This will go some way towards solving the manufacturing problem, just as maruti-suzuki kicked the Indian car sector into some shape. The new line will open up Indian defense manufacturing to a similar type of competition.What tech this new fighter line is bringing that LCA doesn't have? Radar? Engine? composites? alloys?
Now, flip the question. What will manufacturing 240 LCAs vs 120 get India? Not strategic independence, because the prime mover, the prime sensor and part of the prime weapon system are imported.Neither any new technological know-how in these domains. Its simply a system integration effort, which has its own benefits, but lets not make it more than it is. Capability wise, its a wash at best. F16 or Gripen is a far more mature platform than the LCA. From an economy point of view, its a wash again, because the other fighter will also be manufactured in India! From a manufacturing point of view, will a further manufacture of 100 odd fighters after the initial 120 be a production exercise or a learning exercise too? I feel, itll simply be a production exercise.
So we need to be aiming to be making the 700 out of 700 aircraft for IAF, not just 120. Sure, we know that we are not there yet, but we will never be unless we don't start somewhere and that is what the other posters are perhaps trying to point out.
Its not like the cpg/software industry, there is no outside ever growing captive market waiting to be filled up. A line that we get, will be to produce a product that we need, and the contract will only allow us to fulfill our needs. It will come with all sorts of agreements against sale and management of other countries planes. Unless we are willing to get dictated by the state department whose order we can and cannot fulfil, whose plane we can and cannot service, its pointless. This whole thing is a marketing scam that we will get to do deep upgrades for other countries etc. No one is coming here with their specialized planes and allowing us to poke around with it, how will the state department mandate the special code for each radar type jammers etc and how much to degrade it by to us for uae/saudis/turks/saf etc? They won't because all we will be doing is even less than what we do on the LCA. We will make the body and stuff in the parts from all other vendors making us just assemblers. We already do that with the russians. Why do we need a new contract for that.
And yes if we make 240 LCA, we might have bought ourselves enough time to have perfected an asea radar and put it on the 120 out of 240 orders. We can now dream and design another 10 new weapon types that we may not have to buy, because we own the radar and could integrate incremental versions of Astra 2/3/4 in another ten years along with different versions of short to long range A2G missiles. We can even power the kaveri with an M88 core and make most of the engine and continue to aim at perfection. Lets not let perfection be the enemy of good enough, which is what we have always held against ourselves in any indigenous effort.
IMO creating a defence aviation industry isn't going to be like creating a car industry, its not about mass production, its not very much about bringing cost down(not primary goal), it really is about creating innovative products that are better than what your enemy can dream about every single day. That can give us a strategic advantage to win a war. We will own and maintain without tipping our hand on what the weapon does to everyone and sundry much like the scorpene/u209 saga. And we are not going to do that by continuing to import other peoples hand me down lines they don't think poses any problems to anyone in our region. No one is going to hand us that strategic advantage however much we want, we argue that every day here.
So what do we really want? Just short term fixes or long term independence? I think the LCA balances this really well even today, but whats really intriguing, is the potential of what the roadmap could truly be like, if we allow ourselves to get another 200 more of these.