indranilroy wrote:However, I don't find this cyclic outcry for 300-400 Tejas Mark-I just!
Please don't distort. In my post, 300-400 planes refers to total numbers for MK1 and MK2 variants as against oft talked about 140( 40 mk1+100mk2). What else is a mass production plane for? The Mki is about to reach close to 300 but we bought the bulk of them when Rouble was in trouble.
indranilroy wrote:Not entirely true. LCA turned up heavier than expected. So the target characteristics can't even be achieved with the GE 404. The alternate engine is part of Mark II. All of us know about the AoA issues. We can only say that acceptable characteristics are met.
Even Jaguars are underpowered though bought much after the ‘62 war.
About AoA a leaf could be borrowed from how Yanks dealt with Soviet fighters whose fighters had a better edge in manoueverability. What the yanks did not have in their airframes, they built into their missiles. If India integrates off-boresight missiles like Python 5, some of the Tejas mk1’s disadvantages if any can be partly compensated for close range WVR merry-go-round. What is quicker, a missile based partial compensation for mk1s with modified mk2 joining later or waiting ONLY for structurally modified and tested MK2?
indranilroy wrote:I know the Mark II is not going to be produced before 5 years. That's why I said 40 planes at 8 planes a year.
Perfect way to give a silent death. Creating conducive situation for opportunist folks to say ”Too little, too late, can’t be procured in numbers at this rate”
indranilroy wrote:I never equated it to the JF-17. I always said stay clear of that nonsensical race.
A race is a race. Challenge has been thrown to us. Even the Yanks were forced to respond with f16 when Soviets started the numbers game although yank doctrine has always focused on quality.
indranilroy wrote:We have always maintained that qualitative edge.
Gnats going against Sabre jets. Mig21s to face the F16s in pre-mki era. Cough, Cough. Ok there were Mig-29s added later too but in the then config it wouldn’t be a qualitative edge.
indranilroy wrote:But as a customer, I totally understand IAF's stand. It just wants it in the right avatar.
Really? Take the example of PAK-FA. The plane has been thrashed left, right and center on s-duct and frontal stealth issues by a specific poster on keypubs. The russkies were first in denial, then in personal attacks and weak defence(Sukhoi engineers know what is best for it). Forget any related modifications, the russkies seem even reluctant for adding second seat for Indian avatar. Though I still support it against f35 for the absence of strings and ridiculous need to be sent to unkil for even maintenance.
But imagine if PAK-FA was built by ADA/HAL, then the same expose would have forced a return to the drawing board by IAF. The persistence for right avatar is surely different for imports and indigenous gear. And the little end-user involvement in setting the requirements for PAK-FA hardly seems to be a bother ! And don’t we hear about Fly-by-light being outright rejected by russkies but is being burdened on AMCA.
indranilroy wrote:I would never doubt the same force which guards me atleast in terms of patriotism.
Common man’s admiration is for life-risking foot-soldiers, pilots and sailors and residual patriots in increasingly rotten higher echelons. Don’t stretch the halo reserved for a subset to include the rotten eggs as well.
Blanket institution-wide respect would have definitely suffered setback in minds of many a common folk when spanners in indigenization efforts were thrown by vested ranks. What do you think followers of Arjun saga think about DGMF or likes of Bharadwaj today? But the love, admiration and respect for the jawan remains.