Agreed. Katrina's moochie is much prettier.Rahul M wrote:corrected. the EF has an ugly moustache.rajanb wrote:^^^^ Beauty is in the eys of the beerholder.

Agreed. Katrina's moochie is much prettier.Rahul M wrote:corrected. the EF has an ugly moustache.rajanb wrote:^^^^ Beauty is in the eys of the beerholder.
That's nothing. What if it turns out that the Rafale won after all? Think of all the 9G mental Immelman u-turns! Established positions and self evident truths will change so fast that even the red baron would get dizzy.tsarkar wrote:Badar wrote:umm .. wasn't it argued in this very forum that the MKI is the best air to air platform bar raptor? What has changed overnight?The joys of Jingo-giri
^^^tejas wrote:Obviously looks are not important but on looks alone their is no comparison. Look at that wing body blending. Those intakes are a work of mathematical art!!
Well that's only when you look at it from the front. When viewed from the side on the other hand, those intakes give the Rafale a rather emaciated look. The nose too seems quite puny.tejas wrote:The air intakes in the tiffy are butt ugly. Also the foreplane canards are at an angle simply displeasing to my eye. Obviously looks are not important but on looks alone their is no comparison. Look at that wing body blending. Those intakes are a work of mathematical art!! The tiffy intakes look like the mother of all radar reflectors. The main advantage to the tiffy is its larger radome and thus >> t/r modules for its AESA.
Well they adore their Sukhois as well with their distinctive bulky air intakes.If the IAF loves the M2K what do you think they will feel about the Rafale?
Well those dog teeth are nice but its totally clean aircraft. There's no getting around the bigger issue here - external stores. After the two aircraft are loaded with hardpoints, pylons and a variety of munitions and/or fuel tanks, having 'stealthier' trailing edges on flaps and canards, cleaner intakes or a retractable IFR probe becomes practically meaningless. If anything, I'd expect an equivalent or even better RCS reduction from the semi-recessed weapon stations on the EF.tejas wrote:One more. Look closely for the little dog teeth radar "deflectors" on the canards, trailing edges of the wings,flaps and ventral body surfaces.This is a graceful philly not an East German female wrestler on steroids/male hormones
Bring it on home Raffy!!!
AFAIK, the size of the air-intakes doesn't matter as long as the fan blades are hidden with an S-duct. I don't know to what extent the engine face is hidden in the EF. But it doesn't seem to be a straight intake like on the Flanker.tejas wrote:What about those monster air intakes Viv S?
Thats what I thought too Prasad but not being an aero engineer I had a faint hope
I have my doubts. The nose and forward fuselage blend together beautifully to channel air into the intake. That larger nose will interfere with the airflow ahead of the intake (in fact your diagram illustrates that). And that effect will be particularly pronounced in the transonic and supersonic regimes.Victor wrote:Making the Rafale's nose larger should not be such a big deal if money and time are available. It would make the perfect Dassault-HAL project to modify the Rafale following our experience with Sukhoi where we bought a few squadrons of Su-27s as-is before MKI'zing the rest.
Well the intakes do an adequate job of hiding the compressor face, they probably have at least some composite content and RAM application. Beyond that it becomes a 19/20 difference, discernible only when flying clean. Also, the movable lip on the Eurofighter makes sustained supersonic flight more efficient and its simpler design allows for a relative less complex engine upgrade.tejas wrote:What about those monster air intakes Viv S?
Of course it will alter aerodynamics but it's no bigger deal than sticking canards on the Su-27 to make an Su-30MKI. Such mods are to be expected in any fighter's life cycle. Look how much the MiG-21 changed between "FL" and "Bison" mods. The styling in the nose can be optimized to handle a bigger-radius nosecone. That's really no biggie. It won't guarantee an equally sexy look (which some folks may disputePrasad wrote:Its not "not such a big deal".
Actually aside from the the Harrier (which is a strictly subsonic aircraft), I can't think of any aircraft that were retrofitted with a bulbous nose. The MiG-21 had a retractable inlet cone, an enlarged intake did not require a substantial airframe redesign.Victor wrote:Of course it will alter aerodynamics but it's no bigger deal than sticking canards on the Su-27 to make an Su-30MKI. Such mods are to be expected in any fighter's life cycle. Look how much the MiG-21 changed between "FL" and "Bison" mods. The styling in the nose can be optimized to handle a bigger-radius nosecone. That's really no biggie. It won't guarantee an equally sexy look (which some folks may dispute) but it will more than do the job if that's what we want. In fact, if Rafale is to be up-engined, that would be the best time to effect such changes.
indranilroy wrote:Viv, If you are trying to prove that EF is stealthier than Rafale then thats a very slippery road. This has been discussed to death before. Look at the
1. wing body blending of EF vs Rafale
2. are you trying to say that those box inlets on the EF with so many edges and corners and perfect perpendicular joins have the same RCS as the Rafale?
3. The canards of the EF are control canards which continuously move to stabilize the plane ... they have way more RCS than the close couple canards of the Rafale.
It is a simple equation. What the EF loses in stealth, it makes up with a bigger radar.
Not completely true either ... we had discussed this too ... Suppose Rafale had a RCS (say x) and EF (say 2x) and all the loadout had a RCS of x. Then RCS is 2x and 3x for a loaded Rafale and loaded EF repectively. We know that the detetction range is a 4th power of the RCS. So with the same kind of a opposition radar, the ratio distances at which EF would be detected vs Rafale is 1.316/1.189 = 1.11.Viv S wrote:indranilroy wrote:Viv, If you are trying to prove that EF is stealthier than Rafale then thats a very slippery road. This has been discussed to death before. Look at the
1. wing body blending of EF vs Rafale
2. are you trying to say that those box inlets on the EF with so many edges and corners and perfect perpendicular joins have the same RCS as the Rafale?
3. The canards of the EF are control canards which continuously move to stabilize the plane ... they have way more RCS than the close couple canards of the Rafale.
It is a simple equation. What the EF loses in stealth, it makes up with a bigger radar.
Actually, I'm saying the RCS difference is significant when compared to an aircraft like the Su-27/Su-30 or even a small metal airframe like the Mirage-2000 or F-16. But in a loaded configuration, the difference between the EF and Rafale is small enough to be insignificant. I mean we may as well start comparing the type of pylons and hardpoints, and thereafter the ASRAAM/MICA, AMRAAM/Meteor, Scalp-EG/Taurus, 1000L/1500L/2000L tanks, Paveway II/IV/AASM, etc and how they interact with the airframe from different aspects, not to mention the quality of the composites employed and RAM, because that will start playing far larger role than marginal differences in the design of the intake or airframe refinements.
Shape does. I was thinking the size of the intakes themselves would increase the RCS by an insignificant amount compared to the engine fan blades, were they to be visible. What you say regarding the rectangular shape vs Rafale's curved one is true. My knowledge in these matters is limited to what I've gleaned from the Internet.indranilroy wrote:Nachiket ji, I think you posted in a hurry ... when it comes to RCS shape does matter .. a lot!
Hmm... actually in my opinion the Rafale would have a RCS of X, EF of 1.5X and with a loadout would have their RCS increased by 5X each. Taken in isolation the stores have a lower RCS, but slung under the airframe, scatter from both the aircraft and load would be amplified.indranilroy wrote:Not completely true either ... we had discussed this too ... Suppose Rafale had a RCS (say x) and EF (say 2x) and all the loadout had a RCS of x. Then RCS is 2x and 3x for a loaded Rafale and loaded EF repectively. We know that the detetction range is a 4th power of the RCS. So with the same kind of a opposition radar, the ratio distances at which EF would be detected vs Rafale is 1.316/1.189 = 1.11.
That is if the EF is detected at 111 kms, the Rafale would be detected at 100kms.
You see if these things did not make a difference the EF designers would have never tried to make the weapons semi recessed even at the cost of aerodynamic performance.
But the Su-30 is already perfect for the strike role and has long legs, plus two pilots for long missions. Only question mark is regarding upgrades to russkie a-to-g weapons.indranilroy wrote:
I prefer the Rafale because it would perfectly compliment our Su-30s in a strike role with those long legs.
My opinion is that the IN should stick with the Mig-29K and LCA-Navy for now. No reason to complicate their logistical problems with yet another aircraft type.Besides they are perfect for IAC II. With the sea-typhoon, there is a lot to be tested. Then there is alwas.ys the Kaveri angle to it.
But I hate the exorbitant price they charge for upgrades.
Well I'll wait for you to post a more detailed description because I can't visualize how one would go about increasing the size of the radar's antenna which is limited to the area of the front surface of the fuselage/back surface of the nose. It would either involve increasing the size of the radome (giving it a bulbous appearance) or redesigning the entire fuselage so that a larger nose can aerodynamically be adapted to it.Victor wrote:viv s, agreed with the shockwave issue but nowhere did I suggest a "bulbous" nose. A "bigger" nose can be designed to fit the aerodynamics required, specially if a bigger engine and inlets are being considered. I don't have the time to illustrate this unfortunately but we are not talking about anything extraordinary. The Fishbed's nose intake was also made larger in later models as were the shock cones but they retained the essential characteristics and that's pretty much what can happen with not just the Rafale but any fighter.
Scattering never amplifies electromagnetic waves .. many possible reflections increase the possibility that the wave after many reflections might reach back to the radar. However I don't know what would be the interference patterns. and nobody will tell meViv S wrote:Hmm... actually in my opinion the Rafale would have a RCS of X, EF of 1.5X and with a loadout would have their RCS increased by 5X each. Taken in isolation the stores have a lower RCS, but slung under the airframe, scatter from both the aircraft and load would be amplified.indranilroy wrote:Not completely true either ... we had discussed this too ... Suppose Rafale had a RCS (say x) and EF (say 2x) and all the loadout had a RCS of x. Then RCS is 2x and 3x for a loaded Rafale and loaded EF repectively. We know that the detetction range is a 4th power of the RCS. So with the same kind of a opposition radar, the ratio distances at which EF would be detected vs Rafale is 1.316/1.189 = 1.11.
That is if the EF is detected at 111 kms, the Rafale would be detected at 100kms.
You see if these things did not make a difference the EF designers would have never tried to make the weapons semi recessed even at the cost of aerodynamic performance.
Even your figure of a mere 10% difference in detection range is quite modest for a substantial two times the RCS.
We will be repeating the discussion again, won't wenachiket wrote:But the Su-30 is already perfect for the strike role and has long legs, plus two pilots for long missions. Only question mark is regarding upgrades to russkie a-to-g weapons.indranilroy wrote:
I prefer the Rafale because it would perfectly compliment our Su-30s in a strike role with those long legs.
The EF will come with a powerful AESA radar, IRST and HMS already integrated, great aerodynamic performance in all flight regimes, and an option for getting modern long-range AAMs which are cheaper than the Meteor (AIM-120C7 and D). By the time the IAF inducts it in numbers, most of the a-to-g weapons integration will be complete as well.My opinion is that the IN should stick with the Mig-29K and LCA-Navy for now. No reason to complicate their logistical problems with yet another aircraft type.Besides they are perfect for IAC II. With the sea-typhoon, there is a lot to be tested. Then there is alwas.ys the Kaveri angle to it.
But I hate the exorbitant price they charge for upgrades.
Viv, are you just posting for the heck of it ... please read a little before posting ... a simplest Google search would have sufficed.Viv S wrote:Regarding the shape of the intake, while I know the conventional wisdom is that the curved type on the Rafale is stealthier than the blocky rectangular one on the EF, I'm still not convinced by it -
Loaded with Freudian sub text. So what really happened? You can come clean--your secret is safe on the internetshiv wrote:Rafale looks like a starving woman trying to suck thick chocolate ice cream up a very narrow straw.