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Rafale wins Indian order

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Rafale wins Indian order

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Old 1st Feb 2012, 11:15
  #41 (permalink)  
 
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Seeing all this wobbling around by the Eurofighter partners (of what is potentially a very promising weapon) makes me wonder if the Germans wouldn't
have been better off going with the French iso the Italians and Brits, 2 nations that begin a pan European multi billion project that could have been good for
its forces and industry and subsequently also get fully engaged with its
potentially biggest competitor, the JSF, be it only as glorified parts suppliers.

A French-German-Spanish program would've been a lot more effective and
wouldn't have had the problem of having a key partner that is essentially
unreliable because of a conflict of interest.

I've said it before and I'll say it again, we're just pissing away our ability
to develop,design and produce complete fighter aircraft that can compete with the best out there.
At the same time nobody seems to have a problem with getting completely
dependant of 1 US company that completely monopolizes the market with something that essentially more and more looks like a pipedream that won't meet is initial goals but nevertheless will be hideously expensive.

F35 so far looks like it;
-won't be as stealthy as initially envisioned
-will not carry some of the UK weapons
-has problems all throughout its flight envelope
-won't have its wunderhelmet but an of the shelf alternative instead
-won't have its sourcecode available for its customers
-will be at least 2.5 times as expensive as intitially envisioned
-won't be easy nor cheap to maintain
-will cost at least 40% more expensive to operate per flight hour compared with the F16
-etc..... .


It's easy to be critical about the French but one thing is sure they certainly don't lack vision and healthy ambition ,we should be honest with ourself and admit that they at least try to keep an indigenous fighter production capability alive.
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Old 1st Feb 2012, 11:19
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And the paint will wash off in the rain.....
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Old 1st Feb 2012, 11:24
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Not in the rain, only in supersonic.
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Old 1st Feb 2012, 11:49
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Much to choose?

THere's not much to choose between either aircraft
From my uneducated position it would seem there is quite a bit to choose between them, as the Rafale has a carrier variant (a stated Indian requirement, google "Indian IAC"), whereas the Eurofighter does not.

So either the Indians do what we are attempting (and seemingly finding it too expensive/difficult) and buy both a land based aircraft and a different carrier aircraft, or they do what the French have done and buy one that does both.

The whole life costs of running 1 fleet versus 2 ought to make a small difference in purchase price negligible. Assuming, of course, that cost is a factor rather than political machinations

Nick
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Old 1st Feb 2012, 12:26
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so.. is this "game over" for this order as far as Typhoon is concerned then, or has it not that far...
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Old 1st Feb 2012, 12:36
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Nick

Try Googling IAC and MiG29K. The MRCA requirement did not include carrier-capability and in any case Rafale may not actually be capable of recovery using STOBAR techniques. It's all in the nose gear loading and FCS......

If it is capable of STOBAR, then obviously it's nice to have a fall-back. Something we could learn from when setting our fast-jet requirements......
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Old 1st Feb 2012, 12:39
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Scud,
i doubt its over from a financial shenanigans point of view, but i'm afraid that its over from a potential customer asking 'which is the better aircraft?' point of view.

Rafale is far more flexible in terms of where it can be based, it is far more multi-role than any Typhoon ever will be, and it is a proven in a sustained combat role.

Typhoon is probably a better dogfighter in a brillcream boys-esque, Battle-of-Britain styleee. whoop-fceking-doo.
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Old 1st Feb 2012, 12:39
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Originally Posted by jackonicko
Typhoon's AESA radar programme looks shaky and uncertain.
That's an interesting statement, seeing as the Typhoon AESA programme is fifteen years old if you count AMSAR. Amusingly, Thomson-CSF (at the time, now Thales) has been a partner in GTDAR for most of those fifteen years. They were interested in producing a replacement for RBE-2; Selex for the CAPTOR. I suspect that RBE2-AA and CAESAR share a lot of underlying design.

Others will know more about the comparative performance of RBE2 and CAPTOR, and whether this has any bearing on the need to spend money on putting AESA into Rafale, compared with the need to spend money on putting AESA into Typhoon...
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Old 1st Feb 2012, 12:44
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Originally Posted by kbrockman
A French-German-Spanish program would've been a lot more effective and wouldn't have had the problem of having a key partner that is essentially
unreliable because of a conflict of interest.
What, you mean like the Tiger helicopter?

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Old 1st Feb 2012, 12:52
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India doesn't need our aid contribution and is flush for $$$ - I see this going all the way to contract.

They've decided to buy a proven, highly-capable fighter aircraft and the Indians are not stupid....the whole A-G 'demonstration' by Typhoon over Libya was nothing short of an appallingly desperate attempt to emblazon 'multi-role ready' on the side of the jet...which it wasn't/isn't. I suspect India saw right through that. The French motive was similar.

However, Rafale eclipsed our illustrious Warton Wonder.
Ah yes - the "Warton Wonder" designed by a 4 nation consortium
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Old 1st Feb 2012, 13:08
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Nicholas Howard,

Wrong I'm afraid. The final downselect to two contenders selected the Rafale and Typhoon. Both of these types were 100% compliant with the technical and performance requirements and were declared good enough to do the job. The final selection was down to price and this is what has resulted in the Rafale moving forward to exclusive final negotiations.


The Indian choice for their carrier is the Mig 29K. The only other potential embarked type mentioned by the Indians is a possible variant of their much delayed indigenous light fighter.

cokecan,

No one has said that the Rafale is a better aircraft. Typhoon and Rafale were the final downselect, both deemed good enough to be chosen. Rafale is just cheaper. Now the really hard negotiating on best and final price, technology transfer and industrial offset will begin. This is where Dassault came unstuck in the UAE.
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Old 1st Feb 2012, 13:14
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downselect ...
... is one of the most horrible non-words I have ever read. Shortlist perhaps?
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Old 1st Feb 2012, 13:28
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"... is one of the most horrible non-words I have ever read. Shortlist perhaps? "


English is a beautiful language. One of its many advantages over, for example, French, is that it is still growing, developing and evolving. It is defined by use, not archaic rules over what is and isn't horrible.
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Old 1st Feb 2012, 14:22
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pr00ne,

''No one has said that the Rafale is a better aircraft.''

i'm sorry, but when the Indians asked if the two aircraft could self-designate LGB's, or carry anti-ship missiles, or launch ALCM's - and the French said 'Je ne se quas! sure, here are the pictures', and EADS said 'err... yeah, it should be able to'.

and when the Indians made noises about needing a plan 'B' incase the MiG-29K buy wents tits up, and the French said 'Mangetout! don't worry, Rafale can do the business from a carrier, don't you worry about that', and the EADS team went 'err... lovely weather over here - must bring the wife'.

and when the Indians asked about a proven combat record and a proven history of integrating weapon systems and producing true multi-role capability, and the French said 'Zoot alores - these are pictures of Rafale over Afghanistan and Libya dropping death onto the beared ones/brave freedom fighters!', and the EADS team said 'well, err.. Meteor is going well...'

you don't think the Indians cocked an eyebrow and thought to themselves 'fcuking how long has this plane been in development? this bunch of jokers couldn't find their arse with both hands...'?
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Old 1st Feb 2012, 14:30
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cokecan,

If that was the case then Typhoon would have never made the ultimate competitive downselect. It succeeded where many platforms failed. The competition wasn't for the variant currently being flown by any of the consortium members, it was for a version to enter development and production in 2015 with the 1st 18 to be manufactured by the winning company and the remainder of the order to be manufactured by HAL in India.

If Typhoon had been eliminated in the early stages then your argument would hold water. As it was it made it right through to the end and lost on price.
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Old 1st Feb 2012, 14:38
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According to the Daily Politics show on BBC2 today (1 Feb), Mr Cameron says the deal isn't final yet. There's still an opportunity for BAe to revise their bid downwards.
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Old 1st Feb 2012, 14:48
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There's still an opportunity for BAe to revise their bid downwards.

O dear!
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Old 1st Feb 2012, 15:40
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That's good - give squillions in aid to a foreign country who then spend it in France - so Sarkozy sticks two fingers up behind Cameron's back - FANTASTIC!
I doubt it, he'll probably do it to his face on this one!
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Old 1st Feb 2012, 17:17
  #59 (permalink)  

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cokecan Vs Pr00ne

I must say I find cokecan's points persuasive because they are clearly based on well known facts.

If that was the case then Typhoon would have never made the ultimate competitive downselect. It succeeded where many platforms failed
A tad naive. I fear that any self respecting customer will always try and keep pressure on their 'chosen' supplier by suggesting there exists a credible alternative. The Indians could have used any of the original list for that but how much better to keep the Rafale team honest by choosing another European supplier with whom there was some history?
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Old 1st Feb 2012, 17:47
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Given this is India all BAE really need to do is drag out those guys who were involved with the Saudi's a few decades ago.. India is one of the most corrupt nations on the face of the earth. This has less to do with technology and more to do with who has the biggest hospitality/brown paper/ Swiss account choc full of CHF budget.
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