Still Gallium Arsenide baseIndonesia will get a transfer of technology of AESA radar from the Rafale purchase according by Colonel Dedy Laksmono.https://www.youtube.com/live/TUquJxuYg30?feature=share
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Still Gallium Arsenide baseIndonesia will get a transfer of technology of AESA radar from the Rafale purchase according by Colonel Dedy Laksmono.https://www.youtube.com/live/TUquJxuYg30?feature=share
Just stay with Hanwa AESA. It has more TR module and already mature. It also already Gallium Nitritemayan lah buat di taroh di IFX
how did you come in conclusion the offset would be "Gallium arsenide" based AESA radar though ?? (even though if it was Gallium Arsenide, still considered as quantum leap in our domestic radar development), THALES does not just offer Gallium arsenide based radar, they've already been using Gallium Nitride RF sub-component on their radar since very long time ago.Still Gallium Arsenide base
It's ToT from Rafale deal. RBE2 AA is GAs AESA. And do you think we still have time for this when the target is 2026 for mass production?how did you come in conclusion the offset would be "Gallium arsenide" based AESA radar though ?? (even though if it was GAs, still considered as quantum leap in our domestitc radar development), THALES does not just offer Gallium arsenide based radar, they've already been using Gallium Nitride RF sub-component on their radar since very long time ago.
now the one that i will be skeptical is whether indonesia will source that sub-component from foreign supplier or does Thales also will provide necessary development resources for our own domestic made Radar Sub-Component such as Solid State amplifiers, PIN diode control devices, oscillators, filters, and monolithic microwave integrated circuit (MMIC).
if the second scenario does happened, indonesia might started it's journey on Semiconductor Industry in RFIC field.
sub component above is also dual use technology since both can be used for commercial/civil or military requirements.
Even with much less radar modules (838 T/R vs 1088 T/R) and only "GaAs", both have the same radar range. Just don't underestimate Bonaparte technology.Just stay with Hanwa AESA. It has more TR module and already mature. It also already Gallium Nitrite
I never understood how Rafale can get so good performance from a GaAs radar with so little cells. Most other western aircraft with AESA radars have many more cells. The RBE2 AA might be one of the smallest modern western radars.Even with much less radar modules (838 T/R vs 1088 T/R) and only "GaAs", both have the same radar range. Just don't underestimate Bonaparte technology.
The Koreans agreed to give IDN the tech or not?Even Korea (with help from Elta, Saab, and Leonardo) need almost a decade to develop KF21 AESA radar.
No.The Koreans agreed to give IDN the tech or not?
Hoe Dhimas calculate it?Even with much less radar modules (838 T/R vs 1088 T/R) and only "GaAs", both have the same radar range. Just don't underestimate Bonaparte technology.
Hoe Dhimas calculate it?
Slower scan mean slower target update, right?
maybe, I don't really understand it.Slower scan mean slower target update, right?
Lol the antenna technology on American radar is probably a generation ahead than its European counterpart.maybe, I don't really understand it.
but some say it's because Rafale uses European modules, where it improves quality and range of the radar compared to American-made modules.
British/Italian Tempest (GCAP) Fighter : News and Discussion
So, if the Captor-E uses the same hardware as the RBE-2 AESA, it could even match Irbis-E's 350Km performance. So all these figures are way above the capabilities of the older American radars on the F-22 or the F-35, 'cause we know for a fact that the F-35 falls short of the F-22, and the F-22...www.strategicfront.org
The APG-77v1 and APG-81’s large bandwidth also allows the F-22 and F-35 to use their radar for powerful broadband jamming. Their radar is the primary transmitter for the EW suite, providing 10 times effective radiated jamming power of dedicated EW platforms.
[3]
This is what allows F-22 and F-35 to provide escort-jamming support to legacy aircraft, whereas Su-57’s EW suite is purely for Self-Protection. The N036 radar is expected to have limited Electronic Attack capability but it’s highly unlikely that the current radar has any such capability. The Su-57 very likely needs a new antenna design to accommodate EA capability – similar to how EF Typhoon requires a brand new AESA radar (ECRS Mk 2) for EA operations. This is mainly because a jammer requires wider bandwidth in order to be viable, preferably requiring a notch antenna. Of course, a post-production upgraded radar can’t match the level of integration to one designed from the onset to be deeply integrated with the EW suite. Just like Typhoon’s ECRS Mk 2 and F-18E/F’s APG-79, future Su-57 radar’s EA capability will not be anywhere close to that of F-35 or F-22.
Those figures just came out of his ass. How cann he calculate all those number while not knowing necessary figures like dwell time, PRT, peak power, SNR of each radar backend, etc?Even with much less radar modules (838 T/R vs 1088 T/R) and only "GaAs", both have the same radar range. Just don't underestimate Bonaparte technology.
Don't even need to bring up US MICs, the Europeans were even behind the Japanese when it comes to active phased array developments. It is only recent that they have caught up to the deficit from the 90s. They are in no way matched to contemporary US technology.Lol the antenna technology on American radar is probably a generation ahead than its European counterpart.
Just to remember here, the APG-77 and 81 comes 20 years ago and the European's has yet to field their own counterpart to those two.
Does the F-35/F-22 have any advantages in avionics over that of the Su-57 besides the AN/AAQ-37? Whose radar is more powerful, Belka, AN/...
Abhirup Sengupta's answer: F-35’s DAS is only an extreme example where there’s absolutely no equivalent, even keeping that aside almost every avionics on F-22 and F-35 is vastly more capable than Su-57. Both APG-77v1 and APG-81 are bigger than Su-57’s N036 radar (~2,000 & 1,676 vs. 1,550 TRMs on ...www.quora.com
Don't even need to bring up US MICs, the Europeans were even behind the Japanese when it comes to active phased array developments. It is only recent that they have caught up to the deficit from the 90s. They are in no way matched to contemporary US technology.
Though, this again doesn't mean that it applies to each individual examples, since fighter radar capabilities are limited by various other factors apart from the available techonlogy.