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Will Uttam AESA be integrated from the 40th jet onwards?
The current order of 83 jets with this will put the total number of LCA Tejas Mk-1A at 180 along with 40 Mk-1
Replying to myself, Janes reported 2 days before the first Mk1A was due for delivery that HAL announced the delivery schedule would not be met. Q2 2024 now? Q3 for first delivery to IAF? It will be interesting to see if HAL can catch up on the delivery schedule by the end of the 2024/2025 financial year.HAL upped FAL capacity to 8 frames a year around 2016 IIRC. A second line was commissioned 2021, giving FAL capacity of 16 frames a year. Currently 2 frames are scheduled for delivery by end March this year. 8 deliveries are scheduled in 2024/2025 financial year, 16 in 2025/2026 financial year and later years. If Nashik FAL is commissioned in 2025, I think that the production rate could reach 24 per year 2027 onwards.
A 4th assembly line for exports some time later? On that basis I suspect that Argentina will go for F-16 and Philippines will select F-16 or Gripen E.
Replying to myself, Janes reported 2 days before the first Mk1A was due for delivery that HAL announced the delivery schedule would not be met. Q2 2024 now? Q3 for first delivery to IAF? It will be interesting to see if HAL can catch up on the delivery schedule by the end of the 2024/2025 financial year.
I hear that Nashik is going to be used to assemble more Su-30's. If so, I think that Mk1A production capacity falls to 16 per annum for the foreseeable future.
I wonder how long it will take to switch from Mk1A assembly to Su assembly at Nashik, build 12 x Su then switch back to Mk1A assembly. I also wonder how many unused GE 404 there are in India and the current delivery rate from GE. I know that GE is raising the delivery rate to 20 per year but have no idea when they will get to that level.Only 12 more Su max. Super Sukhoi upgrade hasn’t been started However HAL Nashik has advertised they will be delivering 2 mk1A by March next year.
Means work has already started there.
Engine delivery is another issue. GE hasn’t delivered engines as per contract . They have supply chain issues
I wonder how long it will take to switch from Mk1A assembly to Su assembly at Nashik, build 12 x Su then switch back to Mk1A assembly. I also wonder how many unused GE 404 there are in India and the current delivery rate from GE. I know that GE is raising the delivery rate to 20 per year but have no idea when they will get to that level.
Hold up with T-7 could help F404 supply to other customers in the next year or two.Either they have increased the assembly area or decreased the number of Su jigs there. They can’t do both without expansion. Particularly after Super Su project kicks in.
Older GE F404 engines can’t be used as HAL uses the IN 6 version. The earliest prototypes used a different version of F404. I think it’s only after 2012, we zeroed in for this particular variant of F404. Not sure who easy it’s to convert older model to IN6 version.
GE needs to increase delivery to 24 per year. Supply chain issues are there. I don’t think they can supply 20 before 2026. Remember KA 50, Boeing T7A are also vying for the same engine. Hurjet is the latest entrant to the engine user. Plus they have to supply new engines to Saab Gripen, F18 a/b/c/d MLU to various air forces. Some modules and suppliers are the same for 404&414.
This problem with continue with F414, but we have local assembly planned. How much will still be imported for F414, no one knows.
Does anyone have any info regarding when Mk1A will be delivered to IAF? I think the contract signed in 2021 stipulated delivery of 2 by 1st April 2024. IIRC it was announced 29th March that that would not be happening. The story I heard is that IAF wanted a modification (which cannot have been in the contract).
Is there a new schedule announced for deliveries? 3 months have passed since the first 2 Mk1A were due to be delivered and it would be good to have some idea when IAF will start receiving them.
India’s Defence Research and Development Orgnaisation (DRDO), a branch within the Ministry of Defence (MOD), has handed over indigenously built components to an industrial supplier, Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL), to be fitted onto the next Tejas fighter iteration, the Mark 1A (Mk1A).
Building on the Indian Air Force’s original Tejas fighter jet, which entered service in 2016, the Mk1A will cost $4.5bn over the next ten years, according to GlobalData. The DRDO has widened the indigenous supply chain, having sourced various components across India’s fledgling defence industry.
As part of these efforts, the DRDO has handed over the first batch of cutting-edge actuators and an airbrake control module to HAL for the LCA Tejas Mk1A.
For Defence this media entity "The Print" is a waste of time. They are not tech savvy, just try to cover every geopolitical thing a.s.a.p.
For Defence this media entity "The Print" is a waste of time. They are not tech savvy, just try to cover every geopolitical thing a.s.a.p.