Bl[i]tZ
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Finally, somebody downloaded it from http://tejas.gov.in/ and put it on youtube. Check out the website for other videos/pictures.
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For an aircraft whose design studies were completed in 1975, Indian Tejas have surely taken their sweet time to become operational ( I hear it is expected to be operation by 2014 ). Anyway, from the looks of it, the aircraft seems to be pretty nimble and agile. Let's hope it meets upto its expectations. Congratulations to Indian friends on this remarkable achievement.
Bl[i]tZ;2681709 said:Finally, somebody downloaded it from Tejas - India's Light Combat Aircraft - Official Website and put it on youtube. Check out the website for other videos/pictures.
For an aircraft whose design studies were completed in 1975, Indian Tejas have surely taken their sweet time to become operational ( I hear it is expected to be operation by 2014 ). Anyway, from the looks of it, the aircraft seems to be pretty nimble and agile. Let's hope it meets upto its expectations. Congratulations to Indian friends on this remarkable achievement.
lol u just jumped one and half decade, HAL Tejas design was finalized in 1990 not 1975. Thanks for the compliment.
Sorry if Wikipedia is wrong about the studies. This is what they are saying ( Can you provide a link to back up your claim ?):
HAL Tejas
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
6 prototypes
16 LSP aircraft[citation needed]
Program cost
$1.2 billion[1]
Unit cost
US$31 million[2]
US$31.09 million (Naval version)[3]
The HAL Tejas (Hindi pronunciation: [t̪eːdʒəs] ( listen)) is a lightweight multirole fighter developed by India. It is a tailless,[4] compound delta-wing design powered by a single engine. It came from the Light Combat Aircraft (LCA) programme, which began in the 1980s to replace India's ageing MiG-21 fighters. Later the LCA was officially named "Tejas",[5] meaning "Radiance" by then Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee.[6]
The Tejas has the delta wing configuration, with no tailplanes or foreplanes, and features a single vertical fin. It integrates technologies such as relaxed static stability, fly-by-wire flight control system, advanced digital cockpit, multi-mode radar, integrated digital avionics system, advanced composite material structures and a flat rated engine. The IAF is reported to have a requirement for 200 single-seat and 20 two-seat conversion trainers, while the Indian Navy may order up to 40 single-seaters to replace its Sea Harrier FRS.51 and Harrier T.60.[7]
The Tejas achieved a speed of over 1,350 kilometres per hour (840 mph) during its sea level flight trials, thus becoming the second supersonic fighter developed indigenously by Hindustan Aeronautics Limited after the HAL Marut.[8] The Tejas was cleared in January 2011 for use by Indian Air Force pilots. It will not reach final operational clearance until 2014.[9]
HAL Tejas at Aero India 2007.
In 1969, the Indian government accepted the recommendation by its Aeronautics Committee that Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL) should design and develop an advanced technology fighter aircraft around a proven engine. Based on a 'Tactical Air Support Aircraft' ASR markedly similar to that for the Marut,[10] HAL completed design studies in 1975, but the project fell through due to inability to procure the selected "proven engine" from a foreign manufacturer and the IAF's requirement for an air superiority fighter with secondary air support and interdiction capability remained unfulfilled.
In 1983 IAF realized the need of an indigenous combat aircraft for two primary purposes. The principal and most obvious goal was the development of a replacement aircraft for India's ageing MiG-21 fighters. The MiG-21 has been the mainstay of the Indian Air Force since the 1970s. The "Long Term Re-Equipment Plan 1981" noted that the MiG-21s would be approaching the end of their service lives by the mid-1990s, and that by 1995 the IAF would lack 40% of the aircraft needed to fill its projected force structure requirements.[11]
The LCA programme's other main objective was to serve as the vehicle for an across-the-board advancement of India's domestic aerospace industry.[12] The value of the aerospace "self-reliance" initiative is not simply the production of an aircraft, but also the building of a local industry capable of creating state-of-the-art products with commercial spin-offs for a global market. The LCA program was intended in part to further expand and advance India's indigenous aerospace capabilities.[13]
To better accomplish these goals, the government chose to take a different management approach, and in 1984 established the Aeronautical Development Agency (ADA) to manage the LCA programme.Although the Tejas is most often described as a product of Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL), responsibility for the development of the Tejas actually belongs to ADA, a national consortium of over 100 defence laboratories, industrial organisations, and academic institutions with HAL being the principal contractor.[14]
For an aircraft whose design studies were completed in 1975, Indian Tejas have surely taken their sweet time to become operational ( I hear it is expected to be operation by 2014 ). Anyway, from the looks of it, the aircraft seems to be pretty nimble and agile. Let's hope it meets upto its expectations. Congratulations to Indian friends on this remarkable achievement.
Sorry if Wikipedia is wrong about the studies. This is what they are saying ( Can you provide a link to back up your claim ?):
HAL Tejas
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
6 prototypes
16 LSP aircraft[citation needed]
Program cost
$1.2 billion[1]
Unit cost
US$31 million[2]
US$31.09 million (Naval version)[3]
The HAL Tejas (Hindi pronunciation: [t̪eːdʒəs] ( listen)) is a lightweight multirole fighter developed by India. It is a tailless,[4] compound delta-wing design powered by a single engine. It came from the Light Combat Aircraft (LCA) programme, which began in the 1980s to replace India's ageing MiG-21 fighters. Later the LCA was officially named "Tejas",[5] meaning "Radiance" by then Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee.[6]
The Tejas has the delta wing configuration, with no tailplanes or foreplanes, and features a single vertical fin. It integrates technologies such as relaxed static stability, fly-by-wire flight control system, advanced digital cockpit, multi-mode radar, integrated digital avionics system, advanced composite material structures and a flat rated engine. The IAF is reported to have a requirement for 200 single-seat and 20 two-seat conversion trainers, while the Indian Navy may order up to 40 single-seaters to replace its Sea Harrier FRS.51 and Harrier T.60.[7]
The Tejas achieved a speed of over 1,350 kilometres per hour (840 mph) during its sea level flight trials, thus becoming the second supersonic fighter developed indigenously by Hindustan Aeronautics Limited after the HAL Marut.[8] The Tejas was cleared in January 2011 for use by Indian Air Force pilots. It will not reach final operational clearance until 2014.[9]
HAL Tejas at Aero India 2007.
In 1969, the Indian government accepted the recommendation by its Aeronautics Committee that Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL) should design and develop an advanced technology fighter aircraft around a proven engine. Based on a 'Tactical Air Support Aircraft' ASR markedly similar to that for the Marut,[10] HAL completed design studies in 1975, but the project fell through due to inability to procure the selected "proven engine" from a foreign manufacturer and the IAF's requirement for an air superiority fighter with secondary air support and interdiction capability remained unfulfilled.
In 1983 IAF realized the need of an indigenous combat aircraft for two primary purposes. The principal and most obvious goal was the development of a replacement aircraft for India's ageing MiG-21 fighters. The MiG-21 has been the mainstay of the Indian Air Force since the 1970s. The "Long Term Re-Equipment Plan 1981" noted that the MiG-21s would be approaching the end of their service lives by the mid-1990s, and that by 1995 the IAF would lack 40% of the aircraft needed to fill its projected force structure requirements.[11]
The LCA programme's other main objective was to serve as the vehicle for an across-the-board advancement of India's domestic aerospace industry.[12] The value of the aerospace "self-reliance" initiative is not simply the production of an aircraft, but also the building of a local industry capable of creating state-of-the-art products with commercial spin-offs for a global market. The LCA program was intended in part to further expand and advance India's indigenous aerospace capabilities.[13]
To better accomplish these goals, the government chose to take a different management approach, and in 1984 established the Aeronautical Development Agency (ADA) to manage the LCA programme.Although the Tejas is most often described as a product of Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL), responsibility for the development of the Tejas actually belongs to ADA, a national consortium of over 100 defence laboratories, industrial organisations, and academic institutions with HAL being the principal contractor.[14]
Sorry if Wikipedia is wrong about the studies. This is what they are saying ( Can you provide a link to back up your claim ?):
]
but the project fell through due to inability to procure the selected "proven engine" from a foreign manufacturer and the IAF's requirement for an air superiority fighter with secondary air support and interdiction capability remained unfulfilled.
1990
Design of LCA was finalised as a small delta winged relaxed static stability aircraft.
Phase 1 of the development was commenced to create the proof of concept system. Financial problems within India prevented full scale operations from starting.
1993
Full funding started from April 1993 full-scale development work for phase 1 started in June.
1995
First technology demonstrator, TD-1, rolled out on 17 November 1995 and was followed by TD-2 in 1998. However, technical problems in flight control systems and structural deficiencies plagued the prototypes and they remained grounded.