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Cutting-edge Israeli radar wins air force approval for Tejas fighter

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The Indian Air Force (IAF), after years of opposing the indigenous Tejas light combat aircraft (LCA), now accepts it is on track to be a world-class light fighter.

The specifications of the new Tejas – termed Standard of Preparation-2018 (SoP-18) – were agreed in New Delhi on September 23, between the air force and the Tejas’ designers and manufacturers. One hundred SoP-18 Tejas fighters will join the IAF, starting 2018-19.

The key battle-winning capability in the SoP-18 Tejas is “active electronically scanned array” (AESA) radar that Israel will develop jointly with India. This was the clincher that made the IAF agree to buy 100 SoP-18 fighters from Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd (HAL), in addition to the 20 Tejas Mark I already on order.

HAL also undertook to equip the SoP-18 Tejas with air-to-air refuelling, a “self-protection jammer” (SPJ) under the fighter’s wing, and to refashion the layout of internal systems to make the fighter easier to maintain. Yet, it was the AESA radar that conclusively grabbed the IAF’s attention. No Indian fighter has this capability yet nor does any fighter with Pakistan or China.

AESA radar enjoys key advantages over conventional “manually steered” radar. In the latter, the antenna is moved manually to let the radar beam scan the sky for enemy targets. In AESA radar, the beam moves electronically, switching between multiple targets so rapidly that it effectively scans them simultaneously, even when they are located far apart – in the air, on sea, and the ground. By switching its beam rapidly, the “multi-tasking” AESA radar can simultaneously track enemy aircraft, guide missiles to those targets, and jam enemy communications and radar. In modern-day aerial combat, AESA radar would be a key difference between defeat and victory.

Since India’s Defence R&D Organisation (DRDO) cannot yet miniaturise airborne radar for a fighter’s nose (it has built a larger radar for airborne early warning and control aircraft), the Tejas fighter was equipped with the EL/M-2032 radar, bought from Israeli company, Elta.

The impending replacement of this manual radar with Elta’s ELM-2052 AESA radar illustrates the symbiosis between Israel’s high-tech defence industry and India’s equipment-hungry military, and how each sustains the other.

Business Standard first reported the IAF’s decision to order 100 improved Tejas Mark 1A fighters (August 13, With Tejas Mark II years away, HAL asks air force to buy Tejas Mark 1A, and October 2, Parrikar cuts Gordian knot to boost Tejas line). Now, from HAL Bengaluru, comes this account of how Elta’s ELM-2052 AESA radar was chosen.

The decision stems from the IAF’s ongoing plan to refurbish its 123-aircraft Jaguar fleet, upgrading those six squadrons of deep penetration strike aircraft to continue in service for another 15-20 years. This involves spending $2 billion (Rs 13,000 crore) on new, more powerful engines (the Honeywell F-125N has been chosen); upgrading 61 Jaguars with HAL’s vaunted DARIN-3 navigation-attack system, and arming the fleet with lethal, smart munitions like the Textron CBU-105 “sensor-fuzed bombs” that India bought from the United States in 2010.

Then, in 2012, Elta sensed an opportunity and offered to equip the Jaguar with its new ELM-2052 AESA radar. This would provide the Jaguar real ability to beat off enemy fighters, even while on its primary mission of ground strike. Says HAL Chairman T Suvarna Raju: “I was delighted when Elta offered the AESA radar for the Jaguar. Elta wanted neither development costs nor more time.”

Elta’s offer, however, came with the condition that at least one more fighter in the IAF’s inventory should field the ELM-2052 AESA radar. To sweeten the deal, Elta offered to work jointly with HAL on an improved version of the ELM-2052.

This was a win-win for both Elta and HAL. “Look at the market HAL provides Elta. The 61 Jaguars being upgraded to DARIN-3 would all be fitted with the ELM-2052. At least 100 Tejas would get the improved version, possibly with more to follow. Meanwhile, 50 IAF Mirage-2000 fighters are being upgraded, but with a manual radar that could become obsolescent quickly. So the improved AESA could eventually equip the Mirage fleet too, adding up to 200-plus radars,” says Raju.

Aerospace industry experts highlight other benefits for Elta. While bearing the design and development cost of the new AESA radar, the Israeli company would save a great deal of money by having flight-testing done on IAF Jaguars. “Israeli Aircraft Industries (IAI is Elta’s parent company) and HAL have signed an agreement that says we would partner IAI in developing the improved AESA radar for the Tejas,” confirms Raju.

Defence ministry sources say the agreement specifies that 60 per cent of the new radar, by value, would be manufactured in India.

The Elta proposal is typical of how Israeli defence companies do business, explains a senior HAL manager. The Israeli Air Force operates US-built F-15 and F-16 fighters, which come fitted with US-designed AESA radar. All this comes to Israel free, as US military aid to a crucial ally. That leaves little space in Israel’s military inventory for equipment built by domestic companies like Elta. Yet, the Israeli government insists on nurturing its defence industry, in case the pipeline from Washington ever shuts. “To stay in business and to fund high-tech R&D, Israeli defence companies like Elta rely heavily on sales to India, particularly the IAF”, says aerospace expert Pushpinder Singh.

Illustrating Israeli capabilities, the Tejas Mark I was already armed with an all-Israeli combination of the Elta EL/M-2032 radar, the Derby and Python air-to-air missiles, and a data link that digitally interconnected these. Indian test pilots say this was a “world-class” air-to-air combat configuration. But now, the Elta-HAL AESA radar could make Tejas a more capable air-defence fighter.

JET, SET, GO

  • The specifications of the new Tejas – termed Standard of Preparation-2018 (SoP-18) – were agreed in New Delhi on September 23, between the air force and the Tejas’ designers and manufacturers
  • One hundred SoP-18 Tejas fighters will join the IAF, starting 2018-19
  • The key battle-winning capability in the SoP-18 Tejas is “active electronically scanned array” radar that Israel will develop jointly with India
  • This was the clincher that made the IAF agree to buy 100 SoP-18 fighters from HAL, in addition to the 20 Tejas Mark I already on order.

Cutting-edge Israeli radar wins air force approval for Tejas fighter | idrw.org

AESA on 200 fighters:cheesy::cheesy:

:yahoo:

OH BOY, this news is gonna piss off a lot people.
@Abingdonboy @PARIKRAMA @MilSpec @anant_s @GURU DUTT @DrSomnath999
 
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Jaguar if fitted with EL-2052 and new engine will make it relevant for another 15 years. This along with LCA is potentially the best news for IAF in current year.
 
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Not enough power!!And besides,what do you need an AESA radar on a CAS aircraft for??

In Air-to-ground missions, the radar provides very high resolution mapping (SAR), surface moving target detection and tracking over RBM, DBS and SAR maps in addition to A/G ranging. In Air-to-Sea missions the radar provides long-range target detection and tracking, including target classification capabilities (RS, ISAR

I don't understand what this article is trying to convey?

The radar we are buying from Israel is a pulse-doppler radar, and AESA (Uttam) is being designed in India itself.

Looks like reporter mixed AESA with PESA.
Uttam AESA is for LCA mk2 ......in meantime LCA mk1 will be equip with proven AESA rader
 
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Major news indeed; the Tejas will be gaining an incredible leap in capability in a few years, along with a host of other incremental upgrades that take advantage of the Tejas' modular aspect.

No Indian fighter has this capability yet nor does any fighter with Pakistan or China.

Sounds like the author is 15 years late to the party. :(
 
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Am I the only person that thinks the billions spent on upgrading old planes such as the jaguar, Mig 29, Mirage, etc., would be better spent on Sukhois off the shelp from the Russians?

The Sukhois perform well, and most of the issues concerning servicabnility will be solved ASAP now that spares will be made in India.

Think about it.

Mirage upgrades 2 billion

Mig 29 upgrades 1 billion

Jaguar upgrades 2 billion

Thats 5 billion!. At 30 million each that 166 SU 30s! Sometimes i get angry when the IAF complaoins about mainteneance issues. They have plenty of chances to standardize the fleet and simplify mainteneance and then they do everything they can to keep old airframes going. All the while they could get new planes and build a fleet around 1 or 2 airframes.
 
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Am I the only person that thinks the billions spent on upgrading old planes such as the jaguar, Mig 29, Mirage, etc., would be better spent on Sukhois off the shelp from the Russians?

The Sukhois perform well, and most of the issues concerning servicabnility will be solved ASAP now that spares will be made in India.

Think about it.

Mirage upgrades 2 billion

Mig 29 upgrades 1 billion

Jaguar upgrades 2 billion

Thats 5 billion!. At 30 million each that 166 SU 30s! Sometimes i get angry when the IAF complaoins about mainteneance issues. They have plenty of chances to standardize the fleet and simplify mainteneance and then they do everything they can to keep old airframes going. All the while they could get new planes and build a fleet around 1 or 2 airframes.

An mki costs 30 million? :o:

If it was so, then PAF would have had flankers in its inventory.
 
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In Air-to-ground missions, the radar provides very high resolution mapping (SAR), surface moving target detection and tracking over RBM, DBS and SAR maps in addition to A/G ranging. In Air-to-Sea missions the radar provides long-range target detection and tracking, including target classification capabilities (RS, ISAR)

I very much doubt Jags will be used in such roles after the advent of strike fighters like Su 30 and Rafales!!And besides,AESA radars are extremely power hungry,and I don't think that Jag's power-plants can cater for that need.
 
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My Question is that when they already developed according to Indian members Utam AESA radar why they go for Israeli Radar is Utam another failure like Tejas if so then why they always brag about under developed weapons and systems
Quote from Indian Claims:

It is no longer a secret when it comes to India developing a AESA(Active Electronic Scanning Array) radar, though many countries are offering their expertise in this field to India to develop the radar on its own, so, that they can win the MMRCA bid, India has always rejected the idea as it is developing it's own since the 90's which was kept like a secret until the patent was made for the T/R(ATransmitter/Receiver) module for the AESA radar which shows that steady progress has been made by India in this field so that they can fill the void by placing it on its home grown LCA project.

IMG_1074.JPG


Infact work on the necessary transmit/receive modules was done back in 1998 itself as revealed by Dr. Harinarayana (the father of the LCA programme) in a interview. India is working on this AESA technology to develop an AESA radar for the LCA (which presently will only have the MMR which is a PD radar), India is also developing a new AESA radar ( link ) with a range of 300 km for its indigenous AWACS aircraft, that will be mounted on the Embraer ERJ-145. It is to be deployed by 2011 here is a good picture of it notice that the radar is not like the rotating type deployed by other countries and the flying aircraft is from embraer from brazil.

1_030301_0176_p_RGB.jpg


The new AEWACS' mission avionics and sensors will be integrated via a dual MIL-STD 1533 B digital databus, with software programmes providing tactical aids, cues and alerts. The mission system will provide automatic radar control, automatic detection and track initiation, reduced false alarms, improved track continuity, sensor and databus fusion and modern communications management. It will also provide adaptive tracking performance, fast track update rate, reliable local situation display and computer-assisted decisions.

The LRDE-developed roof-mounted radar will be an active phased-array, pulse compression, Doppler radar operating in the S-band. The fixed antenna, with extremely low sidelobe levels, will comprise 200 transmitter/receiver modules mounted on top of the aircraft's fuselage. The best range performance will be achieved in a 150 degree sector sideways, with the performance reduced in forward and aft directions outside of this sector. The instrumented range will be 243nm and the typical detection range for a combat aircraft-sized contact will be 190nm. The radar's electronically scanning beam will be controlled by an automatic and intelligent energy management system which will optimise the beam position and compared to conventional, rotodome solutions, will provide quicker detection verification, increased tracking range, and improved tracking performance even for highly manoeuvring targets.

Work on the ASP's Technology Demonstrator (TD) began in earnest and the first flight of the TD, an Avro HS-748 twin-turboprop aircraft equipped with a rotodome fabricated by BAE Systems, took place in November 1991 at the ASTE's Bangalore facility. By 1994, the LRDE and state-owned Bharat Electronics Ltd (BEL) had completed development and fabrication of the ASP's radar and related electronics and a fresh round of technology evaluation and flight testing got underway, following a funding of Rs 250 million from the DRDO. By mid-1996, work on most aspects of the AWACS project had been completed, and the LRDE radar demonstrated an effective range of 300km when called upon to detect a low-flying target cruising at Mach 1.5 speed. However, the sole ASP TD perished in a fatal crash at Arrakonam near Chennai in January 1999, killing eight personnel, and the ASWAC project was consequently put on hold.


Within two months of signing the $1.1-billion Phalcon Airborne Early Warning and Control Systems contract, India is looking to revive its own $400-million AWACS project.

To be called the Mini-AWACS system, the project harkens back to the indigenous airborne surveillance platform (ASP) effort shelved by India's Defense Research and Development Organization (DRDO) in 1999 after a modified Avro HS-748 crashed, killing four scientists and four air force officers on board. The accident was blamed on a rotodome that blew off, indicating a failure in the modification process.

However, this time DRDO is expected to mount the Mini-AWACS' phased-array radar on an in-production executive jet, according to K.U. Limaye, director of the Electronics and Radar Development Establishment and head of CABS. An experimental radar is already in testing, he added in a interview.
http://www.subcontinentaldef.net/2010/08/indias-aesa-radar-development.html

Source: India's AESA radar development
 
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