Abingdonboy
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From this angle you can really see how over engineered that landing gear is on the NLCA at the moment.
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From this angle you can really see how over engineered that landing gear is on the NLCA at the moment.
From this angle you can really see how over engineered that landing gear is on the NLCA at the moment.
PART 1: Big Surprises In LCA Navy NP1's Ski-Jump Fight
When the first prototype of India's LCA Navy (NP1) roared off the ski-jump at the Shore-based Test Facility (SBTF) for the first time on December 20 last year, no one from the team observing the jet from the flightline and from telemetry stations knew that something unseen had happened. Something that would only become known later in the day when performance data was analysed. And it was good, solid news, much needed for a team that has seen little more than questions, derision and barely veiled bemusement. Importantly, it was the first time the team felt it had an answer to the 'what use is this platform, really?' question...
...And that's where it gets interesting
Top sources on the team say the NP1 was flown a few times conventially before the ski-jump test to soak up the thick sea-level air in Goa. As expected, engine performance was markedly better. Spirits were high, but as has become the norm on milestone tests in the Tejas programme, there was pervasive nervousness. Surprises can be nasty. And the ski-jump test would leave no recovery time if something went wrong. As the Team says, "The first attempt at any new activity is fraught with uncertainties and potential surprises. Given the 'leap off the edge' nature of the first launch, all the major possibilities of failure were identified and options to handle them were built into the plan."
The test flight team decided to lock 5.7 degrees as the minimum climb angle for the NP1 once it made the leap off the ski-jump. When the aircraft actually did roar into the sky, the actual minimum climb angle was observed to be in excess of 10 degrees. Also, the NP1 achieved an angle of attack after ramp exit of 21.6 degrees, giving the team healthy new margins to work with in terms of performance. Simply put, the aircraft performed better than the team ever thought it could.
Now you can argue that safety margins always allow for bumps in performance, but the number crunch that evening demonstrated that the NP1 had exceeded expectations healthily...
...The Indian Navy, which has ordered six of LCA Navy Mk.1 has indicated, albeit unofficially, that the Mk.1 platform is likely never to see actual carrier service. While the performance surprises of December aren't likely to change that, the numbers have changed. And that's something.
From this angle you can really see how over engineered that landing gear is on the NLCA at the moment.
I don't think it is over engineered...
When I say "over engineered" I am directly quoting the chief test pilot of the NFTC:I don't think it is over engineered...
@sancho let's see what new information comes out of aeroindia.
True dat. Apparently the specs for this have been frozen and design finalized. Let's hope that info comes out with more details.We really need some information on MK 2
True dat. Apparently the specs for this have been frozen and design finalized. Let's hope that info comes out with more details.
Nope just rumors about this.You have a link for the Specs frozed Claim
Nope just rumors about this.