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IAF to buy 14 Tejas squadrons

Mike_Brando

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India’s own fighter, the Tejas Light Combat Aircraft (LCA), is playing a growing role in protecting Indian airspace. On December 20, when the Tejas was cleared for operational service in the Indian Air Force (IAF), Defence Minister A K Antony declared that 200 Tejas fighters would eventually enter combat service. Today, that figure quietly swelled to well above 300, with the government indicating that the IAF would have at least 14 Tejas squadrons.

Each IAF combat squadron has 21 fighter aircraft; 14 squadrons add up to 294 Tejas fighters. The 21 fighters include 16 frontline, single-seat fighters, 2 twin-seat trainers and 3 reserve aircraft to make up losses in war.

In a written statement tabled in the Lok Sabha today, Antony’s deputy Jitendra Singh stated, “The MiG-21 and MiG-27 aircrafts of the IAF have already been upgraded and currently equip 14 combat squadrons. These aircraft, however, are planned for being phased out over the next few years and will be replaced by the LCA.”

So far, the IAF has committed to inducting just 6 Tejas squadrons --- 2 squadrons of the current Tejas Mark I, and 4 squadrons of the improved Tejas Mark II. In addition, the navy plans to buy some 40-50 Tejas for its future aircraft carriers.

Since the Tejas programme began in 1985, about Rs 7,000 crore have been spent on the Tejas Mark I, which obtained Initial Operational Clearance in December, allowing regular IAF pilots to fly it. By the end of this year, when it obtains Final Operational Clearance, it would have consumed a budget of Rs 7,965 crore.

An additional Rs 2,432 crore has been allocated for the Tejas Mark II, which takes the total development cost of the IAF variant to Rs 10,397 crore.

Separately, Rs 3,650 crore were sanctioned for developing the naval Tejas, which is ongoing. That means the Aeronautical Development Agency will spend Rs 14,047 crore on the entire Tejas programme, including the IAF, naval and trainer variants.

Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd, which manufactures the Tejas, has quoted Rs 162 crore per fighter as its latest price. Amortising the entire development cost on the envisioned 344 fighters (IAF: 294; Navy: 50), the Tejas would cost Rs 209 crore ($33.5 million) per fighter.

In comparison, the IAF’s Mirage 2000 fighters, which were bought in the 1980s, are currently being upgraded for $45 million per aircraft. IAF pilots that test-fly the Tejas Mark I find it qualitatively superior to the Mirage 2000.

The heavier Sukhoi-30MKI costs more than Rs 400 crore ($65 million) each. And the Rafale, which is currently being negotiated with Dassault, is pegged at Rs 750-850 crore ($120-140 million) per fighter.

Aerospace expert and historian, Pushpindar Singh, points out that ordering more Tejas would bring down the price further, making it enormously attractive for air forces across the world that are replacing some 3,500 MiG-21, Mirage-III, early model F-16 and F-5 fighters that are completing their service lives.

“With these air forces facing severe budget pressures, the Tejas has only one rival in this market --- the JF-17 Thunder, being built by China in partnership with Pakistan. They are marketing the JF-17 aggressively in every global air show, but India is completely ignoring the Tejas’ potential,” notes Singh.
IAF to buy 14 Tejas squadrons | Business Standard
so it seems that the I.A.F. is finally interested in acquiring a large no. of L.C.A. to replace our aging Mig-21 and Mig-27 squadrons:victory::partay:
 
Thats fuc*ing awesome news.
Atleast we will see reduction in imports.
 
Are all the 14 Squd going to be LCA mk1 or mk2 as well..... ??
 
:lol: Another great Ajay Shukla story!
Filled with a nice heap of bias and Rafale bashing ;)


Although 14 SQDs of LCAs is certainly welcome news. HAL needs to seriously increase its production capacity of LCAs though 14-16 a year from 2015 isn't good enough, that's less than a SQD a year so it will take over 16 years to deliver the full 14 SQDs- not acceptable.

Are all the 14 Squd going to be LCA mk1 or mk2 as well..... ??
Only the initial 2 SQDs (around 40 LCAs) will be MK.1s so right now it looks like 12 SQDs will be MK.2.
 
I certainly do not think IAF is looking for 294 LCAs. At most we could build 120-150 of them.
 
Hmmmm.. Good story with typical Shukla touch..

Govt. wants IAF to buy so many Tejas but how will HAL produce it..? For 300 Tejas, they need to ramp up production to 20-25 per year which seems almost impossible.
 
Hmmmm.. Good story with typical Shukla touch..

Govt. wants IAF to buy so many Tejas but how will HAL produce it..? For 300 Tejas, they need to ramp up production to 20-25 per year which seems almost impossible.
probably he referred timeline of 2030 :unsure:
 
Where will the FGFA fit into this mix then? unless the sanctioned strength of sq is increased for the IAF.
 
Where will the FGFA fit into this mix then? unless the sanctioned strength of sq is increased for the IAF.
Thats a good question Sir. Also not to forget about AMCA. It doesnt make sense unless we plan to go for 50+ squadrons in future.
14 sqds MKI(confirmed)
14 sqds Tejas.
7 sqds Rafale.
6 sqds 29s+2k5s
10 sqds FGFA.
10 sqds AMCA.
Seems very unlikely.
 
India’s own fighter, the Tejas Light Combat Aircraft (LCA), is playing a growing role in protecting Indian airspace. On December 20, when the Tejas was cleared for operational service in the Indian Air Force (IAF), Defence Minister A K Antony declared that 200 Tejas fighters would eventually enter combat service. Today, that figure quietly swelled to well above 300, with the government indicating that the IAF would have at least 14 Tejas squadrons.

Each IAF combat squadron has 21 fighter aircraft; 14 squadrons add up to 294 Tejas fighters. The 21 fighters include 16 frontline, single-seat fighters, 2 twin-seat trainers and 3 reserve aircraft to make up losses in war.

In a written statement tabled in the Lok Sabha today, Antony’s deputy Jitendra Singh stated, “The MiG-21 and MiG-27 aircrafts of the IAF have already been upgraded and currently equip 14 combat squadrons. These aircraft, however, are planned for being phased out over the next few years and will be replaced by the LCA.”

So far, the IAF has committed to inducting just 6 Tejas squadrons --- 2 squadrons of the current Tejas Mark I, and 4 squadrons of the improved Tejas Mark II. In addition, the navy plans to buy some 40-50 Tejas for its future aircraft carriers.

Since the Tejas programme began in 1985, about Rs 7,000 crore have been spent on the Tejas Mark I, which obtained Initial Operational Clearance in December, allowing regular IAF pilots to fly it. By the end of this year, when it obtains Final Operational Clearance, it would have consumed a budget of Rs 7,965 crore.

An additional Rs 2,432 crore has been allocated for the Tejas Mark II, which takes the total development cost of the IAF variant to Rs 10,397 crore.

Separately, Rs 3,650 crore were sanctioned for developing the naval Tejas, which is ongoing. That means the Aeronautical Development Agency will spend Rs 14,047 crore on the entire Tejas programme, including the IAF, naval and trainer variants.

Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd, which manufactures the Tejas, has quoted Rs 162 crore per fighter as its latest price. Amortising the entire development cost on the envisioned 344 fighters (IAF: 294; Navy: 50), the Tejas would cost Rs 209 crore ($33.5 million) per fighter.

In comparison, the IAF’s Mirage 2000 fighters, which were bought in the 1980s, are currently being upgraded for $45 million per aircraft. IAF pilots that test-fly the Tejas Mark I find it qualitatively superior to the Mirage 2000.

The heavier Sukhoi-30MKI costs more than Rs 400 crore ($65 million) each. And the Rafale, which is currently being negotiated with Dassault, is pegged at Rs 750-850 crore ($120-140 million) per fighter.

Aerospace expert and historian, Pushpindar Singh, points out that ordering more Tejas would bring down the price further, making it enormously attractive for air forces across the world that are replacing some 3,500 MiG-21, Mirage-III, early model F-16 and F-5 fighters that are completing their service lives.

“With these air forces facing severe budget pressures, the Tejas has only one rival in this market --- the JF-17 Thunder, being built by China in partnership with Pakistan. They are marketing the JF-17 aggressively in every global air show, but India is completely ignoring the Tejas’ potential,” notes Singh.
IAF to buy 14 Tejas squadrons | Business Standard
so it seems that the I.A.F. is finally interested in acquiring a large no. of L.C.A. to replace our aging Mig-21 and Mig-27 squadrons:victory::partay:


Actually, Tejas development started in 1984, not 1985. Furthermore, you think Americans would let India export Tejas and compete with F-16? The US can block F404 engines sale to India.
 
The IAF wants 42 SQDs by 2025 and 49-50 by 2030/32
Considering that the first Rafale will not arrive until 2017(if the contract is signed this year).. and that the FGFA is delayed in the words of Indian Def Min..it seems that Tejas is being touted as the alternative to fill the numbers gap.
 
And sir batman continues making third rate troll comments in each and every indian thread.:coffee:
 
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