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Indian Air Force to begin C-17 trials by month-end

Justin Joseph

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Indian Air Force to begin C-17 trials by month-end

The Indian Air Force (IAF) is likely to begin trials of the Boeing C-17 Globemaster III heavy-lift transport aircraft, of which it intends to purchase 10, by the end of the month, an official said.


"It should happen in the next two weeks," the official told IANS on condition of anonymity.

"The trials should last about 10 days," he added of the evaluation process of the aircraft, which has a carrying capacity of 75 tonnes.

The trials are likely to be conducted in the same manner as the IAF is evaluating the six combat jets in contention for an order for 126 medium multi-role combat aircraft.

This means the C-17, which can take off from unprepared airstrips as short as 3,000 metres, will be put through its paces in the icy heights of Ladakh in Jammu and Kashmir, the deserts of Rajasthan and the humid conditions of south India.

Price negotiations will begin after the trials and the first aircraft should arrive within two years of Boeing receiving a letter of acceptance, the official said.

Asked how long it would take for IAF pilots to convert to the C-17, the official said: "Pilots who have done a reasonable number of hours on the Il-76 (the IAF's current heavy lift aircraft) can convert to command status in a few months."

The US Congress has cleared the sale of the C-17 to India. The Obama administration had notified Congress April 23 of the potential sale of 10 aircraft and sought objections or approval.

The aircraft are being sold to India under the US government's Foreign Military Sales (FMS) programme, with the maximum package value of $5.8 billion. This includes the 3.8 percent administrative fee the government charges to ensure timely delivery and guarantee the supplies.

The actual cost of the C-17 aircraft would be less as India would not be buying all the options that are offered with it and the 3.8 percent fee would be payable only on the actual amount of the deal. In some countries, the administrative fee ranges up to 18 percent.

The IAF chief, Air Chief Marshal P.V. Naik, had said last year that it was looking for ten C-17s, described in its parlance as VHTAC, or Very Heavy Transport Aircraft, as a replacement for its ageing fleet of Soviet vintage IL-76 transports. He also spoke of a repeat order for 10 more aircraft.

The US Air Force has ordered 223 C-17s, of which 198 have been delivered. The aircraft, which first flew in 1991, was inducted in 1995.

Boeing plans to continue production for about five years to ensure deliveries to the US Air Force (24), the United Arab Emirates (six), Britain (seven) and India (10).

Indian Air Force to begin C-17 trials by month-end- Hindustan Times
 
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thats why they are ordering only 10... Best part take 8O ton of cargo any time any where,...
 
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India is making a good purchase. It could be expensive but its worth it. India should get more.
 
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Nah......we rather wait for the AN 124 lines to reopen.
I agree with you russia may reopen An-124-150(if it will take time i dnt think we have any argency if it will take 1-2 yr more) Military A/c. which is 1/5 of the cost of C-17 with much more payload and higher range then C-17
 
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I agree with you russia may reopen An-124-150(if it will take time i dnt think we have any argency if it will take 1-2 yr more) Military A/c. which is 1/5 of the cost of C-17 with much more payload and higher range then C-17

Yes, thats would be a good choice, approx 500 million $ for a transport aircraft is too much. Better to order An-124-150 with Russia and we can have more nos in the same budget. And like others this deal will also be sanction proof.
 
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@Lt.Prateek,Sancho,Gogbot,Kinetic or anyone...


Any idea why India didn go for the An-124 in the first place..?
 
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india need 40 heavy-lift transport aircraft that means around 24 billions if we buy c-17 with UNCLE SAM sitting on our head............and i don't think it will take more then 2 - 3 billion$ to shift the whole production line of an124 -150 to india............with drdo,israel and france we can easily upgrade them.....i don't think even after doing all this the aircraft will cost more then 200-250 million$..............
 
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Yes, thats would be a good choice, approx 500 million $ for a transport aircraft is too much. Better to order An-124-150 with Russia and we can have more nos in the same budget. And like others this deal will also be sanction proof.

I some other defense forum i read that in Afg in the same rough airfield where C-17 land An-124 land too
 
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@Lt.Prateek,Sancho,Gogbot,Kinetic or anyone...


Any idea why India didn go for the An-124 in the first place..?

Russia and Ukraine just agreed on reopening the An-124 production line again, when it will open and the first aircraft will come out no one gonna know and when India can get the first An-124 is more complicated question.

For immediate purposes of heavy lift, aging Il-76 and because of advanced self protection suites, avionics etc India went for C-17 GM-III. But I think Boeing made the price extraordinarily high though its an excellent aircraft.
 
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An -124 anydays would have been better...less cost + more capabilities.
But Globemaster does project the power.
 
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I dont know about the cost of this plane but it is a real monster .
Sukhoi KR-860

Some specs are as under .

* Capacity: 860-1000 passengers
* Length: 80 m (262 ft 6 in)
* Wingspan: 88 m (288 ft 9 in) with the wings unfolded or 64 m (210 ft) span with wings folded
* Wing area: 700 m2 (7,500 sq ft)
* Max takeoff weight: 650,000 kg (1,433,005 lb)

Performance

* Cruising speed: 1,000 km/h (620 mph; 540 kn)
* Range: 15,000 km (9,321 mi; 8,099 nmi)

Deutsche Suchoj Homepage [Galerie]
 
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