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The Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft: A Technical Analysis
Abhijit Iyer-Mitra and Pushan Das
Introduction
The Indian Air Force's global tender to buy 126 Medium Multi-Role Combat Aircraft (MMRCA) has been cancelled and instead, a limited purchase of 36 Dassault Rafales is being negotiated without the transfer of technology and local production envisaged in the original Meanwhile, the fighter strength of the Indian Air Force (IAF) is diminishing rapidly due to obsolescence. The IAF operates a wide variety of aircraft which significantly complicates its logistics, training, budgets, and force synergy. The acquisition of just two squadrons of Rafales is hardly enough to overcome the numbers crunch.
The Aeronautical Development Agency (ADA), an aviation research arm of the Defence Ministry, however, believes its Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft (AMCA) may just be the answer that the IAF is looking for. The AMCA programme, though still in its design and development phase, is believed by the ADA to hold immense potential to replace a wide range of IAF aircraft while bringing quantum changes to fielded capability as the aircraft will be a generation ahead of what the IAF currently fields, or is considering. The indigenous Light Combat Aircraft (LCA), which the ADA has been developing over the last 30-odd years, has created an aeronautic ecosystem for the AMCA programme. ADA officials believe that if the IAF were to throw its weight behind the AMCA programme, it would result in a shift from short-term tactical thinking to a more long-term strategic view, keeping pace with technological developments and meeting future threats.
This Brief examines the AMCA programme, aggregating and comparing official information on the programme with its peers, and analyses the drivers of – and obstacles to – the successful completion of the AMCA project
IAF Combat Fleet Forecast
Figure 1 is based on data collated from official statements on the phasing out of old aircraft and introduction of extant and new combat aircraft in the IAF. Even without analysing the feasibility of this induction-retirement schedule, some points stand out clearly.
The first is that the venerable Mig- 21 will continue to serve the Indian Air Force well into the 2020s – marking close to 60 years of service for this aircraft family.
Second, specialist aircraft like the Jaguar (optimised for ground strikes) and the air superiority Mig-29 will continue to play a significant role in the IAF till at least 2032, with their phased retirement beginning only in 2027.
The graph also indicates that the number of fighters is expected to remain well below the authorised total, even assuming that the government procures another fighter in lieu of the scrapped MMRCA programme. This is subject to further variability should the negotiations for 36 Rafales fail and should the contract for Fifth Generation Fighter Aircraft (FGFA) being developed with Russia be cancelled, as seems likely.
However, it is important not to assume that falling numbers automatically translates to a drop in overall combat capability or effectiveness. In this age of air-to-air combat beyond the visual range, standoff precision strikes and multiple targets per plane per sortie (as opposed to multiple sorties per target a few decades back) mean that a numeric shortfall does not necessarily result in a deficiency in capabilities.
Yet the most striking revelation from Figure 1 is that by 2027, the Air Force intends to have a fleet almost exclusively comprising twin engine fighters. While such a trend is already beginning to show, it will sharpen considerably after 2027 following the retirement of the MiG-21 and the Mirage 2000.
The MMRCA and Sukhoi-30 MKI will form the bulk of the IAF fleet. This means that contrary to international trends where countries have more light fighters and fewer high-end heavy fighters, the IAF arsenal will be almost completely dominated by twin engines heavies, with their attendant life cycle and operational costs.
This raises several questions on IAF thinking of the High-Low mix, or even the High-Medium-Low mix despite the sheer nebulousness of the term 'medium' in IAF literature.
AMCA Design Drivers
The AMCA programme is envisaged as replacement for a host of aircraft currently operated by the IAF as well as to fill gaps left by retirement of the Dassault Mirage 2000s, SEPECAT Jaguars and Mig- 27s. The ADA has received definitive design drivers for the AMCA after the issuing of the Air Staff Requirements (ASR) in 2010.
The broad requirements outlined for the AMCA are to incorporate a high degree of stealth, a high internal and external weapons payload, high internal fuel capacity, and the ability to swing from an air- to-air role to air-to-ground. It is also expected to have the ability to super cruise. This allows the aircraft to travel at supersonic speeds with greater endurance as the afterburners do not have to be used with the additional fuel usage. Even though future air combat has been envisaged as being beyond visual range excluding the likelihood of aerial dogfights as before, the AMCA is expected to sport a thrust vectoring engine which will give it superior manoeuvrability in the event of a dogfight. The ADA is designing the AMCA as a platform with high survivability, to meet the challenges of future air defence environments through a combination of moderate stealth, electronic warfare capability, sensors and kinetic performance, including possible super-manoeuvrability. The design philosophy seeks to balance aerodynamics and stealth capabilities.
Design
The structural layout of the aircraft incorporates some of the key design features that define a 5th- generation fighter aircraft. The following graphics show the evolution of the AMCA design, and is consistent with the modifications to that design over the years. The initial tailless double engine, delta design is clearly no longer in the offing, having moved to a double delta wing, with vertical and horizontal stabilisers in design 38-01. By 38-09 the angle of the vertical stabilisers has changed and the wings too have transitioned to a design much like the F-22.
Front Aspect Stealth
The following section describes the AMCA's design, much of which seem to follow that of F-22, albeit with some significant variations. The front end—comprising the cockpit and radome as well as the air intakes—seems much closer to the X-36 unmanned demonstrator pictured, than to the F-22. That apart, from all aspects, the design shows significantly greater adherence to stealth principles than the beleaguered PAK-FA project – supposedly a collaboration between India and the Sukhoi design bureau. If the current graphics translate accurately into the production design of the aircraft, a high level of stealth can be expected from it against radars operating in the L band. X to C band stealth,however, will be heavily dependent of the quality of construction, the shaping of the facets and joints, and of the equipment and weapons bay doors.
The exact nature of the skin's radar absorbency has not been discussed in publicly available material. It is safe to assume this will be in the nature of a Radar Absorbent Material (RAM) coating – possibly paint rather than the integrated RAM treatment cured into the F-35 panels.6 The kind of treatment that will be applied to the joints remains unclear, though there is the possibility of using the maintenance-intensive 'adhesive strips' of the B-2 and F-22.
Abhijit Iyer-Mitra and Pushan Das
Introduction
The Indian Air Force's global tender to buy 126 Medium Multi-Role Combat Aircraft (MMRCA) has been cancelled and instead, a limited purchase of 36 Dassault Rafales is being negotiated without the transfer of technology and local production envisaged in the original Meanwhile, the fighter strength of the Indian Air Force (IAF) is diminishing rapidly due to obsolescence. The IAF operates a wide variety of aircraft which significantly complicates its logistics, training, budgets, and force synergy. The acquisition of just two squadrons of Rafales is hardly enough to overcome the numbers crunch.
The Aeronautical Development Agency (ADA), an aviation research arm of the Defence Ministry, however, believes its Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft (AMCA) may just be the answer that the IAF is looking for. The AMCA programme, though still in its design and development phase, is believed by the ADA to hold immense potential to replace a wide range of IAF aircraft while bringing quantum changes to fielded capability as the aircraft will be a generation ahead of what the IAF currently fields, or is considering. The indigenous Light Combat Aircraft (LCA), which the ADA has been developing over the last 30-odd years, has created an aeronautic ecosystem for the AMCA programme. ADA officials believe that if the IAF were to throw its weight behind the AMCA programme, it would result in a shift from short-term tactical thinking to a more long-term strategic view, keeping pace with technological developments and meeting future threats.
This Brief examines the AMCA programme, aggregating and comparing official information on the programme with its peers, and analyses the drivers of – and obstacles to – the successful completion of the AMCA project
IAF Combat Fleet Forecast
Figure 1 is based on data collated from official statements on the phasing out of old aircraft and introduction of extant and new combat aircraft in the IAF. Even without analysing the feasibility of this induction-retirement schedule, some points stand out clearly.
The first is that the venerable Mig- 21 will continue to serve the Indian Air Force well into the 2020s – marking close to 60 years of service for this aircraft family.
Second, specialist aircraft like the Jaguar (optimised for ground strikes) and the air superiority Mig-29 will continue to play a significant role in the IAF till at least 2032, with their phased retirement beginning only in 2027.
The graph also indicates that the number of fighters is expected to remain well below the authorised total, even assuming that the government procures another fighter in lieu of the scrapped MMRCA programme. This is subject to further variability should the negotiations for 36 Rafales fail and should the contract for Fifth Generation Fighter Aircraft (FGFA) being developed with Russia be cancelled, as seems likely.
However, it is important not to assume that falling numbers automatically translates to a drop in overall combat capability or effectiveness. In this age of air-to-air combat beyond the visual range, standoff precision strikes and multiple targets per plane per sortie (as opposed to multiple sorties per target a few decades back) mean that a numeric shortfall does not necessarily result in a deficiency in capabilities.
Yet the most striking revelation from Figure 1 is that by 2027, the Air Force intends to have a fleet almost exclusively comprising twin engine fighters. While such a trend is already beginning to show, it will sharpen considerably after 2027 following the retirement of the MiG-21 and the Mirage 2000.
The MMRCA and Sukhoi-30 MKI will form the bulk of the IAF fleet. This means that contrary to international trends where countries have more light fighters and fewer high-end heavy fighters, the IAF arsenal will be almost completely dominated by twin engines heavies, with their attendant life cycle and operational costs.
This raises several questions on IAF thinking of the High-Low mix, or even the High-Medium-Low mix despite the sheer nebulousness of the term 'medium' in IAF literature.
AMCA Design Drivers
The AMCA programme is envisaged as replacement for a host of aircraft currently operated by the IAF as well as to fill gaps left by retirement of the Dassault Mirage 2000s, SEPECAT Jaguars and Mig- 27s. The ADA has received definitive design drivers for the AMCA after the issuing of the Air Staff Requirements (ASR) in 2010.
The broad requirements outlined for the AMCA are to incorporate a high degree of stealth, a high internal and external weapons payload, high internal fuel capacity, and the ability to swing from an air- to-air role to air-to-ground. It is also expected to have the ability to super cruise. This allows the aircraft to travel at supersonic speeds with greater endurance as the afterburners do not have to be used with the additional fuel usage. Even though future air combat has been envisaged as being beyond visual range excluding the likelihood of aerial dogfights as before, the AMCA is expected to sport a thrust vectoring engine which will give it superior manoeuvrability in the event of a dogfight. The ADA is designing the AMCA as a platform with high survivability, to meet the challenges of future air defence environments through a combination of moderate stealth, electronic warfare capability, sensors and kinetic performance, including possible super-manoeuvrability. The design philosophy seeks to balance aerodynamics and stealth capabilities.
Design
The structural layout of the aircraft incorporates some of the key design features that define a 5th- generation fighter aircraft. The following graphics show the evolution of the AMCA design, and is consistent with the modifications to that design over the years. The initial tailless double engine, delta design is clearly no longer in the offing, having moved to a double delta wing, with vertical and horizontal stabilisers in design 38-01. By 38-09 the angle of the vertical stabilisers has changed and the wings too have transitioned to a design much like the F-22.
Front Aspect Stealth
The following section describes the AMCA's design, much of which seem to follow that of F-22, albeit with some significant variations. The front end—comprising the cockpit and radome as well as the air intakes—seems much closer to the X-36 unmanned demonstrator pictured, than to the F-22. That apart, from all aspects, the design shows significantly greater adherence to stealth principles than the beleaguered PAK-FA project – supposedly a collaboration between India and the Sukhoi design bureau. If the current graphics translate accurately into the production design of the aircraft, a high level of stealth can be expected from it against radars operating in the L band. X to C band stealth,however, will be heavily dependent of the quality of construction, the shaping of the facets and joints, and of the equipment and weapons bay doors.
The exact nature of the skin's radar absorbency has not been discussed in publicly available material. It is safe to assume this will be in the nature of a Radar Absorbent Material (RAM) coating – possibly paint rather than the integrated RAM treatment cured into the F-35 panels.6 The kind of treatment that will be applied to the joints remains unclear, though there is the possibility of using the maintenance-intensive 'adhesive strips' of the B-2 and F-22.