According to The Indian Express, the
United States has extended an offer to India to jointly produce a line
of fighter jets to both enhance military ties as well as provide for
India’s frontline fighter fleet shortage. This comes right after the
Indian government announced that the MMRCA (Medium Multi-Role Combat
Aircraft) deal, originally signed with France’s Dassault Aviation, was,
for all intents and purposes, over. Bumps, missteps and poor
communication contributed to the downfall of the contract which would
have seen a set of Rafales built in France to Indian specifications,
while the remaining number of jets to be procured in the deal would be
built under license in India. So that means India will soon be back on
the market, looking for another multi-role fighter to fulfill its needs
for another fifteen to twenty years while it works on developing its own
indigenous stealth fighter program and makes the best of the mess that
is the Sukhoi/HAL FGFA, the joint Russian-Indian derivative of the PAK
FA/T-50 stealth fighter prototype.
Among the many offers tendered to India
during the MMRCA competition was one from Lockheed Martin, featuring a
heavily-updated version of one of the most successful fighter aircraft
in history- the F-16 Fighting Falcon. Designated the F-16IN Super Viper,
Lockheed Martin went as far as to call it “the most advanced F-16
ever”.
The integration of fifth-generation
technology into the fourth-generation platform is pretty much what makes
an already-potent fighter an even more potent air-to-air and
air-to-ground killer. Using the Block 60 configuration as the base to
work off of, Lockheed Martin added a number of upgrades to beef up the
Fighting Falcon into the Super Viper.
The most powerful upgrade comes in
the form of the AN/APG-80 AESA (Active Electronically Scanned Array)
radar system, which is already in service with the United Arab Emirates’
Block 60 Desert Falcons. The AN/APG-80 gives the pilot incredible
situational awareness and the ability to target and track in any
weather/atmospheric condition with stunning precision. An infrared
search and track (IRST) system, the ability to integrate the Indian Air
Force’s Operational Data Link (which allows for interoperability with
other Indian fighter/attack/AWACS/support units), an onboard electronic
warfare suite from Raytheon, and an upgraded modular mission computer
add to the F-16IN’s sizable resume.
The cockpit has been redeveloped to
an extent, with three color high-definition MFDs (multi-function flight
displays) feeding the pilot everything he needs to know, as well as the
ability to integrate the Joint Helmet Mounted Cueing System (JHMCS).
An
updated General Electric F110-132A functions as the sole powerplant,
able to output over 32,000 pounds of thrust, and the Super Viper also
carries conformal fuel tanks (CFTs) with a built-in fuel probe, designed
to mate with the basket/drogue refueling system used by Indian aerial
tankers, instead of the boom/receptacle system commonly used by American
F-16s.In terms of producing the fighters themselves, it wouldn’t be the first
time the F-16 was built outside the United States. Turkish Aerospace
Industries (TAI) was responsible for building over 300 Vipers under
license for but the Turkish Air Force and the Egyptian Air Force from
the late 1980s onward. Additionally, Korean Aerospace Industries also
built a production line for the KF-16, outputting 140 Block 52 Vipers
within ten years.
Hypothetically, an Indian F-16 line would be the sixth
such line in the F-16’s history. The F-16IN was originally eliminated
from MMRCA contention in 2011, apparently due to a slower turning rate
and diminished agility with conformal fuel tanks loaded. However, given
the Fighting Falcon’s track record and combat history, as well as the
kickass price tag ($50 million USD/unit) that comes with such a deal
(when contrasting it with other comparable fighters sold en masse within
the same program parameters), it wouldn’t be the worst thing for the
Indian Air Force to give Lockheed Martin’s F-16IN Super Viper another
long hard look.
tacairnet
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