Boeing offers to set up f/a-18 fighter jet production facility in india

Boeing offers to set up f/a-18 fighter jet production facility in india


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ASIA DEFENSE “We are talking about creating a next generation facility in India,” a Boeing VP said on August 28. U.S. aircraft maker Boeing has proposed the construction of an assembly line


in India for its F/A-18 Super Hornet fighter jet should the company be awarded a contract for the Indian Navy’s new carrier-based fighter jet force, according to Indian media reports. “We


are talking about creating a next generation facility in India. We think the Super Hornet is the most advanced airplane that India could manufacture which will lead to the next generation of


aeroplane that India will design and build here,” Dan Gillian, Vice President of Boeing’s F/A-18 program said on August 28. Gillian stated that the F/A-18 aircraft, a supersonic twin-engine


carrier-capable multirole fighter jet based on the McDonnell Douglas F/A-18 Hornet, would not need any modifications to operate from the Indian Navy’s future aircraft carrier fleet. He also


said that F/A-18 will have the lowest cost per hour flight ratio. The Indian Navy issued a request for information (RFI) for 57 new carrier-based multirole warplanes in January. The


majority of aircraft are expected to be built locally in India with an Indian partner via joint ventures and technology transfers under Indian Prime Minister’s Modi’s Make in India


initiative. “We envisioned bringing a large part of it to India. It’s not about moving our production line…. We think we can bring best of the Boeing to India. We can create a next


generation 21st century factory in India to build Super Hornet,” Gillian added. The January 2017 RFI lays out in detail the tactical and technical requirements for the new aircraft including


shipborne air defense, air-to-surface, ‘buddy-buddy’ aerial refueling, reconnaissance, and electronic warfare capabilities. “In terms of weapons systems the Indian Navy is looking for an


aircraft that can carry four beyond visual-range air-to-air missiles (AAM), two shorter range AAMs and is fitted with a gun. The aircraft should also be capable of carrying strike weapons


next to AAMs,” I explained in January. The selection of the aircraft will partially be influenced by what launch system will be installed aboard the Indian Navy’s burgeoning aircraft carrier


fleet. As I explained previously: > The INS _Vikramaditya and INS Vikrant, _India’s first > indigenously built aircraft carrier,_ _are both fitted with > so-called ski-jump 


assisted Short Take-Off But Arrested Recovery > (STOBAR) launch systems for launching aircraft, whereas the second > carrier of the new _Vikrant_-class, the INS _Vishal_, will likely


> use a catapult assisted take-off but arrested recovery (CATOBAR) > aircraft launch system, incorporating the new electromagnetic > aircraft launch system (EMALS) technology (See: 


“Confirmed: > India’s Next Aircraft Carrier Will Be Nuclear”). The F/A-18 aircraft would be ideally suited for carriers using CATOBAR aircraft launch system. The heavier weight of the


F/A-18 in comparison to the current mainstay of Indian naval aviation, the Russian-made MiG-29K Fulcrum fighter jet, would make launches of the U.S. aircraft from STOBAR launch systems


technically more challenging and would require a reduction of the fighter jet’s armament. A contract is not likely to be signed before 2018-19. “Delivery of the first aircraft is expected to


begin three years following the inking of a contract and completed within three additional years,” I reported previously.