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On Nov 3, 3:24 am, Tiger wrote:
India's AF is looking to make a huge purchase & production deal. $10 Billion dollars for 126 aircraft. They are looking to replace their Mig 21's. There are about 6 Firms/ planes up for consideration. Eruofighter Typhoon Saab Gripen Boeing's F-18 Lock Mart's F16 Mig's 29 & 35 Dassualt's Rafale & Mirage series So if you had $10 Billion to spend? What would you buy for your force?? Keep in mind the needs of India, the potential foes & that any US plane come with political strings attached (like Pakastians f-16 deal). Rough field capability would be a plus; do the Saab and Mig offferings still favor that? Eurofighter and Dassualt are probably very motivated to negotiate price, but maybe Mig most of all... logical winner? But I would expand the search box. On the more futuristic side, consider unmanned hunter-killer drones like General Atomics MQ-9 Reaper, adding sidewinders. Using the price from Wikipedia, India could afford 12000 of these instead of 126 of the above. Well, maybe China or sombody could figure out how to jam UAV's. My personal favorite would be a low tech option that takes advantage of India's vast manpower. I'm thinking of a plywood overcast: 126000 rocket/cruise-missle carrying Mosquito's. Get the DeHavilland assembly plans from the internet, and make it's plywood from recycled scrap wood in a thousand village workshops. For engines, Russia must have heaps of worn out Kuznetsov turboprops used on Tupolev Bear bombers - those awesomely fast ones with counterrotating props might be rebuilt cheaply. Quantity has a quality of it's own, and that is India's forte. |
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On Nov 4, 5:53�pm, dumbstruck wrote:
On Nov 3, 3:24 am, Tiger wrote: India's AF is looking to make a huge purchase & production deal. $10 Billion dollars for 126 aircraft. They are looking to replace their Mig 21's. There are about 6 *Firms/ planes up for consideration. Eruofighter Typhoon Saab Gripen Boeing's F-18 Lock Mart's F16 Mig's 29 & 35 Dassualt's Rafale & Mirage series So if you had $10 Billion to spend? What would you buy for your force?? Keep in mind the needs of India, the potential foes & that any US plane come with political strings attached (like Pakastians f-16 deal). Rough field capability would be a plus; do the Saab and Mig offferings still favor that? Eurofighter and Dassualt are probably very motivated to negotiate price, but maybe Mig most of all... logical winner? But I would expand the search box. On the more futuristic side, consider unmanned hunter-killer drones like General Atomics MQ-9 Reaper, adding sidewinders. Using the price from Wikipedia, India could afford 12000 of these instead of 126 of the above. Well, maybe China or sombody could figure out how to jam UAV's. My personal favorite would be a low tech option that takes advantage of India's vast manpower. I'm thinking of a plywood overcast: 126000 rocket/cruise-missle carrying Mosquito's. Get the DeHavilland assembly plans from the internet, and make it's plywood from recycled scrap wood in a thousand village workshops. For engines, Russia must have heaps of worn out Kuznetsov turboprops used on Tupolev Bear bombers - those awesomely fast ones with counterrotating props might be rebuilt cheaply. Quantity has a quality of it's own, and that is India's forte. Easiest answer is whatever meets India's needs in the region and not what Russia, Europe, or the US think they need... With 1.1 billion people, maybe they should emulate China and think indigenous design, with a little help from their allies ![]() In the 21st century there will be 5 powers: US, United Europe, China, Russia, and India. China and India constitute 1/3rd of the entire world population and are growing while the US, Europe, and Russia are declining by birthrate. The West needs to start taking these nations seriously. Rob |
#3
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![]() "Rob Arndt" wrote in message ups.com... My personal favorite would be a low tech option that takes advantage of India's vast manpower. With 1.1 billion people, maybe they should emulate China and think indigenous design, with a little help from their allies ------------------- The Indian military has a problem with completing large projects. They know they have a problem and they keep trying to do something about it, but nothing much seems to work. This is why they prefer to buy big stuff. -- William Black I've seen things you people wouldn't believe. Barbeques on fire by the chalets past the castle headland I watched the gift shops glitter in the darkness off the Newborough gate All these moments will be lost in time, like icecream on the beach Time for tea. |
#4
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William Black wrote:
"Rob Arndt" wrote in message ups.com... My personal favorite would be a low tech option that takes advantage of India's vast manpower. With 1.1 billion people, maybe they should emulate China and think indigenous design, with a little help from their allies ------------------- The Indian military has a problem with completing large projects. They know they have a problem and they keep trying to do something about it, but nothing much seems to work. This is why they prefer to buy big stuff. The US military has a problem with completing large projects. They know they have a problem and they keep trying to do something about it, but nothing much seems to work. This is why they prefer to buy big stuff. |
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On Nov 5, 8:34 am, ffff wrote:
William Black wrote: "Rob Arndt" wrote in message oups.com... My personal favorite would be a low tech option that takes advantage of India's vast manpower. With 1.1 billion people, maybe they should emulate China and think indigenous design, with a little help from their allies ------------------- The Indian military has a problem with completing large projects. They know they have a problem and they keep trying to do something about it, but nothing much seems to work. This is why they prefer to buy big stuff. The US military has a problem with completing large projects. They know they have a problem and they keep trying to do something about it, but nothing much seems to work. This is why they prefer to buy big stuff. Could you please try to make sense with your next post? |
#6
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Rob Arndt wrote:
On Nov 4, 5:53�pm, dumbstruck wrote: On Nov 3, 3:24 am, Tiger wrote: India's AF is looking to make a huge purchase & production deal. $10 Billion dollars for 126 aircraft. They are looking to replace their Mig 21's. There are about 6 �Firms/ planes up for consideration. Eruofighter Typhoon Saab Gripen Boeing's F-18 Lock Mart's F16 Mig's 29 & 35 Dassualt's Rafale & Mirage series So if you had $10 Billion to spend? What would you buy for your force?? Keep in mind the needs of India, the potential foes & that any US plane come with political strings attached (like Pakastians f-16 deal). Rough field capability would be a plus; do the Saab and Mig offferings still favor that? Eurofighter and Dassualt are probably very motivated to negotiate price, but maybe Mig most of all... logical winner? But I would expand the search box. On the more futuristic side, consider unmanned hunter-killer drones like General Atomics MQ-9 Reaper, adding sidewinders. Using the price from Wikipedia, India could afford 12000 of these instead of 126 of the above. Well, maybe China or sombody could figure out how to jam UAV's. My personal favorite would be a low tech option that takes advantage of India's vast manpower. I'm thinking of a plywood overcast: 126000 rocket/cruise-missle carrying Mosquito's. Get the DeHavilland assembly plans from the internet, and make it's plywood from recycled scrap wood in a thousand village workshops. For engines, Russia must have heaps of worn out Kuznetsov turboprops used on Tupolev Bear bombers - those awesomely fast ones with counterrotating props might be rebuilt cheaply. Quantity has a quality of it's own, and that is India's forte. Easiest answer is whatever meets India's needs in the region and not what Russia, Europe, or the US think they need... With 1.1 billion people, maybe they should emulate China and think indigenous design, with a little help from their allies ![]() In the 21st century there will be 5 powers: US, United Europe, China, Russia, and India. China and India constitute 1/3rd of the entire world population and are growing while the US, Europe, and Russia are declining by birthrate. The West needs to start taking these nations seriously. Rob PetroChina 1st firm worth $1 trillion By ELAINE KURTENBACH, AP Business Writer 2 hours, 31 minutes ago SHANGHAI, China - PetroChina became the world's first company worth more than $1 trillion on Monday, surging past Exxon Mobil as the Chinese oil producer's shares nearly tripled in their first day of trading in China. State-owned PetroChina Co., a unit of state-owned China National Petroleum Corp., is the country's biggest oil and gas producer. Its Shanghai initial public offering of 4 billion shares raised $8.94 billion — a record for a mainland bourse. Adding the value of PetroChina shares traded in Shanghai, Hong Kong and New York — and those still owned by the government — the company's total market capitalization ballooned to just over $1 trillion, compared to Exxon Mobil Corp.'s $488 billion. http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20071105/...9O4dbVNv 24cA |
#7
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On Nov 5, 6:59 am, "William Black"
wrote: "Rob Arndt" wrote in message ups.com... My personal favorite would be a low tech option that takes advantage of India's vast manpower. With 1.1 billion people, maybe they should emulate China and think indigenous design, with a little help from their allies ------------------- The Indian military has a problem with completing large projects. They know they have a problem and they keep trying to do something about it, but nothing much seems to work. This is why they prefer to buy big stuff. -- William Black I've seen things you people wouldn't believe. Barbeques on fire by the chalets past the castle headland I watched the gift shops glitter in the darkness off the Newborough gate All these moments will be lost in time, like icecream on the beach Time for tea. I would advise buying something that is in existence right now. Musharraf is going to be looking for something to unify a country that consists of four minorities. A nice nuke war with India would suit for the present. |
#8
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![]() "Jack Linthicum" wrote in message oups.com... On Nov 5, 6:59 am, "William Black" wrote: "Rob Arndt" wrote in message ups.com... My personal favorite would be a low tech option that takes advantage of India's vast manpower. With 1.1 billion people, maybe they should emulate China and think indigenous design, with a little help from their allies ------------------- The Indian military has a problem with completing large projects. They know they have a problem and they keep trying to do something about it, but nothing much seems to work. This is why they prefer to buy big stuff. -- William Black I've seen things you people wouldn't believe. Barbeques on fire by the chalets past the castle headland I watched the gift shops glitter in the darkness off the Newborough gate All these moments will be lost in time, like icecream on the beach Time for tea. I would advise buying something that is in existence right now. Musharraf is going to be looking for something to unify a country that consists of four minorities. A nice nuke war with India would suit for the present. I was listening to a CBC Radio program a few weeks ago related to that region which dealt with relations between the two countries, and the commentator was saying that currently the region of India/Pakistan is the most dangerous place in the world, apocalyptically speaking, and bears close watching. - nilita |
#9
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On Nov 5, 3:53 am, dumbstruck wrote:
On Nov 3, 3:24 am, Tiger wrote: India's AF is looking to make a huge purchase & production deal. $10 Billion dollars for 126 aircraft. They are looking to replace their Mig 21's. There are about 6 Firms/ planes up for consideration. Eruofighter Typhoon Saab Gripen Boeing's F-18 Lock Mart's F16 Mig's 29 & 35 Dassualt's Rafale & Mirage series So if you had $10 Billion to spend? What would you buy for your force?? Keep in mind the needs of India, the potential foes & that any US plane come with political strings attached (like Pakastians f-16 deal). Rough field capability would be a plus; do the Saab and Mig offferings still favor that? Eurofighter and Dassualt are probably very motivated to negotiate price, but maybe Mig most of all... logical winner? Snip fantasy............ I'd say go with the SAAB. Avoid the political "strings attached" that come with buying from "Uncle Sam" or from "Brother Russia". The Grippen is a really good 5th generation multirole fighter, way ahead the F16 and F18 are antique designs that are really at the end of their useful life. The TCO is a lot lower too and so is ease of maintenance. |
#10
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Rob Arndt wrote:
On Nov 4, 5:53�pm, dumbstruck wrote: On Nov 3, 3:24 am, Tiger wrote: India's AF is looking to make a huge purchase & production deal. $10 Billion dollars for 126 aircraft. They are looking to replace their Mig 21's. There are about 6 ?Firms/ planes up for consideration. Eruofighter Typhoon Saab Gripen Boeing's F-18 Lock Mart's F16 Mig's 29 & 35 Dassualt's Rafale & Mirage series So if you had $10 Billion to spend? What would you buy for your force?? Keep in mind the needs of India, the potential foes & that any US plane come with political strings attached (like Pakastians f-16 deal). Rough field capability would be a plus; do the Saab and Mig offferings still favor that? Eurofighter and Dassualt are probably very motivated to negotiate price, but maybe Mig most of all... logical winner? But I would expand the search box. On the more futuristic side, consider unmanned hunter-killer drones like General Atomics MQ-9 Reaper, adding sidewinders. Using the price from Wikipedia, India could afford 12000 of these instead of 126 of the above. Well, maybe China or sombody could figure out how to jam UAV's. My personal favorite would be a low tech option that takes advantage of India's vast manpower. I'm thinking of a plywood overcast: 126000 rocket/cruise-missle carrying Mosquito's. Get the DeHavilland assembly plans from the internet, and make it's plywood from recycled scrap wood in a thousand village workshops. For engines, Russia must have heaps of worn out Kuznetsov turboprops used on Tupolev Bear bombers - those awesomely fast ones with counterrotating props might be rebuilt cheaply. Quantity has a quality of it's own, and that is India's forte. Easiest answer is whatever meets India's needs in the region and not what Russia, Europe, or the US think they need... With 1.1 billion people, maybe they should emulate China and think indigenous design, with a little help from their allies ![]() In the 21st century there will be 5 powers: US, United Europe, China, Russia, and India. China and India constitute 1/3rd of the entire world population and are growing while the US, Europe, and Russia are declining by birthrate. The West needs to start taking these nations seriously. Rob Well part of my orignial post stated that the deal would include provisions to domestically build. "Eighteen of the fighters would be bought off the shelf by 2012 while the remaining 108 planes would be manufactured under licence in India. India would also hold the option of purchasing another 64 fighters from the top bidder, Indian officials said."- http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20071102...LyZWTntzkE1vAI |
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