v**e 发帖数: 8422 | 1 Price Talks Imminent On GE F414 Engine For India LCA
Oct 6, 2010
By Neelam Mathews m************[email protected]
NEW DELHI
Price negotiations will begin soon for 99 General Electric F414 fighter jet
engines selected to power the Mk II version of the Indian Air Force’s Tejas
Light Combat Aircraft (LCA).
India’s Aeronautical Development Agency (ADA) awarded the contract on Oct.
1, and it is expected to be signed in a few months (Aerospace DAILY, Oct. 1).
The F414 engine was in the running along with the EuroJet EJ-200. The
contract’s value cannot be confirmed until it is finalized, a Defense
Research Development Organization spokesman says. “We could always go for
more [engines],” he adds.
The selection follows earlier GE engine buys for the Indian Air Force (IAF).
In 2007, India purchased 24 F404 GE engines, and in 2004 the country bought
17 F404 engines to power a limited series of operational production
aircraft and LCA naval prototypes.
The F414-GE-INS6 is the highest-thrust F414 model. It boasts Full Authority
Digital Electronic Control (FADEC) and additional single-engine safety
features. “GE keeps infusing the latest technology,” a company official
says. “If, for instance, we have a version 12 of the blade, the customer
gets just that.”
Helping seal the deal was GE’s offer to provide increased technical
manpower and base workers in India to help develop the engine, officials
said.
The contract requires 8-10 engines to be provided in fly-away condition,
with the rest to be delivered in semi-knocked-down condition and assembled
in India. The agreement also contains a 30% offset clause and will tap some
of the 24 Indian companies that GE has certified. “The deliveries will
depend on when the development phase of the LCA is over,” and official says.
A remaining point of contention is the technology transfer clause.
“The requirement and conditions were not clear,” an engine manufacturer
says. “You cannot offer a product unless you know how it will be used.
Besides, you need to consider which of the two technologies are more
advanced.” GE requires U.S. government clearance for transfer of technology
. “We can almost be sure there will be no transfer of crystal blades of the
F414,” an analyst says.
India has expressed interest in the F/A-18 and F-16 Medium Multi-Role Combat
Aircraft (MMRCA), which can carry an active electronically scanned array
radar. | c****g 发帖数: 37081 | 2 Does F414 have compatible size with LCA origin one? |
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