Nouveau réacteur franco-indien dérivé du M-88 ?

Maquettes, images, meetings, aviation réelle
Avatar de l’utilisateur

Topic author
Deltafan
As du Manche
As du Manche
Messages : 10219
Inscription : 13 avril 2004

Nouveau réacteur franco-indien dérivé du M-88 ?

#1

Message par Deltafan »

Sujet qui pourrait se retrouver dans le topic Rafale en Inde comme dans celui du Chasseur post-Rafale ou dans un éventuel topic sur l'AMCA indien, mais j'ouvre un nouveau topic dédié dans la mesure où il pourra ainsi être abordé séparément

Article Economic Times, avec le titre : Rafale offsets: New fighter jet engine complex coming up, French assistance likely

https://m.economictimes.com/news/defenc ... ssion=true
NEW DELHI: Even as the central auditor has raised questions on non-completion of high end technology transfer as part of the Rafale fighter jet offsets deal, ET has learnt that a new fighter jet engine complex spearheaded by the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) is in the works, with advanced discussions on for a completely new engine for future Indian fighters with a French manufacturer.

The new engine complex is being set up as a national mission to develop a 110 kilo newton powered engine for the future class of advanced medium combat aircraft (AMCA) and could produce the engine within seven years of starting work.

French engine manufacturer Safran has offered a compete technology transfer to develop the engine and use the offset credits from the Rafale deal and is also tying up with Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL) for transferring manufacturing technology for high end engines.

“We are signing an agreement related to the technology needed for high thrust engine manufacturing. The technology will be common to the Rafale engines that can be supported by us and would also be useful for the 110 kn engine project,” HAL Chairman R Madhavan told ET.

While the new engine complex is yet to be set up, the broad understanding is that it would cater to high end fighter jet engines while HAL would be involved in lower thrust engines for helicopters, light transport aircraft, UAVs and trainers.

HAL is also likely to be part of the 110 kn engine project as a manufacturing partner. As reported by ET, the air force is keen that the future AMCA fighter jet be powered by an indigenous engine to ensure self reliance. While the first squadron of the AMCA fighters would need a foreign engine due to timelines, future squadrons would be powered by an Indian engine, which could possibly be christened the Kaveri.

As reported, in a report referring to the Rafale fighter jet deal, the Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) pointed out on Wednesday that plans for transfer of high end technology as part of the offsets deal have not been completed and it not clear if it will even take place in the future.

ET has been reporting that plans to use the Rafale offsets for obtaining jet engine technology has been hanging since 2016, even though French company Safran has been in talks with Indian stakeholders. French companies can modify offset plans at any point but have a huge obligation - to the tune of 3.5 billion Euro – that need to be competed in the next three years, though this timeline can be extended by the government.
A suivre...
"Toujours en mouvement est l'avenir…"
Yoda

ironclaude
Légende volante
Légende volante
Messages : 16469
Inscription : 18 mai 2006

Re: Nouveau réacteur franco-indien dérivé du M-88 ?

#2

Message par ironclaude »

Et c'est pour ce siècle ci ?
Avatar de l’utilisateur

jojo
Dieu vivant
Dieu vivant
Messages : 34511
Inscription : 22 octobre 2002

Re: Nouveau réacteur franco-indien dérivé du M-88 ?

#3

Message par jojo »

Ça doit bien faire 10 ans qu'on leur propose l'aide SNECMA pour le Kaveri :emlaugh:
Config: MSI Z270 GAMING M5/ I7 7700K + Water Cooling/ SSD 500Go/DDR4 4x16Go 3200Mhz/ MSI RTX 3080 Ventus 3x Plus 10Go
Virpil T50CM3 + WarBRD + TM Hornet/ MFG Crosswind/ HP Reverb G2

Photo aéro: Nikon D7000/ D500 + Sigma 150-600 F5-6.3
ma galerie: cliquez FLICKR / WARBIRDS
Image
Répondre

Revenir à « Aviation passion »