Tag: AMCA

  • Hindustan Lead Fighter Trainer (HLFT)-42 to meet futuristic training requirements

    Express News Service

    NEW DELHI: The ambitious plans of developing indigenous modern aircraft will require specialised training as the country’s aviation major Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL) has initiated a project for training aircraft. HAL is working on a project to develop Hindustan Lead Fighter Trainer (HLFT)- 42 supersonic jet trainer and its mockup was displayed for the first time at Aero India.

    Talking to The New Indian Express, Group Captain HV Thakur (Retd) told that HLFT-42 will be similar to the recently approved projects like the LCA MK II and eventually the Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft (AMCA). “So, it (the new fighter trainer) will have to keep pace with that kind of requirement. It should have similar sensors and weapons. Obviously, the simulators and simulations should be of that capability as well,” he added. Group Captain Thakur is a test Pilot of the HAL.

    AMCA is a project to develop fifth-generation fighters. Also, the Twin Engine Deck Based Fighter (TEDBF) is another project to develop an advance maritime fighter to be based on Indian aircraft carriers. The projected timelines for their development are at the end of this decade or early 2030s.

    According to the HAL, the HLFT-42 trainer, which is aimed at preparing fighter pilots comprehensively for the fifth-generation aircraft, incorporates an ultra-modern training suite, enabling hyper-real combat situations to train pilots in a perfectly safe, standardised and efficient flying environment. “To fill today’s needs and for tomorrow’s aircraft like the Light Combat Aircraft Mark II, we have to have a very high-performance trainer to go along with them. The trainer needs to have similar capabilities. As a leading fighter trainer, it is very efficiently made. It will do exactly the same task that it is supposed to. The trainer will be very similar to the fighter aircraft of the next generation,” the Group Captain (Retd) said. He further added that the training of Indian pilots happens on three platforms — the basic trainer, the intermediate trainer and the advanced trainer; all of these teach how to fly. The basic trainer is for all kinds of pilots, including helicopter pilots. In advanced trainers, they train only fighter pilots.

    The advanced trainers mentioned earlier are about the AJT or the Hawk-I of the HAL kind of aircraft. But these trained fighter pilots only learn how to manoeuvre the aircraft. It never goes supersonic, never does any missile firing, does not have sensors, and does not have a radar or an infrared search and track (IRST) system. “So, on yesterday’s aircraft, the real combat training never gets done. Today and tomorrow, that is required. That’s why we have the need for a medium fighter trainer urgently,” added Gp Capt Thakur.

    NEW DELHI: The ambitious plans of developing indigenous modern aircraft will require specialised training as the country’s aviation major Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL) has initiated a project for training aircraft. HAL is working on a project to develop Hindustan Lead Fighter Trainer (HLFT)- 42 supersonic jet trainer and its mockup was displayed for the first time at Aero India.

    Talking to The New Indian Express, Group Captain HV Thakur (Retd) told that HLFT-42 will be similar to the recently approved projects like the LCA MK II and eventually the Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft (AMCA). “So, it (the new fighter trainer) will have to keep pace with that kind of requirement. It should have similar sensors and weapons. Obviously, the simulators and simulations should be of that capability as well,” he added. Group Captain Thakur is a test Pilot of the HAL.

    AMCA is a project to develop fifth-generation fighters. Also, the Twin Engine Deck Based Fighter (TEDBF) is another project to develop an advance maritime fighter to be based on Indian aircraft carriers. The projected timelines for their development are at the end of this decade or early 2030s.

    According to the HAL, the HLFT-42 trainer, which is aimed at preparing fighter pilots comprehensively for the fifth-generation aircraft, incorporates an ultra-modern training suite, enabling hyper-real combat situations to train pilots in a perfectly safe, standardised and efficient flying environment.
     
    “To fill today’s needs and for tomorrow’s aircraft like the Light Combat Aircraft Mark II, we have to have a very high-performance trainer to go along with them. The trainer needs to have similar capabilities. As a leading fighter trainer, it is very efficiently made. It will do exactly the same task that it is supposed to. The trainer will be very similar to the fighter aircraft of the next generation,” the Group Captain (Retd) said.
     
    He further added that the training of Indian pilots happens on three platforms — the basic trainer, the intermediate trainer and the advanced trainer; all of these teach how to fly. The basic trainer is for all kinds of pilots, including helicopter pilots. In advanced trainers, they train only fighter pilots.

    The advanced trainers mentioned earlier are about the AJT or the Hawk-I of the HAL kind of aircraft. But these trained fighter pilots only learn how to manoeuvre the aircraft. It never goes supersonic, never does any missile firing, does not have sensors, and does not have a radar or an infrared search and track (IRST) system. “So, on yesterday’s aircraft, the real combat training never gets done. Today and tomorrow, that is required. That’s why we have the need for a medium fighter trainer urgently,” added Gp Capt Thakur.

  • India plans to roll out fifth-generation fighters by 2024

    Express News Service
    BENGALURU: Aiming to match up with the fast-developing aerial combat technologies, India has begun work on the 5.5 generation Unmanned Aerial Combat Vehicle.

    It will be the advanced version of the Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft (AMCA) being developed by the Aeronautical Development Agency (ADA), Ministry of Defence. Also, the first fifth-generation indigenous fighter is expected to take its first flight in the next 3 years.

    Talking to The New Indian Express, DRDO’s AMCA Project Director AK Ghosh said, “We have plans in future to incorporate 6th generation technologies, where it will be possible to fly AMCA aircraft in an autonomous mode for dangerous missions.”

    The AMCA is an ambitious project of ADA which will be 5th generation indigenous fighter aircraft designed and developed as per the requirements of the Indian Air Force. It is expected to roll out in 2024 with the first flight planned for 2025. AMCA will be incorporated with features like stealth airframe, internal carriage of smart weapons, and advanced sensors with data fusion among others.

    “The PDR (Preliminary Design Review) has been completed and it is in the midst of the detailed design. After some time we are going to develop the aircraft and start making the prototype,” the AMCA Project Director said.

    Talking about production, Ghosh said, “Production of AMCA is planned to start after 2030. It would have capabilities of swing-role, close combat, and precision strike. The aircraft would be fitted with future missiles, standoff weapons, and precision weapons.

    Only three other countries — the US, Russia, and China — have developed the 5th generation aircraft so far.

    AMCA is a twin-engine medium multi-role aircraft having a weight of around 25 tonnes and a leap jump in technologies.