La Direction générale de l’armement teste une nouvelle optique infrarouge destinée au Rafale F4.2
The French armaments procurement agency tests the Rafale F4.2The F4.2 version of the Rafale will be operational in around a year's time, and among the tests currently under way are those concerning a new improvement to the Rafale's IRST, which relates to its optics.
It was a year ago that the French Defence Procurement Agency [DGA] announced that it had qualified the Rafale F4.1. Compared with its predecessor, this new standard includes a number of major upgrades, such as the Scorpion helmet-mounted sight and the ability to carry the AASM 1000 GPS/laser-guided munition. It also featured improved fire control for the Meteor air-to-air missile, new functions for its sensors (Talios pod, RBE2 active antenna radar) as well as increased connectivity and better protection against cyber threats.
This is just the first increment... And the DGA is already preparing the second, the F4.2 standard.
"In qualitative terms, the standard for deliveries under the 2024-2030 military programming law will be the Rafale F4, made up of three sub-standards [F4.1, F4.2 and F4.3]. The incremental advances will include: the helmet-mounted sight, an initial connectivity brick, improved survivability, integration of upgraded weapons and improved availability", explained General Stéphane Mille, Chief of Staff of the French Air Force [AAE], in May 2023.
For the Rafale F4.2 standard, the main emphasis will be on collaborative combat, with, among other things:
- the integration of Link 16 Block 2,
- CONTACT digital software radio,
- TRAGEDAC [which will give the Rafale a passive target location capability by networking aircraft in the same patrol]
- and CAPOEIRA [for improved connectivity for Rafale upgrades].
"Thales' Frontal Sector Optronics enables the Rafale F4.1 to track targets in the visible and infrared ranges. In its F4.2 version, it will be equipped with a new infrared optic that will improve the image quality of the Night Identification function," explains the DGA.
It adds: "These tests are being carried out by the DGA flight test centre of expertise to evaluate the performance of the engagement range, as well as the quality of the infrared image in small fields and that of tracking in dynamic evolution".
According to Thales, the OSF-IRST in high-resolution electro-optical/infrared [EO/IR] mode provides "unparalleled imaging".
"Thanks to the OSF-IRST function, pilots are able to distinguish, day or night, the nature of their target, whether it is armed or not, and other useful information. These new capabilities offered by the Rafale's OSF system enable pilots to detect, track and identify targets at any time, whatever the type of mission," concludes the manufacturer.