Trainer Aircraft of IAF - PC-7, HTT-40, HJT-36, BAE Hawk

I do not understand the reason for not choosing a western engine for HJT-36. Garrett TFE731 or Williams FJ44 fits the bill. AL-55 has very bad TBO numbers.
@vstol Jockey @Milspec @randomradio
Initially we used a French engine , which turned out to be under powered, so AL55 was a kind of emergency procurement. But now AL55 is also under question.

HAL has been making AL31FP, Adour etc now for some time. And DRDO has Kaveri. Hopefully these two come together to realise HTFE 25....
 
However, the IJT’s development trajectory has been troublesome. In 2016, flight testing was put on hold after the trainer experienced difficulty in pulling out of spins – something that inexperienced pilots cannot be exposed to.

In December, the IAF requested to close down the IJT project. However HAL asked the defence ministry (MoD) for time to rescue the programme. HAL offered to return the IAF the Rs 3,000 crore it had paid towards an order for 73 IJTs. HAL’s board allocated Rs 50 crore in company funds to take forward the IJT’s development, supplementing the Rs 600-700 crore it had already spent.

Senior HAL sources tell Business Standard the IJT has undergone an extensive two-year redesign process, guided by design consultancy from US firm, Birhle, to help the aircraft pull out of spins. This was achieved by shifting the horizontal fins and rudder further down the fuselage. Now mathematical modelling indicates the redesigned IJT is well equipped to handle spins.

“HAL continued its R&D efforts and undertook modification of IJT aircraft based on extensive and comprehensive wind tunnel studies”, affirms HAL chief R Madhavan.

“We will have to conduct at least another 200 test flights to validate the IJT, including its stall and spin characteristics. But we have built 13 aircraft already and we can finish this without undue delay,” says a senior HAL designer.

HAL designers also say many useful lessons have been learned from the development of the HTT-40 basic trainer. That expertise is now being fed back into the IJT.

An example of this is the HTT-40’s modern all-glass cockpit, which will be retro-fitted into the IJT. In addition the safety equipment for stall and spin testing is being used in the HTT-40 and will be also used for the IJT.

With the service life of the Kiran Mark II having recently been extended by four years, the IJT has that much time to enter service in numbers.

Broadsword: HAL’s intermediate trainer flies again, reviving prospect of all-indigenous trainer fleet

All-glass cockpit is coming to IJT, now only thing subpar is the engine.
 
HAL will now expedite HTFE-25. That engine will make it a top class IJT. I only hope that HAL creates a large number of systems dupliction on HTT-40 and IJT to sort out issues of spares and reduce transition time from HTT-40 to IJT. Infact I will go for similar cockpit layout and systems architecture as that of Hawk for all three of them.
 
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IAF issued RFI for IJT in 2014. Only one responded, FMA IA-63 Pampa produced by Argentinan company. So, people claiming lack of requirement for this because IAF ditched three staged training is wrong. They are actively looking for IJT class aircraft. IAF didn't change old training regime, they are using two types of aircraft (BTT,AJT) for three staged training as a stopgap.

Aircraft in the market with comparable specs:

FMA IA-63 Pampa
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Aero L-39NG
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Aero Vodochody L-39NG completes first flight : Dec 24, 2018


IAF forced to adopt 2-aircraft training for pilots: Arup Raha


NEW DELHI: With the indigenous Intermediary Jet Trainer (IJT) nowhere in sight, the Indian Air Force has been forced to adopt a new training process under which rookie pilots will train on two aircraft rather than three at present, Air Chief Marshal Arup Raha said today.

Under the new programme, pilots will now be trained on Pilatus PC-7 Turbo Trainer and Advanced Jet Trainer (AJT) Hawk aircraft, Raha said.

Kiran, the intermediary jet trainer used currently, will be phased out out in the next two-three years.

Raha said as of now ten cadets are being trained on Pilatus and the results are "extremely encouraging".

"With the induction of PC7, almost 75 of them with 38 more on the way, and as you get the HTT 40, indigenously prepared by the HALfor the BTA (Basic Trainer Aircraft) role, we will be well on our way in making up the deficiencies in pilot training.

"We are getting a few more AJT (Advanced Jet Trainer) Hawk aircraft and the training of amateur pilots will meet our requirements in the future," Raha said.

"Having said that, we don't have the IJT, which is supposed to be indigenously built and supposed to replace Kiran which is going to retire in about two-three years time. Since the replacement is not coming, we are already working on a three-stages two-aircraft programme. The scheme has already been put in place," Raha said.

The HJT-16 Kiran is an Indian two-seat Intermediate Jet Trainer built by Hindustan Aeronautics.

Last year, the CAG had slammed Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd (HAL) for the 14-year delay in developing the intermediate jet trainer (IJT). The audit watchdog came down heavily on HAL for "adversely affecting" the Stage-II training of IAF pilots - who are forced to train on obsolete and ageing Kiran aircraft - by failing to deliver the Sitara IJT till now.

The Chief of Air Staff was addressing the media ahead of the 83rd Anniversary of the Indian Air Force.

Raha added that Swiss-made Pilatus, has a reasonable flight envelope to substitute the training that was planned on IGT. To make up for the non-availability of the IJT in this fashion is a "well-accepted norm" across the world.

When asked whether the government has given up on IGT, Raha said he has to "choose between a hard place and a rock" and has "no option but to utilise whatever is available and push through a three-stage programme".

With Kiran retiring in two-three years, it was important to look at stage II of training programmes, he said, adding that the Pilatus is large enough to accommodate the syllabus IAF covers in stage 2.

"So, already 10 cadets are training on Stage II on PC7 and the results are so far extremely encouraging. And it is not because that we do not want the IJT...(but) IJT is well behind schedule. If you go by the history, it is already a decade behind," Raha said.

Read more at:
//economictimes.indiatimes.com/articleshow/49207462.cms?utm_source=contentofinterest&utm_medium=text&utm_campaign=cppst

@Ashwin - Thanks for updated us! (y)
 
IR from BRF gives us another gem after the Tejas evolution article. Enjoy :)

HAL’s HJT-36 Intermediate Jet Trainer Rises From The Ashes: A Detailed Look
By Indranil Roy

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April 23, 2019

Rising like a phoenix above Bengaluru, Hindustan Aeronautics Limited’s HJT-36 ‘Sitara’ Intermediate Jet Trainer (IJT), took to the sky for the first time in three years on April 17, 2019. The IJT program has been resurrected on account of both renewed interest from the Indian Air Force (IAF) as well as HAL’s confidence in the modifications it has made to the design. With these modifications, the aircraft is projected to clear its stall and spin tests and achieve certification by 2020. If this objective is indeed achieved, HAL will commence serial production of the HJT-36 to fulfil the role that is discharged by the HJT-16 Kiran trainer with respect to Stage-2 pilot training in the IAF.



The Rise
Back in March 2003, the IJT program had been the talk of town after the first prototype had taken to the skies within four years of project sanction in July 1999. After all, such a short gestation period for an Indian aviation program had not been seen since Dr. Ghatge’s famous HT-2 trainer development effort in 1948 and that too for a complex machine such as the HJT-36. Achieving first flight on such a tight schedule was made possible by embracing many modern design techniques for the first time in HAL, and possibly in India. For example, a Numerical Master Geometry (NMG) was created first and made centrally available to various groups like wind tunnel testing, aerodynamics, structural analysis, tooling etc. for concurrent engineering. The end-result was a modern IJT which HAL was proud to showcase at various airshows like Aero India and Farnborough.



Capable of training pilots in air to air, air to land and waypoint navigation, the HJT-36 boasts a composite body, a modern full glass cockpit, zero-zero ejection seats and modern avionics. It can carry a ton of armament in the form of podded guns, within visual range air to air missiles, rockets and anti-tank missiles. This makes it an effective solution against a variety of targets such as unmanned aerial vehicles, soft skinned vehicles and tanks, for which a supersonic fighter aircraft would be overkill. Also, its ability to fly slow as a trainer is a serious advantage when it comes to acquiring such relatively slow moving targets.

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Figure 1: The clean lines of the first prototype. Photo credit: As shown in image.



The Stall
However, even as HAL was celebrating this design triumph, problems had already started brewing. For one, the aircraft had significantly overshot its designed weight. Even when its original Larzac 04-H20 engine was replaced by the more powerful Saturn AI-55I engine which provided 15% more thrust, the Limited Series Production (LSP) units required further weight reduction. What is more, the AI-55I engine was a new design when introduced by the program in 2007 and underwent teething problems unlike the mature Larzac engines that had already flown over 0.75 million hours. This led to low overall availability of the LSPs for testing.



An even bigger problem which has proved insurmountable till now is the aircraft’s undesirable stall and (subsequent) spin recovery characteristics. As such, being a trainer, the requirements for the aircraft’s stall and spin profile are rather stringent:

  1. The aircraft must be stall-able,
  2. The onset of stall must be unmistakable,
  3. Behaviour at stall must be deterministic, and
  4. Recovery from the stall and the ensuing spin must be guaranteed and deterministic.


Although, the aircraft was stall-able, the onset and behavior were not ideal for a trainee aircraft. In training, a trainee pilot brings the aircraft to ‘wings level’ and pulls back on the stick (raising its nose). As the wings reach their critical angle of attack (AoA), the plane stalls. At this point (or just before) if a yaw input is provided the plane enters a flat spin where it begins to fall like a leaf through air. The trajectory is straight down, but the plane spins around the vertical axis. This is a disorienting and harrowing experience for any pilot, let alone one who is a mere trainee. Therefore, it is desired that the rate of spin is low to moderate and that the plane always stays right side up. This was not guaranteed on the IJT. As the aircraft came to a stall, a wing drop occurred. This happens when one of the wings stalls before the other due to small asymmetry in building the plane. The recovery was also difficult. In order to recover from a flat spin, the control surfaces on the tail must be effective throughout the spin and recovery. This was not the case with IJT.


HAL tried to overcome these problems using a variety of fixes without a major redesign. First, it installed nose strakes, which form two vortices on either side of the nose to stabilize the aircraft at high AoA by having symmetric side forces. Such strakes had to be carefully designed so that they did not interfere with the working of the engine air intakes. Thereafter, ventral fins were also added to increase the directional stability and efficacy of the tail surfaces.

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Figure 2: LSP 1 with nose strakes and ventral fins undergoing drop tank test. Photo credit: Hindustan Aeronautics Limited.



But these modifications did not yield the desired results. As wing drops continued to be witnessed, HAL also experimented with a wing fence on the wing. The thinking behind the use of a wing fence is thus:

At the onset of stall, it is desirable that the wing stalls progressively from the root to the tip. Among other things, this helps with containing the wing drop phenomenon as the wing root has a lower roll moment than the tip. This is typically achieved by having a ‘twist’ or ‘washout’ in the wing where the root is set at a slightly higher AoA than the tip, thus allowing it to stall first. When this is not enough, wing fences are used to minimize span wise airflow (loss of lift) whose effect is maximum at the wing tips.

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Figure 3: IJT prototype with wing fence in addition to the nose strake. Photo credits as shown in image.



However, when none of the above changes produced the required characteristics, HAL removed the nose strakes and wing fence and introduced vortex generators on the outer half of the wing with the aim of energizing the airflow (and therefore delay stall) over the outer half of the wing. Unfortunately, this did not prove useful either.


The last configuration that HAL tried without making major redesign was the removal of the vortex generators and the reintroduction of the wing fences, this time two over each wing. However, by this time, it had become clear that these fixes were inadequate, and a major redesign could not be avoided. The last few test flights were done after the installation of spin chutes, just in case the aircraft could not be recovered under its own controls.



By 2017, the IJT program was running years behind schedule and the IAF had settled into a training curriculum which relied heavily on its newly inducted Pilatus PC-7 MkII and BAE Hawk AJTs, while using the HJT-16 Kirans in a reduced role. With no quick fix in sight, the IAF lost confidence and interest in the project and majority of its personnel assigned to the project dissolved away, getting absorbed into other HAL projects.

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Figure 4 LSP-4 conducting one the last test flights. The two wing fences, ventral fins and the spin chute can be seen. Photo credit: Deb Rana.



The Recovery
However, a small team of about 20 designers continued to strive on the project. It was evident that the aircraft required a major redesign, and yet the resources made available to the project were minimal. Another major challenge is that India does not have a wind tunnel suitable for undertaking spin tests. Given these tight constraints, the team sought to modify the aircraft with minimal changes and maximum reuse.



They focused on the tail and performed extensive computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulations. Based on these simulations, a wind tunnel model was created and sent for extensive tests to ONERA, France. The results were encouraging and a decision was made to modify LSP-4 for flight testing. This decision was made easier with renewed support from the IAF which wants to maintain its three-stage training syllabus and is therefore in need of a replacement for the HJT-16 Kiran.

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Figure 5: LSP-4 with modifications to the tail section. Photo credit: Hindustan Aeronautics Limited.



The modified aircraft can be seen in Figure 6, above. The front and mid fuselage and wings look unaltered since the grounding. The wing fences and ventral fins have also been maintained. However, the empennage has been severely altered. The vertical fin has been moved back by over a meter. This greatly enhances its efficacy. The rudder now extends beyond the end of the fuselage and below the vertical stabilizer. With 30 percent larger area, it is guaranteed that some part of it will always be in clean airflow even at high AoAs. Leading edge strakes have also been added to the root of the horizontal stabilizer. At high AoAs, they generate vortices that energize the airflow over the vertical stabilizer and the fin.



At this moment, it is unclear if the weight reduction efforts have yielded results, but the return to flight status is a welcome sign. If HAL is able to make the modifications to all 13 IJTs that it has built to date, it can complete the flight tests rather quickly. At the moment, HAL has about four years to bring the resurrected HJT-36 up to speed, if its ‘phoenix’ has to replace the HJT-16 which will be retired from IAF service by then.

Indranil Roy is an aerospace watcher and a part time processor chip designer.


© Delhi Defence Review. Reproducing this content in full without permission is prohibited.

HAL’s HJT-36 Intermediate Jet Trainer Rises From The Ashes: A Detailed Look
 
HJT-36 Flight Test Resumption Renews Hope for AL-55 Engine

Following a three-year break, Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd (HAL) has resumed flight tests of the HJT-36 Sitara twin-seat aircraft developed for the Intermediate Jet Trainer (IJT) program. The latter aims to produce a direct replacement for the Indian Air Force Kiran, of which production was terminated in 1989 with nearly 200 built. The resumption took place in late April involving a prototype aircraft serialed S3854. “The flight was flawless and its success is an important step in the IJT program,” reported the manufacturer.

With over 800 flights performed since March 2003 on the PT-1 and PT-2 prototypes (serialed S3474 and S3466, respectively), the IJT effort appeared to be well on its way to serial production, with the Indian air force looking to procure between 200 and 250, until unsuccessful spin testing in 2016. Issues necessitated a major redesign of the aircraft’s tail section. The aircraft that flew recently features a repositioned vertical fin moved aft and other design changes. It is understood that, if the new configuration proves up to customer expectations, the Indian air force may buy 73 serial examples. Although far below the initial requirement, already met in part through the purchase of 146 BAE Systems Hawk Mk 132s contracted in 2004-2012, such an order would bring HAL a business worth Rs 5,000 crore ($719.2 million).

Working out remedies to improve spin characteristics for an otherwise promising and mature design required extensive wind testing on scale models. During the past three years, HAL also addressed issues of excessive airframe weight, while its program partners in Russia had more time to improve the engine that powers the HJT-36. Back in 2005, NPO Saturn won a $300 million Indian contract to develop the AL-55I, a version of the baseline AL-55 customized to match the airframe. Three engine examples were shipped in December 2008, including one for the first prototype, which was refurbished and flew in May 2009.

Replacing the previously fitted Snecma Turbomeca Larzac 04-30 (04-H-20) engine reduces fuel burn by 10- to 13 percent through higher turbine temperatures (by 15 to 45 degrees C) while keeping the same mass flow (at 28kg/62 pounds per second). The maximum thrust increase from 14.24 to 17.27 kN (3,200 to 3,880 pounds) is important in view of airframe overweight issues, and is necessary to meet the customer requirements for rate-of-climb, ceiling, and weapons load. Developing the AL-55I required considerable changes to the baseline design, chiefly to reduce weight by more than 50 kg (110 pounds). This was necessary to match the respective figure for the 295-kg (650-pound) Larzac, and thus eliminate the need to re-balance the airframe and onboard equipment for center-of-gravity position.

Russia insists that the 2005 contact was fulfilled in 2013, when AL-55I pre-production specimens demonstrated a 300-hour lifetime. Further plans called for the extension to 600, and then to over 1,200 hours, the latter being an Indian Air Force requirement. According to developers, the engine’s cold section is designed to withstand 6,400 hours and the hot section 4,000 hours. So far, however, Russia has delivered only about 20 engines, due to the HJT-36 production program being halted by the spin issue.

For NPO Saturn and its patron United Engine Corporation, the IJT program resumption means a boost to the AL-55 effort. If the engine goes into quantity production, unit costs would decrease to a level affordable for more foreign and local customers. Russian aircraft makers are yet to place their orders, with the AL-55 fit to power the 3,100-kg (6,830-pound) SAT SR-10 jet trainer with forward-swept wings and the 2,300-kg (8,380-pound) Argument UCAV derived from it. With more than 85 flights performed on a single SR-10 prototype, the project won a positive MoD assessment, but experiences financial issues related to establishing serial production. Apart from SAT, there are some other Russian companies interested in the AL-55 version generating 17.35 to 19.6 kN (3,900-4,400 pounds') thrust at military power and up to 29.4 kN (6,600 pounds') thrust when fitted with an afterburner.
 
IAF block on indigenous HTT-40 trainer aircraft keeps door open for Swiss trainers

The Indian Air Force has refused to issue a Request for Proposals (RFP) for the Hindustan Turbo Trainer - 40 (HTT-40) basic trainer aircraft. An RFP is essential for Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd (HAL) to release money to develop the engine that will power the Indian-designed trainer.

HAL has to pay Rs 180 crore to US firm Honeywell, to upgrade its TPE-331-12B engine that will power 106 HTT-40 trainers needed by the Indian military. HAL is willing to pay, but the company’s board insists that the money be disbursed only after the IAF demonstrates its intention to procure the HTT-40 – through an RFP, which is the first stage of a purchase.

But the IAF says it will only issue an RFP after the HTT-40 completes spin trials. In this critical trial, the test pilot deliberately throws his aircraft into a spin. After it has spun six times around its axis, he must recover the aircraft into level flight.

Since its first flight in 2015, the HTT-40 has consistently surpassed IAF performance benchmarks in flight-testing. In on-going spin trials the trainer has incrementally demonstrated the ability to recover from three spins.

At a high-level meeting in the MoD, chaired by the defence production secretary (Secretary DP) and attended by top IAF officers, HAL presented videos of the trainer recovering from three spins. The project managers pointed out that recovering from six spins is a matter of incremental testing.

The IAF had initially committed to issuing the RFP after the HTT-40’s first flight. When it flew in 2015, the IAF set a new benchmark of stall testing. When that was completed in 2017, the benchmark was changed to the first spin test. In late 2018, after the HTT-40 demonstrated it could recover from a spin, the IAF said it would issue an RFP only after the HTT-40 demonstrated it could recover from six spins.

HAL is concerned about production delays that could arise. An immediate RFP would allow HAL to pay Honeywell to begin the two-year process of replacing the TPE-331-12B engine’s old “electronic engine controller” (EEC) with a “full authority digital engine controller” (FADEC). Delaying payment would result in the FADEC-equipped engine being unavailable when the HTT-40 goes into production.

A senior HAL official points out they have asked the IAF neither for payment, nor a contract. An RFP amounts to only an IAF statement of interest, without financial liabilities. But it is essential for the HAL board to clear payments to Honeywell.

With the HTT-40 programme thus mired, the IAF is demanding that 38 Pilatus PC-7 Mark II trainer aircraft be imported from Switzerland, to supplement 75 Pilatus trainers contracted in 2012 in a deal that was clouded by controversy.

Contacted for comments, the IAF states: “The [HTT-40] has just entered the spin phase of trials… As per DPP an RFP can be issued only after design and development completion/certification by HAL followed by IAF flight trials.” The air force points out that there was an audit objection when an RFP was issued for the Intermediate Jet Trainer (IJT) before spin trials were completed.

In fact, in the IJT case, the IAF went far beyond placing an RFP. It contracted for and actually paid HAL for constructing a significant number of IJTs. HAL points out that placing an RFP for the HTT-40 involves no financial liability.

Furthermore, in December 2017, the IAF placed an RFP for the Tejas Mark 1A. This is an advanced version of the current fighter that exists only on the drawing board and is nowhere near flight-testing or completion.

The IAF has relentlessly opposed the HTT-40 since the start of the programme, opting instead for importing the Swiss Pilatus. Business Standard reported (July 29, 2013, “Indian Air Force at war with Hindustan Aeronautics; wants to import, not build, a trainer”) that the IAF chief wrote a personal letter to the defence minister, incorrectly attributing an unduly high price to the HTT-40, compared to the Swiss trainer. The defence minister allowed the indigenous programme to continue.

In 2009, when a global tender was floated to buy 75 trainer aircraft, the IAF diluted the existing performance benchmarks, allowing the Pilatus PC-7 Mark II trainer into the contract (July 30, 2013, “Air Force diluted at least twelve benchmarks for trainer aircraft, allowing Pilatus into the contract”).

But the HTT-40 still stands in the way of import. The defence procurement procedure (DPP) mandates the highest procurement priority for “Indian designed, developed and manufactured (IDDM)” equipment – a category the HTT-40 falls in. The MoD and HAL remain committed to backing the HTT-40, which is likely to complete testing by December, according to HAL officials.

Currently, approval exists for buying 106 HTT-40 trainers. If the IAF is permitted to import 38 Pilatus trainers, the number of indigenous trainers will fall to 68 aircraft.

@Milspec @randomradio @vstol Jockey @Falcon
 
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Another anti-IAF hit job. Another low quality Shukla article. It's ridiculous to expect the IAF to issue an RFP before flight testing is complete. We have already seen the fiasco with the IJT. HAL should finish tests before expecting an RFP.

As for LCA Mk1A, the aircraft finished all flight testing in its Mk1 form before the RFP was issued.

The IAF should look out for itself instead of doing favours for HAL.
 
Further to what @randomradio has mentioned.

The GoI today is keen to encourage the competitive spirit based on exploring all options. DPSUs are increasingly being asked to remodel themselves and align to be performers instead of deadweight. Fun to see the agony coming out in open.

If there are no financial liabilities, why is HAL keen on IAF issuing a statement that it will procure? Strange dumb logic. Quoting:

HAL is concerned about production delays that could arise. An immediate RFP would allow HAL to pay Honeywell to begin the two-year process of replacing the TPE-331-12B engine’s old “electronic engine controller” (EEC) with a “full authority digital engine controller” (FADEC). Delaying payment would result in the FADEC-equipped engine being unavailable when the HTT-40 goes into production.

A senior HAL official points out they have asked the IAF neither for payment, nor a contract. An RFP amounts to only an IAF statement of interest, without financial liabilities. But it is essential for the HAL board to clear payments to Honeywell.
 
Further to what @randomradio has mentioned.

The GoI today is keen to encourage the competitive spirit based on exploring all options. DPSUs are increasingly being asked to remodel themselves and align to be performers instead of deadweight. Fun to see the agony coming out in open.

If there are no financial liabilities, why is HAL keen on IAF issuing a statement that it will procure? Strange dumb logic. Quoting:

HAL is concerned about production delays that could arise. An immediate RFP would allow HAL to pay Honeywell to begin the two-year process of replacing the TPE-331-12B engine’s old “electronic engine controller” (EEC) with a “full authority digital engine controller” (FADEC). Delaying payment would result in the FADEC-equipped engine being unavailable when the HTT-40 goes into production.

A senior HAL official points out they have asked the IAF neither for payment, nor a contract. An RFP amounts to only an IAF statement of interest, without financial liabilities. But it is essential for the HAL board to clear payments to Honeywell.
We now have a better engine available from GE and HAL should not remain stuck to Honeywell. They probably want to do this as the same engine is also fitted in Do-228 aircraft.
 
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Why would Hal need permission from IAF to update engine? When the trainer itself is made without IAF interest..

Supposing new engine is required for successful flight, who has the final say in this matters.

Hal or IAF?
 
Further to what @randomradio has mentioned.

The GoI today is keen to encourage the competitive spirit based on exploring all options. DPSUs are increasingly being asked to remodel themselves and align to be performers instead of deadweight. Fun to see the agony coming out in open.

If there are no financial liabilities, why is HAL keen on IAF issuing a statement that it will procure? Strange dumb logic. Quoting:

HAL is concerned about production delays that could arise. An immediate RFP would allow HAL to pay Honeywell to begin the two-year process of replacing the TPE-331-12B engine’s old “electronic engine controller” (EEC) with a “full authority digital engine controller” (FADEC). Delaying payment would result in the FADEC-equipped engine being unavailable when the HTT-40 goes into production.

A senior HAL official points out they have asked the IAF neither for payment, nor a contract. An RFP amounts to only an IAF statement of interest, without financial liabilities. But it is essential for the HAL board to clear payments to Honeywell.

All foreign deals where they are not involved have now become existential threats to HAL.

Coming to the point you made, HAL wants the IAF to issue an RFP for all 106 trainers, whereas IAF wants the order shared between HAL and Pilatus. So 68 HTT-40s and 38 PC-7 Mk IIs. This is also what the MoD had promised back in 2015.

HAL was supposed to have the aircraft certified by early 2018. But it's already a year gone and has still not finished certification. And the most optimistic date for finishing all tests is well after 2020, and a few more years for production and induction. The program officially started in 2012. Who the hell takes 10+ years to induct a trainer?

And it gets worse. Since Pilatus failed to get the order of 38, they have refused to extend the maintenance term on the same price, which led to MoD rejecting the new price. So now IAF is sourcing parts from the open market for the trainer, which is likely more expensive. So IAF today doesn't have the HTT-40, the 38 extra PC-7s as well as no active maintenance contract for the existing PC-7s.

HAL has successfully held the IAF hostage to their whims and fancies.
 
Why would Hal need permission from IAF to update engine? When the trainer itself is made without IAF interest..

Supposing new engine is required for successful flight, who has the final say in this matters.

Hal or IAF?

They want to confirm the order.
 
Another anti-IAF hit job. Another low quality Shukla article. It's ridiculous to expect the IAF to issue an RFP before flight testing is complete. We have already seen the fiasco with the IJT. HAL should finish tests before expecting an RFP.

As for LCA Mk1A, the aircraft finished all flight testing in its Mk1 form before the RFP was issued.

The IAF should look out for itself instead of doing favours for HAL.
Lets see,
LCH money was released before completion of High altitude trials, Brahmos orders were committed and money released by both Army and the Airforce before testing. KH31P bought without a single user test, KH35 bought without a user test, R73ET user trials were done from the first batch bought. And then there is the IAF chief batting for PC7 better than their salesman. And lets not mention Augusta Westland here, we are all aware how IAF can play gymnastics with the trials and specifications before RFP.

Some one should look into this, and especially NAK Browne's involvement in the process.