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defenceman

Junior Member
Registered Member
This really should be the biggest story in this thread were it not for the Tejas crash.

Indian is using a leased in-flight-refueling aircraft:

Hi,
very soon someone will bring the kill switch theory for GE engines supplied by USA, are they
crazy india have just renewed 10 years of defence pact with USA using air and naval bases
training of cource in flight refuelling is there too bla bla, someone’s son or husband brother has
gone and people like him trying to figure out ohh it was a USA air refueling aircraft
thank you
 

Lethe

Captain
Folks here should be commended for discussing the recent loss of LCA airframe and corresponding death of pilot Wing Cdr. Namansh Syal in a measured and mature manner. Let us try to maintain these standards going forward rather than e.g. reacting to every unhinged take emerging from India's tabloid apparatus.

This really should be the biggest story in this thread were it not for the Tejas crash.

Indian is using a leased in-flight-refueling aircraft:


The air refueling saga has been going around and around for
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without resolution. The requirement is discerned, bids solicited, and the figures that come back are invariably too large for what are regarded as mere support aircraft lacking strong institutional backing, and the project is kicked into the weeds for a few years before returning to step one. For all that the IAF has struggled with recapitalising its fighter inventory, there is at least a strong rhetorical focus and corresponding agitation for doing so -- as seen by the constant references in public discourse to squadron numbers. The upper echelons of the IAF are all ex-fighter jocks and think accordingly. That the final sortie of MiG-21 in IAF service was undertaken by the current Air Chief Marshal A.P. Singh illustrates this background and thinking. One can acknowledge the importance of aerial refueling capability intellectually, but when it comes to making the hard choices about where and where not to allocate limited procurement budgets, such things regularly fall by the wayside.
 

Atomicfrog

Major
Registered Member
What you're describing to me sounds precisely like a bad design choice. They probably should've passed on choosing a delta-wing design.
You have also the good sides of using delta, high speed performances are very good. Its not a bad design choice if you want a light fast plane with sturdy wings that can carry heavy payloads.

Its an airshow crash looking like a bunch of others. Its not like it has splitted in the middle and disintegrated in flight.

The plane hit the ground because it was two low without any margins for pilot or technical errors.

The pilot died because the flight profile was without any margins to guarantee ejection.

Its just sad actually.
 
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_killuminati_

Senior Member
Registered Member
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