Sukhoi/HAL FGFA Being Indian

Sukhoi/HAL FGFA Being Indian The Sukhoi/HAL Fifth Generation Fighter Aircraft (FGFA) is a fifth-generation fighter being developed by Russia and India. According to HAL chairman A.K.

It is a derivative project from the PAK FA (T-50 is the prototype) being developed for the Indian Air Force (FGFA is the official designation for the Indian version). Baweja shortly after the India-Russia Inter-Governmental Committee meeting on 18 September 2008, the Russian aircraft will be a single-seater, the Indian FGFA will be a twin seater, analogous to the Su-30MKI which is a twin seat vari

ant of the baseline Su-27. Two separate prototypes will be developed, one by Russia (designated the T-50), and a separate one by India (designated FGFA).[8]

A contract between Bangalore-based Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd (HAL) and Russia’s United Aircraft Corporation (UAC), will commit to building 250 fighters for the IAF and an equal number for Russia. The option for further orders will be kept open. HAL and UAC will be equal partners in a joint venture company, much like the Brahmos JV, that will develop and manufacture the FGFA.[5] Further it was reported that the Bangalore-based HAL has negotiated firmly to get a 25 per cent share of design and development work in the FGFA programme. HAL’s work share will include critical software, including the mission computer; navigation systems; most of the cockpit displays; the counter measure dispensing (CMD) systems; and modifying Sukhoi’s single-seat prototype into the twin-seat fighter that the Indian Air Force (IAF) wants. Further Russia’s expertise in titanium structures will be complemented by India’s experience in composites like in the fuselage. A total of 500 aircraft are planned with option for further aircraft. Russian Air Force will have 200 single seated and 50 twin-seated PAK FAs while Indian Air Force will get 200 twin-seated and 50 single seated FGFAs.[6][9]

Sukhoi director Mikhail Pogosyan has projected a market for 1000 aircraft over the next four decades, two hundred each for Russia and India and six hundred for other countries.[10] Russian Trade Minister Viktor Khristenko said that the aircraft are to be jointly developed and produced with India and both countries will "share benefits from selling the plane not only on their domestic markets, but also on the markets of third countries."[11]

The Indian media also use the term FGFA generically to refer to any fifth generation fighter aircraft.

Indian Air Force celebrates 82nd anniversary ..!!
08/10/2014

Indian Air Force celebrates 82nd anniversary ..!!

13/09/2014
IAF transports operating from Srinagar.
13/09/2014

IAF transports operating from Srinagar.

Photo by Damanbir Singh Sekhon. He is an avid aviation enthusiast-cum-photographer.
27/06/2014

Photo by Damanbir Singh Sekhon. He is an avid aviation enthusiast-cum-photographer.

Airbags Take the Weight in ACTE G-III Loads Testsechnicians at NASA Armstrong Flight Research Center's Flight Loads Labo...
25/06/2014

Airbags Take the Weight in ACTE G-III Loads Tests

echnicians at NASA Armstrong Flight Research Center's Flight Loads Laboratory recently completed structural evaluations on a modified Gulfstream G-III aircraft that will serve as a test bed for the Adaptive Compliant Trailing Edge (ACTE) project.

The loads tests assisted engineers in predicting the levels of structural stress the airplane will likely experience during ACTE research flights. And for the first time, some unusual hardware aided the process: the aircraft was supported by three large inflatable airbags during the tests.

ACTE project researchers have replaced the airplane's conventional aluminum flaps with advanced, shape-changing assemblies that form continuous conformal surfaces with no visible gaps. Evaluation of the revolutionary new flap system is a joint effort between NASA and the U.S. Air Force Research Laboratory. The advanced flexible trailing-edge wing flaps have the potential to improve aircraft aerodynamic and fuel-use efficiency and reduce airport-area noise generated during takeoff and landing.

FlexSys, Inc., of Ann Arbor, Mich., developed the new experimental flaps for installation on Armstrong's G-III Aerodynamics Research Test Bed aircraft. Flight testing is expected to begin later this summer.

Before flying the airplane in the ACTE configuration, technicians had to conduct specialized ground tests that involved applying known stresses, or loads, via hydraulic jacks to the aircraft. Scientifically calibrated strain gages provided researchers with highly accurate measurements of the applied stresses, enabling them to predict the structural performance of the aircraft in flight.

According to chief test engineer Larry Hudson, "Doing a test of this nature enables us to understand on the ground, by applying certain loads into the airplane, what loads will be experienced in flight under similar conditions."

Lifting the airplane off the loads lab floor with the three inflatable airbags, the first step in the testing process, helped isolate the airframe from any potential influence of the landing gear on strain-gage data. According to principal investigator Bill Lokos, this method has never been used before in the center's loads lab.

The airbags were positioned beneath the wings and aft fuselage to keep the main gear tires off the floor so that loading throughout the aircraft's center wing box structure remained constant. This was necessary, Lokos explained, because increased loading on the wings typically resulted in decreased loads on the gear, which affected the strain-gage measurements and skewed the results of the preliminary equations.

Supporting the G-III with standard aircraft jacks was not an option, he noted, because the effects were even more pronounced than those produced by the gear alone. Alternatively, using a cradle system would have been costly and time consuming. Airbags of the type used to lift aircraft in the field following gear-up landings were already available as proven, off-the-shelf hardware.

Once the G-III was properly positioned, lab technicians applied loads via hydraulic jacks positioned underneath the wings. Structures lead Eric Miller explained that combining known loads values with strain-gage responses in the lab helps researchers develop a database for validating or correcting existing load equations.

"We'll be able to correlate these data so that we can drive our own load equations and be able to monitor flight loads in real time during ACTE flight tests," he said.

"This test will either validate those equations," Lokos added, "or help fix them if we find that they're off."

Successful ground testing is key to successful flight-testing. A comprehensive set of data and accurate loads equations will result in more precise flight-test data and enhance safety of flight because researchers will be able to expand the flight-test envelope without exceeding the aircraft's structural limits.

"It's important that we have a small error band and that we know what it is, so we won't cause harm to the airplane while testing the new flap," Lokos added.

The ACTE effort is part of NASA's Environmentally Responsible Aviation (ERA) project under the Integrated Systems Research Program of NASA's Aeronautics Research Mission Directorate. The ERA project explores and documents the feasibility, benefits and technical risk of vehicle concepts and enabling technologies to reduce aviation's impact on the environment.

Amazing....
25/06/2014

Amazing....

First test launch of Russia's Angara rocket may be conducted on June 27The first test launch of Russia's Angara light-we...
25/06/2014

First test launch of Russia's Angara rocket may be conducted on June 27

The first test launch of Russia's Angara light-weight rocket, initially set for June 25, may be conducted from the Plesetsk Cosmodrone in the Arkhangelsk region on June 27, a Russian space rocket industry source told Interfax-AVN.

"Tomorrow the state commission is supposed to make a final decision concerning a date for the Angara launch. It is expected to set the launch for June 27, instead of June 25, as was planned earlier," the source said.

He blamed organizational reasons, not technical difficulties, for the possible postponement.

A universal family of light, medium and heavy-lift Angara launchers is being developed for lifting into orbit practically the entire range of payloads of the Russian Defense Ministry in the designated range of altitudes and orbit inclinations, including the geostationary orbit, and for guaranteeing the genuine independence of Russian military space programs.

Angara launchers will not be using aggressive or toxic fuel, which will significantly improve environmental safety both in the areas around the spaceport and in the zone where rocket fragments fall.

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