Det betyr i praksis to prosjekter; det europeiske samarbeidprosjektet og oppdraget fra FMV. (Red.)
What Shape will Saab's Future Fighter Jet Take?
· DefenseMirror Editorial Team
· Thursday, June 23, 2022 @ 04:05 AM
·
On June 1, Saab
announced it received a $25.3 million order from the Swedish Defence
Materiel Administration (FMV), relating to future fighter aircraft development.
The contract includes studies on future combat air capabilities.
The new project should
help Saab to stay in the global fighter aircraft race even as the JAS 39 Gripen
is ageing with no new international buyers on the horizon. The big question is
will it match with new developments in Europe such as the British Tempest and
the European FCAS or match something such as the 4.5 generation jets being
developed by South Korea and Turkey.
A hint about what was to
come was given in the Saab press release which said, “the study
is preparatory in nature and its purpose is to widen the work on how future
combat air capabilities can be developed and realized.”
“I am very
pleased that we have received this order, which enables development of future
capabilities. It means that we can intensify our work to develop new concepts,
technologies, and other endeavors required to achieve relevant operational
capability and which will prepare the future for Saab’s fighter technologies,” said Jonas Hjelm,
Senior Vice President and head of Saab’s Aeronautics business area.
All this points to future
concepts including manned-unmanned teaming, stealth technology, high precision
missiles and advanced communication concepts.
Sweden is part
of the European FCAS project
The Future Combat Air
System (FCAS) is a European combat system of systems under development by
Dassault Aviation, Airbus, Indra Sistemas and Thales Group. The FCAS will
consist of a Next-Generation Weapon System (NGWS) as well as other air assets
in the future operational battlespace. The NGWS's components will be remote
carrier vehicles (swarming drones) as well as a sixth-generation New Generation
Fighter (NGF). A test flight of a demonstrator is expected around 2027 and
entry into service around 2040.
Sweden is partnered with
the United Kingdom and Italy on the Future Combat Air System (FCAS) program.
Within the program, new technologies are being studied that will be necessary
to ensure air dominance in future conflicts, such as Artificial Intelligence
(AI), networked combat, unmanned aircraft, new sensors and stealth
technologies. The new sixth-generation jet developed under this project will
replace the Italian and British Eurofighter and the Swedish Gripen, starting in
2035.
In July 2019, the then UK
defence minister Stuart Andrew and his Swedish counterpart Peter Hultqvist
signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) for both to work together in
developing future combat aviation technologies. A year later, Saab said it
would stablish a Swedish ‘centre-of-excellence' as part of a wider $6 million
investment in the partnership.
Sweden’s focus is on
developing the technologies that can be used to upgrade its fleet of
domestically developed Saab Gripen fighters. As such, the country has not yet
committed to join the Tempest future fighter project that is the core element
of FCAS.
Other projects aimed at creating new fighters. The FCAS program involves Spain,
Germany and France; while the Tempest team consists of the United Kingdom,
Italy and Sweden.
The Tempest project --
which includes BAE Systems, Rolls-Royce, European missile maker MBDA and the
British arm of Italian defense group Leonardo-- has a budget of around $2.4
billion from the British government to 2025, plus $900 million from the
companies over the same period.
In November 2021, Italy's Air
Force Chief of Staff told Reuters that the two
European programs “will eventually merge.”
Saab’s
experience in developing fighters
Newest Gripen variant
Gripen E has the powerful GE F414G engine, great range and the ability to carry
an impressive payload with its ten hard-points.
It also has a new
AESA-radar, InfraRed Search and Track System (IRST), highly advanced electronic
warfare and communication systems. The E-series redefines air power for the
21st century by extending operational capabilities.
The MS20 update for the
Gripen C offers both hardware and software enhancements to Gripen operators.
The upgrade package includes the integration of MBDA Meteor air-to-air missile
and small GBU-39 SDB bombs, targeting electro-optical pod Litening III to name
a few, and several software updates. The MS20 update can be customised as per
the Gripen operator’s requirements, giving the fleet the capabilities to tackle
new challenges.
Gripen E has a maximum
payload capacity of 16,500 kg and a speed of Mach 2. It can conduct air-to-air,
air-to-surface and reconnaissance missions. Air supremacy is achieved with the
carriage of up to seven Meteor Beyond Visual Range Air-to-Air Missiles and two
Within Visual Range IRIS-T missiles. Weapons like these, combined with the
ability to use offensive and defensive means simultaneously, enables Gripen E
to detect, engage and suppress or destroy targets. The Gripen E is also
equipped with an offensive and defensive electronics warfare suite.
Ingen kommentarer:
Legg inn en kommentar
Merk: Bare medlemmer av denne bloggen kan legge inn en kommentar.