HAL and ADA Achieve 200 kg Weight Reduction in Tejas Mk2 via Monolithic Machining and Jig-Less Assembly, Boosting Payload and Fuel Capacity

HAL and ADA Achieve 200 kg Weight Reduction in Tejas Mk2 via Monolithic Machining and Jig-Less Assembly, Boosting Payload and Fuel Capacity


The Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL) Tejas Mk2 fighter jet programme has successfully achieved a structural weight reduction of approximately 200 kilograms.

This milestone was accomplished through the implementation of advanced modular construction and jig-less assembly methods, which have vastly enhanced the aircraft's structural efficiency.

Developed jointly by the Aeronautical Development Agency (ADA) and HAL, the Tejas Mk2—envisioned as a 4.5-generation medium-weight fighter for the Indian Air Force—is adopting highly modernised manufacturing techniques.

Programme engineers note that transitioning to monolithic machining and utilising advanced carbon-fibre composites has allowed the jet's airframe to shed excess weight without compromising strength.

A major factor in this weight loss is the shift to single-piece, or monolithic, machining for vital structural sections.

In the older Tejas Mk1 model, components like the internal bulkheads and the wing-fuselage joint were built from several smaller pieces joined by heavy steel rivets, requiring extra reinforcement.

Conversely, the Tejas Mk2 uses large, continuous titanium frames carved from a single block of metal.

By eliminating the need for hundreds of heavy fasteners and subcomponents, this single-piece manufacturing approach alone has saved around 120 kilograms, while simultaneously boosting the airframe's fatigue resistance.

Furthermore, the project has embraced jig-less assembly.

Historically, aircraft construction required massive steel jigs to clamp the frame together during the riveting process.

These heavy fixtures put immense mechanical stress on the structure, forcing designers to add internal support frames solely to survive the assembly stage—adding weight but no flight value.

By switching to digital alignment tools and modular techniques, the Tejas Mk2 avoids these assembly stresses entirely, allowing engineers to remove those unnecessary internal reinforcements.

The new fighter also makes extensive use of cutting-edge materials.

Programme engineers confirm that carbon-fibre composites will make up roughly 90 percent of the Mk2's surface area.

Because these composites possess a far superior strength-to-weight ratio compared to standard metal alloys, the aircraft gains significant protection against corrosion and wear while keeping its overall mass to a minimum.

Structurally, the centre fuselage of the jet was entirely redesigned to house the new General Electric F414-INS6 engine.

Replacing the F404 engine of the Mk1, the new F414 produces a substantially higher 98 kN of thrust.

During this necessary redesign to fit the larger engine, designers took the opportunity to optimise the engine bay's layout and streamline the wing-root area for better aerodynamic efficiency.

Instead of just creating a lighter jet, developers have reinvested the 200-kilogram saving directly into the aircraft's combat performance.

Consequently, the internal fuel capacity has jumped to over 3,300 kilograms—a major increase from the Mk1’s roughly 2,450 kilograms—granting the aircraft a much wider combat radius.

Moreover, this structural optimisation translates into approximately 1.5 tons of extra payload capacity.

The Mk2 is now expected to carry up to 6,500 kilograms of weaponry across 11 hardpoints, equipping it to deploy heavy, advanced munitions like the indigenous Astra beyond-visual-range missile, Rudram anti-radiation missiles, and potentially the BrahMos-NG cruise missile.

Ultimately, these manufacturing upgrades demonstrate the increasing sophistication of India’s domestic aviation and defence sectors.

Set to replace ageing fleets of Mirage-2000, Jaguar, and MiG-29 jets, the first Tejas Mk2 prototype is currently in its advanced stages of assembly, with a highly anticipated public rollout expected in the near future.

By successfully implementing globally recognised techniques, India is firmly establishing its capability to build modern, world-class fighter aircraft.
 
It Will be very good to manufacture the aircraft with these revamped structure but when and how many F 414 IN engine s are we really going to possess in time is a question that only God can answer ! Else as per the previous situation, only Aluminium boxes will be ready and there will be no engine to power thems.. All the US presidents are known to throw a spanner in the rollout of the planes and stall the induction in the active service....
 
Where is mk1 a first
This is research. Why do you people not understand this ?
Research and Production happens side by side. Not everything is done by the same people so asking them where an older model that's supposed to be in production is a moot point, They can't abandon r&d programs that are already on a tight timeline for a sub par jet that's already facing production delays due to delays in procuring engines.
This is promising news.
 
It Will be very good to manufacture the aircraft with these revamped structure but when and how many F 414 IN engine s are we really going to possess in time is a question that only God can answer ! Else as per the previous situation, only Aluminium boxes will be ready and there will be no engine to power thems.. All the US presidents are known to throw a spanner in the rollout of the planes and stall the induction in the active service....
Well Indian policy makers in their supreme wisdom decided to be American lapdogs. Nothing can be done about it. Best we can do is acquire as much technology from them as possible and then pray that our vaunted mandarins are somehow magically convinced of the necessity to reverse engineering them.
Because they sure as hell don't have the brains or balls to deploy our humint assets towards Industrial espionage like the Chinese and French.
Considering the number of Indian engineers and physical scientists in the west, tragically wasted potential just so that we can be the white man's loyal sepoy.
 
It Will be very good to manufacture the aircraft with these revamped structure but when and how many F 414 IN engine s are we really going to possess in time is a question that only God can answer ! Else as per the previous situation, only Aluminium boxes will be ready and there will be no engine to power thems.. All the US presidents are known to throw a spanner in the rollout of the planes and stall the induction in the active service....

It was a mistake right from the stage of selection of engine when we choose GE404 over European counterpart. Subsequently, we never made a serious effort to make our engine. Safran was ready to make Kaveri operational as a part of offset clause. Russia was always ready to help so as Mitsubishi. Even we could have made 100% indigenous engine provided Government had seriously persuaded the program with proper resource allocation and with private partnership. Baba Kalyani had said years ago that India can get an operational engine in 7 years if resources are provided. It took more than 2 decades to finalize even a development partner. This is an example of inefficient political and bureaucratic system. We had a high hope when BJP came to power. They proved themselves to be same as congress with exception of Parrikar era. Afterall, this nation is run on the wishes of almighty and continue to remain at his mercy.
 
One of the great developments in our fighter jet development endeavor is exclusion of HAL from AMCA program. Had we done this at the time of MK1 A, we would have few operational jets in our hand.
 
This is research. Why do you people not understand this ?
Research and Production happens side by side. Not everything is done by the same people so asking them where an older model that's supposed to be in production is a moot point, They can't abandon r&d programs that are already on a tight timeline for a sub par jet that's already facing production delays due to delays in procuring engines.
This is promising news.
Sir with all due respect I don't china or America delaying on timelines I see j 20 and j 35 in mass production on their tarmacs while j36 and j 50 are in research the problem is not whether we have a different research group and separate production group the problem is the overall delay in a program that was supposed to fill our squadrons to a sustainable level this self reliance basket is making jets barely capable to fend of j10c are we thinking to pit these against j 16 we kept all our eggs in one basket and today we have barely enough squadron to defend ourselves the point is not who is on what job the point is that they are delayed and that too by a decade and that's all
 

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