Meteor missile completes integrated flight tests on Rafale
Teams from the French Defence Procurement Agency (DGA), Dassault Aviation, MBDA and Thales successfully completed the final guided firing (integration flight test) of the Meteor long-range air-to-air missile against an air target from a Rafale combat aircraft.
During the test, which took place at the DGA’s Biscarrosse Test Centre, the Meteor successfully engaged and destroyed “at very long range” a high-speed air target (Mirach) simulating an evading fighter aircraft.
This fifth, global firing completed the two-year integration flight testing campaign of the Meteor air-to-air missile on Rafale. Performance is described as better than expected. All functionalities were successfully tested (such as the activation of the data-link between the Rafale and the missile) in numerous aircraft flight conditions (speed, load factor) and electronic warfare environment.
Just after the Meteor firing, a (simulated) firing of the currently-used MICA (RF) air-to-air missile was triggered to demonstrate that the Rafale and its crew can efficiently manage a multi-target situation, and then engage the enemy with multi-firings.
Equipped with a throttleable ramjet motor and featuring a “fire and forget” firing mode, Meteor is intended for very long BVR (Beyond Visual Range) air defence operations.
Thanks to the extended range capability of its RBE2 Active Electronically-Scanned Array (AESA) radar, the Rafale equipped with Meteor will be able to intercept targets at very long range from 2018 (Rafale “F3R”), complemented by the MICA (RF/IR) missile, both for combat interception and self-defense. For now, the Rafale is the only European combat aircraft in operational service to incorporate AESA radar technology.
Aero India 2017: Dassault looking for more contracts
Dassault CEO Eric Trappier during Aero India 2017 about the company’s objectives in India. Some excerpts:
On Indian perspectives, following the signature by New Delhi of a contract for 36 Rafale fighters:
“This contract is the result of a lot of hard work. Declarations by the Indian Air Force over the past several years, along with recent declarations by the minister of defence, including here at the show, show that the Indian requirement is substantial.
We want to follow on with additional contracts. Whether for the Indian Air Force or perhaps for the Indian Navy, which recently issued a request for information for fighters for its current and future aircraft carriers.
In that respect, the Rafale has a unique advantage over all its competitors worldwide. It was designed from the outset to equip the French Air Force and to operate from the French Navy aircraft carrier.
So all its characteristics and its multirole capabilities place it in a very favourable position to meet this Indian requirement. It is the only aircraft in the world able to do so. The F-18 has only been designed for naval aviation, whereas the Rafale has been designed for air forces and naval aviation. This is a huge advantage. Moreover, the air force and navy versions are practically identical.
So I think that these initial 36 aircraft should be seen as the first in a long line. And that is why we are investing in India, so that we can be present in this country, with our own production facilities.
These different contracts create work in France but also in India. It’s a real win-win strategy for both countries.”