Dassault Rafale C F.2.2 - Armeé De L´Air's Omnirole Fighter

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Dassault Rafale C F.2.2 - Armeé De L´Air’s Omnirole Fighter

Hi and welcome to my 22th suggestion, which is about the Dassault Rafale C F.2.2, hope you like it. :popcorn:

First of all:

  • This is a suggestion for an aircraft we could see in game at some point in the Future , that doesn´t mean next Patch or somewhere in the near Future
  • Feel free to share more Information and / or correct me if something is wrong
  • Discuss respectfully, any aggressive kind or verbal abuse will be reported, the Forum rules also apply here

20

Background History

In 1977, the Armée de l’air took up the idea of a modern fighter aircraft, now to be put into service after 1990, under the project title Avion de Combat Tactique (ACT). The aim was to build on the ACF project and adopt the design as a twin-engine delta aircraft with fly-by-wire control. A year later, the Marine Nationale launched the Avion de Combat Marine (ACM) project to finally replace the F-8E(FN). In 1979 there was talk for the first time about merging the two French projects and the projects from Great Britain and Germany into one European project. All three companies involved – Dassault, MBB and BAe – each developed their own design for this European project.

In 1983 the EAP (Experimental Aircraft Program) prototype was presented, developed under the auspices of BAe and combining BAe’s ACA (Agile Combat Aircraft) design with MBB’s TKF90 design. Dassault, on the other hand, presented its own revised design in 1983 based on the ACT and ACM under the name Avion de Combat eXpérimental (ACX). Although the inability to agree on a design was already evidence of significant differences, two cooperation agreements for the development of a European Fighter Aircraft (EFA) were signed in late 1983 and late 1984 between Germany, France, Great Britain, Italy and Spain. By this point, a few basic principles had been agreed upon: Canard delta design, two engines and Fly-by-Wire (FBW) control.

Despite this, it was still not possible to agree on uniform specifications or on the division of labor. France wanted a smaller, cheaper, multi-role fighter with strong short-takeoff capabilities that would be better suited to operations from the relatively small French carriers and should have better export prospects, while Germany and Great Britain wanted a fighter that was as capable and agile as possible.

In August 1985, the negotiations finally failed, whereupon the French Defense Minister at the time, Charles Hernu, announced that France would withdraw from the EFA program and develop the ACX on its own until it was ready for series production. The remaining four nations developed the EFA into today’s Eurofighter.

After the decision in 1987 to further develop the Rafale A into a series aircraft, the contract for development with an industrial consortium was signed on April 21, 1988. In addition to Dassault, this consisted of Thomson-CSF (today Thales Group) and Snecma (today Safran). For further testing, four near-series prototypes were built, which were equipped with extensive test instrumentation. The first to take off was the only Rafale C 01 airforce single-seat aircraft - a second prototype of the airforce single-seater was canceled - on May 19, 1991. On December 12, 1991 and November 8, 1993, respectively, the two naval single-seater prototypes Rafale M 01 and M 02 flew for the first time.

On April 30, 1993, the only airforce two-seater, the prototype Rafale B 01, took off for its maiden flight. In 1993 the first prototype of the RBE2 radar, which had been developed since 1989, was delivered.
In 1997, the flight test program ended and series production began. On December 4, 1998, the first series aircraft took off for its maiden flight, the two-seater B 301, in the presence of then Defense Minister Alain Richard.

grafik

The Dassault Rafale C F.2.2 Overall

The Rafale C defines a baseline configuration for the Rafale family. The remarks below apply to the Rafale C, and are followed by descriptions of the other variants and their differences from the Rafale C.
It also features much more use of composite materials than the Rafale A, which reduced both the aircraft’s RCS and weight. It was relatively small for a twin-engine fighter, with an empty weight about 1,360 kilograms greater than that of a single-engine F-16C, and a maximum take-off weight about 4,535 kilograms greater.
The F.2.2 standard serves as a successor to the F.2.1 in the Army De L Air, which was the first in service with those. The improvements include the commissioning of the new rocket-boosted AASM “HAMMER” air-to-ground guided-bombs, in the versions IIR and GPS, as well as an update for the self-defense system SPECTRA. Just like other Rafale standards, the front optronics containing an electro optical tracker and an IRST are present as well as the RBE2 PESA radar and the SPECTRA system with three jammers, MAWS, LWS and countermeasures.

Armament of the Rafale C F.2.2

The Rafale C with F.2.2 standard provides options for the first time on a Rafale CAS (with the exception of SCALP-EG, which is already available on the first Rafale C of the Armée de L´Air, with F.2.1 standard. New additions the imagine infrared and GPS variants of the AASM “HAMMER”.
The main armament is a GIAT 30M791B with 125 rounds.

Air-to-Air Missiles

  • 6x MICA IR
  • 6x MICA EM

Guided-Bombs

  • 6x AASM-IIR
  • 6x AASM-GPS

Air-to-Surface Missiles

  • 3x SCALP-EG

Specifications, Electronics and Internal

  • Crew: 1
  • Length: 15.27 m
  • Wingspan: 10.90 m
  • Height: 5.34 m
  • Wing area: 45.7 m^2
  • Empty weight: 9.850 kg
  • Loaded weight: 15.000 kg
  • Max. takeoff weight: 24.500 kg
  • Powerplant: 2x SNECMA M88-2E4
    • Dry thrust: 50 kN
    • Thrust with afterburner: 75 kN
  • Maximum speed: Mach 1.9
    • 1400 km/h at sea level
    • 2130 km/h at altitude
  • Service ceiling: 18.000 m
  • Rate of climb: 310 m/s
  • Wing loading:
    • Max.: 381 kg/m2
  • Thrust/weight:
    • Max.: 1.50
  • Maximum g-load: +9g / -3.2g

Learn more about the Dassault Rafale here:

Thanks for your time, hope you liked it :salute:
[Will add more if there are some (more) important / declassified things]
[PM or comment if a Link or Picture isn´t working]

Sources:

Links

Dassault Rafale - Wikipedia

The Rafale, the latest Dassault Aviation combat aircraft: introduction

Rafale specifications and performance data

Dassault Rafale vs. F-35: More than Just Selecting a Combat Aircraft - Politics Today

dassault rafale: Latest News & Videos, Photos about dassault rafale | The Economic Times - Page 1

Dassault Rafale 4th Generation Multirole Fighter Aircraft

DASSAULT Rafale | SKYbrary Aviation Safety

Once Called A 'Cursed Aircraft', How Dassault Rafale Jets 'Rose From The Ashes' & Salvaged The French Pride

Caractéristiques du Dassault-Aviation Rafale M [in french]

Books / Other:
Eurofighter Typhoon & Dassault Rafale by Greg Goebel (2016)
Jane´s All the World´s Aircraft 2011 - 2012
Jane´s All the World´s Aircraft 2007 - 2008
Jane´s All the World´s Aircraft 2000 - 2001
Modern Fighter Aircraft - An Illustrated History of War Planes from 1945 to the Present Day by Francis Crosby (2004)
Canard Aeronautics & Rocket-Powered Aircrafts by Roselle Rosen and Gisele Fowlkes

7 Likes

+1

2 Likes

+1 can’t wait for the Rafales to come to the game!

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+1

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+1

Cant wait to fly with this beast.

2 Likes

I appreciate your suggestions.

2 Likes

Shouldn’t come in the near future, but i’d like to see it added at the same time as the Eurofighter, it’ll really help with top tier for minor nations. Hope to see it in game.

I think it would be better to add the Rafale A ( the demonstrator version of the aircraft) first into the game along with the grippen. The Rafale A can only carry 4x Matra 530 D ( the current fox 2 for the mirage 2000 in game) and 2x magic 2 fox 1 missiles.
image
This version wont break the game when added and will make France more bearable to play at top teir (basically a better mirage 2000 with 2 more ok missiles).
image

1 Like

Rafale A was a demonstrator which was never able to use any armament, it was simply not wired for any.
It is also debatable whether it was even possible to install a radar; Production versions of the Rafale have a new airframe also with changes to the nose, which suggests that there is no room for RBE2 in the Rafale A, let alone the front optics, SPECTRA and other Systems.
Neither did it have S.530Ds, the missiles on the picture are MICA EM.
There is no reason to hold back a “real” Rafale, especially when the “alternative” would once again be 50% fantasy.

4 Likes

Suggestion passed to the developers for consideration.

1 Like