Grand Danois
Entertainer
I'll readily admit that I haven't read all of your posts. I will support that a typical cost of integrating af weapon would be around the 150 mn USD mark. The more complex weapons are more expensive, the less complex a bit less.
Interesting here is that many weapons are not integrated on the Gripen. In the complex category would be: Brimstone, Harpoon, NSM/JSM, SDB and those types. ATA weapons are not an issue.
A nav/attack system (target designation pods) is about 2 mn USD apiece and an air force like the Dutch would typically acquire 24+ of these, so we're talking a addition to TCO of about 200 mn USD over 30 years. Naturally this is included in the JSF and is not extra.
Such systems would not, irrc, be part of a SAAB package, but is bought from the US Govt through FMS. I would suggest that this is one of extra costs the Norwegians added to make the Gripen NG "mulitrole."
Datalink may also have been an issue in this context. Link-16 is integrated but may not be produced by SAAB (it's NATO equipment) and would have to be bought outside of a package deal - though I not entirely certain on this one.
I would not consider the UV MAWS currently on the Gripen as adequate. There's an IR based system under development. If this is not included in a package, then it would be a later hardware upgrade at extra cost. Of course the JSF comes with this. This may also have been a couse of extra costs in the Norway calculations.
Lastly, an MLU is not the cyclic software patch/upgrades done to the Gripen fleet. It's more like when the Swedes will rebuild their A/B/C/D fleet to E/F standard sometime in the future with new radar, IR MAWS and other avionics and structural refurbs. This is really an expensive one and probably not included in either 20 or 30 year life cycle offers.
It all adds up...
Interesting here is that many weapons are not integrated on the Gripen. In the complex category would be: Brimstone, Harpoon, NSM/JSM, SDB and those types. ATA weapons are not an issue.
A nav/attack system (target designation pods) is about 2 mn USD apiece and an air force like the Dutch would typically acquire 24+ of these, so we're talking a addition to TCO of about 200 mn USD over 30 years. Naturally this is included in the JSF and is not extra.
Such systems would not, irrc, be part of a SAAB package, but is bought from the US Govt through FMS. I would suggest that this is one of extra costs the Norwegians added to make the Gripen NG "mulitrole."
Datalink may also have been an issue in this context. Link-16 is integrated but may not be produced by SAAB (it's NATO equipment) and would have to be bought outside of a package deal - though I not entirely certain on this one.
I would not consider the UV MAWS currently on the Gripen as adequate. There's an IR based system under development. If this is not included in a package, then it would be a later hardware upgrade at extra cost. Of course the JSF comes with this. This may also have been a couse of extra costs in the Norway calculations.
Lastly, an MLU is not the cyclic software patch/upgrades done to the Gripen fleet. It's more like when the Swedes will rebuild their A/B/C/D fleet to E/F standard sometime in the future with new radar, IR MAWS and other avionics and structural refurbs. This is really an expensive one and probably not included in either 20 or 30 year life cycle offers.
It all adds up...