GF - Please read the Jan-Feb Australian Aviation article Flying Tiger - including and interview with CO 1Avn Regt. The last Audit Office report is similar to US GAO reports - largely doom and gloom based on what were past issues, but if you read what the operators are saying the Tiger is starting to give them what they want.
AIR 87 was for an armed recce aircraft - like the cancelled Comanche - not a large anti tank helo like the AH-64E. The Tiger has longer range is much more agile than the Apache.
I did read it. Appeared a very corporate line to me and on a personal note as someone who is very worried about the likelihood of having his toys taken away...
Corporate line was to publicly, fully support SeaSprite too. Until it was axed and then the knives came out.
As for giving the 'operators' what they want, that is an interesting comment. I suppose if what you want is average daily availability of 3.5 helicopters out of a 2 operational squadron and a training squadron fleet, then you would be satisfied with the Tiger fleet. What the 'operators' don't seem to understand (or be allowed to mention...) is that the only reason they have been able to fly the Tiger as much as they have is because availability has been so terribly awful. That terrible availability in it's own ridiculous way has allowed Army to be actually afford to operate it a bit. Were availability actually good, half the fleet would have been grounded with the cost of the actual flight hours to get this thing in the air...
Tiger will always be the same regardless of which 'Mk' it is. It's been a boondoggle from day one and will always be due to a finite overall fleet, nil new orders, large cancellations or downsized current orders added on top of a historical and future lack of investment in the development of the plaform.
As for it's so-called 'capability' it's a recon asset is it? With no radar system, no ability to hand off imagery, let alone FMV, no compliance with VMF texting and no integration with any Army battlefield management system, it's 'recon credentials' appear rather lacking to me...
Then of course you could think about the seemingly great decision to put an 8k ranged Hellfire missile onto it. A decision that was widely lauded. What wasn't so widely lauded was the French sighting system that only allowed targetting of said missile at 2000m's... meaning any Tiger that is hoping to self-designate it's primary weapon (and it's only precision guided weapon for that matter) has to fly right into the engagement zone of every threat system starting from heavy machine guns upwards...
Now of course I admit there are other ways to guide a Hellfire, from the UAV's the Tiger can't control (or even communicate with) to the JTACS / FAC's Tiger can only talk to via insecure voice...
But hey, it's agility is supposedly 'nn' % greater than it's rival...
Funny. I don't see aerodynamic agility as high on the list of ADF priorities when it discusses the 5th Generation force it is attempting to construct, but maybe I just need to take a closer look at those materials...