i liked your full post above and have made two extracted point of it without changing the context ( i hope u agree )
I particularly like you point (1) - we should be swayed by "legends"
but i am also particularly worried about your (2) - the induction seems to be taking almost as long (
) as the production .- why i that - especially if it is indeed such a solid aircraft - i mean seriously - not sarcastically
According to HAl chief a separate production line for tejas has been set up and the first serial production aircraft is about to join IAF in the third quarter of the current year. So 8 aircraft per year is the minimum production level and there need not be any undue suspicion on this count as tejas has already done it's IOC and all test pilots of Tejas are from IAF only.
If you still have any doubt ,according to A.MUTHANNA the new chief of NTSE from IAf ,"Tejas deserves to be in squadron service and it is a fine fighting machine".
And naval Tejas test pilot says the mk-2 upgrade is primarily meant for naval requirement due to the excessive weight required for landing gear and the much higher strengthening of the airframe to withstand the carrier landing.
As for as IAf is concerned the present mk-1 itself meets all it's needs.Any way since the Navy is going in for higher engined mk-2 IAf thought it prudent to have the excess engine capacity to cater for much higher specs that's why they are ordering mk-2s more in number.
Since IAf tejas MK-2s won't need those heavy landing gears and excessive strengthening of air frame to meet carrier landing ,So the excess engine thrust will lead to higher pay load and higher ITR, STR and TWR and top speed for IAf tejas mk-2.
SO even with IAF -Tejas mk-1 there is nothing basically wrong according to Naval test pilots views expressed to BR poster named KARTHIK in Aeroindia. You can see KUNAL's post in Tejas threads and follow the link to BR forum to read the whole inter view.
These are not my sooth sayong words. The above view is from Test pilots who have flown Tejas mk-1 for years.
Since PAF has F-16 by the time TEJAS entered design phase with ADA , IAF surely would have demanded an LCA with matching specs to take them on.
Also Mirages were present in IAf from the 80s. SO there is no way that IAf would have accepted a fighter from ADA with specs lower than both Mirage and F-16 in fighting performance, Range and payloads may be less for LCA, but flight profile should be close enough to both Mirage and F-16 if Tejas has any relevance in IAF.
All fly by wire fighters like RAFALE, TYPHOON have similar long gestation period and introduction by trnches, because the fly by wire software needs to be carefully evaluated for each particular flight profile. SO from full funding for two TDs in 1993 to IOC in 2013 is the norm for any fly by wire dynamically unstable fighter.
Even the Air Marshal Woolen who was the HAL chief in the 90s when Tejas was designed said that there is noway TEJAS is going to be inducted before 2010, considering the time frame of development for other fly by wire fighters abroad,