Pages

Monday, March 31, 2014

Did IAF’s 'US-made' C-130J Super Hercules that crashed have fake Chinese parts?

India's newly-acquired American C-130J Super Hercules plane that crashed last week near Gwalior has been under intense scrutiny in the United States and Canada after a Senate investigation concluded that counterfeit parts in the aircraft's display systems could cause it to "lose data or even go blank altogether" in midflight, with potentially catastrophic consequences. 

A 2011-2012 investigation by the US Senate armed services committee eventually traced the counterfeit electronic parts used in the C-130J, C-27J, and many other US military systems to a company in Shenzhen, China, called Hong Dark Electronic Trade Company. Hong Dark sold the parts at issue to Global IC Trading Group, an independent distributor in the US, which in turn sold it to L-3 Communications Display Systems, which in turn supplied it to Lockheed Martin, the US military's prime contractor for the C-130J. 


Indian C-130J Super Hercules plane Crash
Indian C-130J Super Hercules plane Crash
 Amid scathing observations by the Senate panel, the US air force suspended and banned Hong Dark in 2012 from competing for government contracts and subcontracts, but testimony before the armed services committee showed stunning lapses in the supply chain and procurement procedures for the military systems, including the C-130J Super Hercules, six of which New Delhi contracted to buy in 2010 for $1.1 billion, around Rs 1000 crores apiece. 
Indian C-130J Super Hercules plane Crash
Indian C-130J Super Hercules plane Crash

India has plans to buys six more to augment its transport fleet with the much-acclaimed aircraft, which has won plaudits for its safety record and its versatility. The acquisition enables the Indian military to put boots and supplies on the ground in remote and inhospitable terrain, giving it matchless reach in the region. 

However, the aircraft display systems itself will now come under scrutiny — if it already hadn't been under the scanner — although the cause of the Gwalior crash is yet to be determined. The US Senate committee report is withering in its observations not only about US procurement and supply chain system, but also the casual manner in which private contractors treated the issue once the counterfeit parts were detected. 

The story begins in November 2010 when L-3 Display Systems detected that the company's in-house failure rate for a chip installed on display units used in C-130J and C-27J had more than tripled from 8.5 per cent to 27 per cent. L-3 also noticed that the same part had previously failed on a fielded military plane. The company sent the chips for testing, which resulted in identification of "multiple abnormalities," with the tester concluding that the parts were "suspect counterfeit." 



"Failure of the memory chip could cause a display unit to show a degraded image, lose data, or even go black altogether," the Senate report said, noting that "unfortunately, L-3 Display Systems had already installed parts from the suspect lot on more than 400 of its display units," including those intended for the C-27J, as well as the C-130J. 

In effect, what the IAF's court of inquiry will need to look at is whether India received any of the contaminated display units in the six C-130J it bought from the US, and if it did, whether the US, including Lockheed Martin, alerted IAF to it. India's own procurement process, including whether the buyer tracked and followed up the troubles associated with the C-130J, including the Senate's investigation, will also have to be reviewed. 

At least in Canada, another C-130J customer, a CBC investigation in early 2013 highlighted the troubles with the aircraft's instrument panel, although the government there glossed over the issue initially. 

But the Senate investigation offers a disturbing picture of people up the supply chain not particularly alarmed at the contamination of crucial display systems with counterfeit parts. According to the senate report (page 35), following the detection of the fakes, L-3 Display Systems on November 4, 2010, issued a part purge notification, quarantining the company's own stock of the suspect memory chips. 

It did not, however, recommend to its customer that assemblies affected by the suspect counterfeit chips be returned for replacement of those chips. As a result, hundreds of display units intended for and installed on C-130Js and C-27Js included the suspect counterfeit memory chip, well after its discovery by L-3 Display Systems. 

Lockheed Martin, the US military's prime contractor for the C-130J, does not cover itself with glory either in the episode. The Senate report notes that when L-3 notified Lockheed of the problem, Lockheed engineers discussed the matter internally and decided "no action" was necessary and the display units did not need to be returned for repair. Lockheed Martin also "did not formally notify the Air Force of the suspect counterfeit chip in the C-130J." 

According to Senate investigators, while Lockheed Martin told the Air Force that the suspect counterfeit parts were "functionally complaint" to authentic genuine parts, the Air Force was apparently not informed that the failure rate of the part had tripled during acceptance and environmental stress testing. 

The Senate report concluded that since its investigation, hearing and public release of information about the counterfeit chips, the US Air Force had reported that they are aggressively taking action to remove the parts in question, audit the supply chains etc. But as of March 2012, the report noted, Lockheed Martin had removed and replaced only a handful of the display units in the C-130J that are affected by the suspect counterfeit memory chip. 

The worrying part for Indian defense planners is that the Senate panel talks of several other US military platforms, such as Boeing's P8A-Poseidon — a custom-made variant of which has been supplied to the Indian Navy — being contaminated with counterfeit Chinese parts. 

According to the US air force, "approximately 84,000 suspect counterfeit electronic parts purchased from Hong Dark entered the DoD supply chain, and many of these parts have been installed on DoD aircraft."

No comments:

Post a Comment

Use your freedom with responsibility

Tags

0104 2A5 2A6 2A7 MBT 767-2C 8Cs A10 A400M acquisition acrobatic Afghan Air Force Afghanistan Afghanistan's Africa AgustaWestland Air Force Air Show airlift Airlines Al-Shabaab Militants Alenia Altius UCAV amphibious AMX Analysis Angola Anti-Ship Missile Useful antiaircraft Antonov Apache APP Argentine Asia-Pacific ASTOR ATC Attack AU-1 AU-2 Australia Australian Army Training B1 B52 BAE BAE Systems Baltic Bangladesh base Belarus Belgium Bharat Heavy Electricals Limited BHEL BMP-1P Boeing Boeing-Vertol 107 Bolivia Bomber Book books border dispute Brazil Brazil's Brazilian Brazilian Air Force's BRD-4 Brunei budget Bulgarian C-130 C-130J Super Hercules C-130s C-130T C-27J C-802 C212 CAF Canada Capabilities Caravan Cargo CAS CASA Celebration CH-53E CH-53K Challenges China China Navy Chinese Chinese New Z-19 clone CMID COIN Cold War Colombia Colombian communicaions conflict controversy Crash CSIST Curiosities Cyprus Czech Czech Ministry of Defence D-20 Guns DAPA Dassault deal Defence Defence Products Denmark Department of Defense development DoD DoD's dogfight DPP DRDO Drone E-3F EADS EBRC ECM Editorial Egypt Egypt Orders Rafale Fighter Aircraft. Embraer engine espionage Estonia Eurofighter Europe exercise F-16 F-16C/D F-16s F-35 F-35A F-35C F-5E F-5E's F-5s F/A-18 F15 F16 F2 F22 F35 F4 F5 FA-50 FAE fake fake Chinese parts Falklands FAP FC-1 FC-20 FFX Fighter fighter-bomber Fire Scout France French French Army French Defence French Navy's Fuerza Aérea Ecuatoriana future G-20 German Army Germany GoPro Greece Trials Gripen grounding Guerrilla Halwara air bases Hawk Helicopter History humor Hungrya Hurkus IAF IAI ICBM IFV Il-76MD-90A (Il-476) Ilyushin image IN India India's India's Ministry of Defence India’s new Defence Minister Indian Indian Navy Indian Navy's Indigenous Indonesia Indonesia. Iran Iran's Iraq Iraqi Government Iraqi Ministry of Defence Iraqi Shia militias IRIAF IRIAF's IRST ISF Islamic State Island ISR Israel Israel Aerospace Industries Israel's Israeli Defense Forces Italy J-10 J-10B J-20 J-31 J10 J11 J15 J16 J20 J31 Japan Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force Japan Ministry of Defence Japan's JAS 39E JASSM Jeddah Port JF-17 JF17 JH-7 jobs Judicial KAI KC-135 KC-46A KC390 KC46 Kenya's Coast Kfir KH-31 KH-35U KMW KMW's Kongsberg Naval Strike Missile korea KV-2 L-39 Lavi Law Liberation Army Navy Líbero Badaró Libya Libya's Lift litigation Lockheed Lockheed Martin Unveils Legion IRST Pod. London Navy M-346 M346 maintain Malaysia Malaysian government Maneuvers MBT Mi-24 Mi-24V Mi-35Ms Mi-35Ps Mi-8 Middle East Mig Mig-29K MIG-31 Military Military Helicopters Designs Minister for Defence Ministry of Defence Minsk Mirage Missile Mitsubishi MMRCA MND MoD modifications Moscow MPR MQ-8B MQ-8C Nanji NAO NATO NATO's NAVAIR Naval Aviation negotiations Nepal Nevada new capability new generation Next Genration of Mobility Niger Nigerian Air Force North Korea Northrop Northrop Grumman Norway NRP Obama's OBOGS OGMA Oman Defence organisational Oshkosh Defense Ouargla PAF PAK DA Aircraft’s PAK FA PAK-FA Pakistan Pakistan Army Pakistan Navy's Pantsir Paris patrol PBL People's Liberation Army PGG 618 Philippines PK PLA PLAAF PLAN PLANAF Poland Polish Army Polish Ministry of Defence Popras SAM Portugal Portuguese Navy preemptive strike ProAn-70 pproduction Production PT PAL's PzH 2000 QF-16 R-73 R-77 RAAF RAAF's RAF Rafale Red Arrows refueling repair replacement Republic of China Army requirements retired Rocket Launcher RoKN RoKN's Romain Rooivalk Royal Malaysian Navy's Royal Navy Royal Navy latest Spearfish Torpedo Royal Norwegian Army Royal Thai Navy RR RTAF RTD rumor Russia Russia New Military Russia's Russia's New Military Nuclear Strike Russian Russian Air Force Russian Air Force's Russian Army Russian Mi-28 Russian military Russian Ministry of Defence Russian Navy's Russian RD-93 S-26T SA-6 Saab SAAF Sales São Paulo SAR SAS Saudi Arabia Scorpion Separatists Serbia Serbia's Military Shia militant group SIFICAP Simulator Singapore SisCaPED Slovakia Software South African soyuz space Spain SR-71 SR71 Strike aircraft Su-34 SU-35 SU-35 Aircraft SU27 Su30 Su35 Submarine Sudan Sukhoi summary Support Switzerland Syria Syrian Atomic Energy Commission T-346A T-X tactics Taiwan Taiwan's Tanker Technology Tejas Textron The Berlin Air Show leatest Tor-M2U Tornado TOT Trainer Training Turkey Type 071 LPDs U.S. Navy UAC's UAE UAV UAV technology UCAV UK UK defence UK Ministry of Defence UK-based UK's UKIS Ukraine Ukrainian Ukrainian Separatists United Arab Emirates United Kingdom upgrade US US Air Force US Air Force's US Army US Department of Defense US forces US government US Marine Corps US Marine Corps F-35C US Navy US Navy's US-2i USA USAF USAF Contemplates A-10. USAF's USD USMC USN USN's USS V-22 V-22 Gunship VBMR Venezuela video Vietnam VTOL VVS Washington Weapons Western X-47B Xavier de Toledo Y20 Yak-130 Yak-152 Yemen Yemeni Air Force Z-18 Z-19 Zhuhai Air show Zhuhai Air Show 2014 ZU-23-2 ZU-23-2 Armed BMP-1P