Gripen News
Saab is celebrating the delivery of another advanced Gripen E, #4107, to the Brazilian Air Force. The Swedes have at least 60 E variants on order and Brazil has ordered 28 E-series and 8 F-series two-seaters for SEAD work for starters, with the Brazilian planes eventually to be assembled domestically at São Bernardo do Campo.
This is the seventh Swedish-made Gripen delivered to Brazil.
Is the Gripen E set for combat against Venuzealan F-16s and Su-30s over the skies of Guyana?
Maybe.
Likely not, but the probability is never zero.
What’s so good about the Gripen E?
First introduced in 1996, over 250 earlier Gripen A/B and C/D-series aircraft have been produced over the past 15 years for a half-dozen countries from Europe to Thailand and South Africa.
But the E is not your daddy’s Gripen.
The Gripen E, or Super Gripen, uses a new engine, the GE F414G (developed from the Super Hornet’s engine) which allows it to supercruise at Mach 1.1, as well as a Raven ES-05 active electronically scanned array (AESA) radar (based on the Leonardo Vixen), and has significantly increased internal fuel capacity that gives it something like 40 percent greater range. It also has two additional underwing hardpoints than the older planes.
In short, it is a budget answer to the F-18E and F-35A while falling technologically somewhere between the two.
Saab recently managed to get footage of operational Swedish Gripen E and legacy Gripen C spending some quality time together.
Enjoy.






