Re: Indian Arihant Class Nuclear Ballistic Missile Submarines
Single crystal blades are extremely demanding customers. A friend who used to work for Royals Royce told me a fascinating story once.
Back in the day, RR had a serious quality control issue with their single crystal blades where the blades had an unusually high failure rate and for a long time, no-one could figure out what the cause was.
Every major facet of production was checked, rechecked and triple checked, found to be on spec yet the blades kept failing.
In the end, one of the senior engineers decided to physically follow the production of a batch of blades himself from start to finish, and he only discovered the cause of the defects at the very end, when the freshly made blades were placed into the warehouse.
Turns out, the guys at the warehouse were just stacking the new blades one on top of another in large stacks, and the weight of the blades on top caused those at the bottom of the pile to weaken and deform by a tiny tiny fraction, but that was enough to cause the blades to fail when stressed at max thrust.
That just shows how even the smallest, most insignificant seeming thing could make all the difference when you are dealing with materials of such high performance and tolerances.
However, I do not think India's engine problems are the result of a simple case of QC.
The Kavari suffers from the same fundamental problems that plague all Indian defense projects - India's blind and utterly insane* trust in foreign ToT.
Foreign companies are profit making entities that cares first (and many suspects only) about their own profits. How would it make any sense for them to teach their biggest cash cow customer how to develop their own stuff so they would no longer need to buy from said foreign companies?
I am really struggling to think of a single example were Indian co-operation with foreign companies and ToT agreements have allowed India to develop a single new advanced weapons system indigenously using the tech they were supposed to have gotten as part of the deal.
Apong, I think you are a very optimistic soul if you think think for a second that the Kavari will become something close to being good enough to replace the French M88s since it is the French who are your main technical consultants on the Kavari in the first place.
The very best case scenario for India would be that after years or decades more development and a frightful amount of consultation fees, the Kavari indeed becomes and engine good enough to replace the M88s in their Rafales. Just in time for France to bring out a new follow-on enough to the M88 that blows the new Kavari out of the water.
*I am using the technical definition for insanity as someone doing exactly the same thing time and time again yet always expecting a different outcome. No insult is meant. How many times has Indian been down this road where a foreign company promised them the world and they ended up with just short of enough to master the technology themselves?