SteelBird said:
IndianFighter:
I've seen you working so hard in posting on two forums: the [Latest Indian MKI aircraft facing problems] and this forum. But do you think that you've posted too much?
I think that it's not good to post too much, because the side effect would make it becoming your personal thread and nobody would bother to check it.
At begining, I was quite interested in the MKI affairs, but later on when the thread goes off its orginal topic, I got tired and don't even check that thread. When eventualy check it, I found that the posters are mostly IndianFighter, IndianFighter and IndianFighter.... and very few others...
Just my suggestion, no other meaning, hope that you would consider it
Sincere yours
SteelBird
Hello Steelbird. A few months ago I had started 2 threads : Indian Air Force News thread and Indian Army & Navy news thread, where I kept posting newws articles (mainly from BR).
But there was an altercation between myself and another member (now banned) on the IA and IN news thread, and hence those threads were locked as well as all topics related to India were banned.
Recently the latter rule was relaxed and news reports were posted. I requested Gollevainen to unlock those threads but he did not do so as old argumentss might have resurfaced.
Thus, I publicly made a declaration that IAF news shall be posted on the MKI thread and IA & Navy news on this thread itself.
Kindly read post #7 (by me) and post #8 (by Gollevainen). It was on Gollevainen's insistence that this thread has been kept for ALL India-related news so that a new thread is not started for every small news report.
I have also made this suggestion clear on post #15 on this URL:
http://www.sinodefenceforum.com/showthread.php?t=1846
Thank you.
Regards.
_____________________
Delays, glitches hit missile plan
Rajat Pandit
[ Sunday, June 11, 2006 11:56:45 pm]
NEW DELHI: India may have successfully tested Prithvi yet again on Sunday, but the fact is that its 23-year-old missile programme still continues to be haunted by technical glitches, time and cost overruns.
As if this was not enough, lack of requisite political will often also stymies development plans as shown by the delay in the maiden test-launch of the nuclear-capable Agni-III missile, as reported by TOI earlier.
Pakistan, conversely, continues to make steady progress in the missile arena. Of course, unlike India's "largely" indigenous efforts, Pakistan's programme has been based on covert help from China and North Korea, with the active support of the now infamous A Q Khan network.
Pakistan's 'Shaheen' missiles, for instance, are basically derived from Chinese M-9, M-11 and M-18 missiles, while
its 'Ghauri' series owe their origin to North Korean Nodong missiles. Even its latest 'Babur' cruise missile has "foreign imprints".
Be that as it may, here's a status report on the Indian missiles :
Prithvi: This tactical surface-to-surface "battlefield support" missile is the only one to be "fully and confidently operationalised" by the Army till now.
While the Army version has a strike range of 40 to 150-km with a one-tonne warhead, the IAF (P-II) and Navy (Dhanush) variants have a 250-km range with a 500-kg payload. Further tests, like the one on Sunday, are being conducted to finetune the different variants and increase their range.
Agni: This family of road and rail-mobile ballistic missiles constitute an important leg of India's nuclear deterrence posture. But while the Pakistan-specific Agni-I (700 to 800-km) and China-specific Agni-II (2,500-km) missiles have now been inducted into the Armed Forces, "some operational glitches" are still being sorted out, say sources.
As for the two-stage solid-fuelled Agni-III, the country's most ambitious missile till now, since it can deliver a one-tonne nuclear payload to over 3,000-km, its first test is now likely in August. "But it will take a few more tests before it can be ready," said sources.
BrahMos: This supersonic 300-km range cruise missile, first tested in June 2001, has done remarkably well, primarily because it's a joint project with Russia. Already installed in some warships, with destroyer INS Rajput being the first one, it has also being tested in the land-attack mode by Army.
Contracts worth Rs 3,500 crore have being inked with Navy and Army for this missile. Even as work is in progress to configure BrahMos on the Sukhoi-30MKI fighters,
the government has now also sanctioned additional R&D funds towards doubling the present missile speed of 2.8 Mach.
Sagarika: Sanctioned in 1990, the development work on this submarine-launched land-attack missile has seen many ups and downs, with even a change in its profile from a ballistic missile to a cruise one. The Armed Forces now hope to test the cruise missile variants in the next two years.
Akash and Trishul: These crucial surface-to-air missiles (air defence systems) have fared the worst since they were conceived in the mid-1980s. The 9-km range Trishul's repeated failure, in fact, forced Navy to push for Israeli 'Barak' missile defence systems for its frontline warships during the 1999 Kargil conflict.
Defence Research and Development Organisation now says the 25-km range Akash, with 13 test flights in 2005 and three in January this year, has now completed "all development trials" and is ready for "user-trials". But it will still take a long time for Akash and the almost-dead Trishul to actually, if ever, enter the Armed Forces' inventory.
Nag: Similar is the case with this four-km anti-tank guided missile, touted to have "top-attack" and "fire-and-forget" capabilities, despite being tested over 50 times since 1990.
DRDO holds Nag's "pre-user trails" have been completed and the final user trials will be held between July and ecember. "But even then, it will take at least two years for it to become fully operational," said an officer.
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