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Defence sector to spend Rs 20,000 cr on fibreglass products: Chander

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The Indian defence sector is expected to spend Rs 20,000 crore in a decade on products made out of fibreglass for use in the latest weaponry systems, said the top official of country’s premier defence research organisation.

The fibreglass (composite) content in the defence industry will alone be Rs 20,000 crore from the total Rs 200,000 crore worth spending in the development of indigenous defence systems in the next 10 years,” said Avinash Chander, chief of Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO), today.

In his inaugural address at the international conference on reinforced plastics here, Chander said the DRDO was working on raising the utilisation of fibreglass material components in the next version of light combat aircraft (LCA) Tejas equipped with Mark-II engine, from the “present 65 per cent to up to 80 per cent”.

“The wings for the aircraft are now totally being made out of fibreglass structures. We are going to look at having the entire fuselage made out of them. Once we achieve this, we want the domestic industry to manufacture the secondary (internal) structures in the aircraft,” he said.

On the role of the private sector in making the country self-reliant on fibreglass materials and technologies, he said, “while the domestic industry has the potential, they need to strive for establishing high quality standards, achieve the required scale”, which according to him are the “deciding factors”.

Fibreglass materials are being widely used in the defence manufacturing industry to cut down the use of structures made from metals and improve the maneuverability of aircraft, agility of the fired missile besides reducing their body weight.

Chander also said while a lot of research had been taking place at the various labs of DRDO on developing new technologies in the area of fibreglass, he expects the private sector to ink partnerships and JVs with the global makers to adopt latest industry standards, as part of ‘Make in India’ initiative.

Noting the use of fibreglass has been an integral part of the country's Agni series of missiles, he said research was happening to make use of them in the manufacture of submarines, unmanned aerial vehicles and light-weight radars.

To improve the availability of skilled workforce in the fibreglass manufacturing industry, he said, it was high time the country developed composite materials engineering on the lines of metallurgical engineering.

The country needs at least 100,000 engineers to work in the fibreglass industry in the next 10 years.

Defence sector to spend Rs 20,000 cr on fibreglass products: Chander | Business Standard News
 
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Chander is still the chief of DRDO :unsure:


His last day is saturday, when we fire AGNI-V

Composite materials are future, says DRDO chief

Scientific Advisor to Defence Minister Avinash Chander on Thursday categorically stated that composite materials were future of scientific advances. Considering the enormous potential they had, it was time for the industry to come together and work on quality and standardisation issues.

“We need to collaborate with each other, forge new partnerships, consolidate strengths and scale up capacity. We want the industry to grow,” he said, at the inaugural of a three-day, international conference and exhibition on reinforced plastics here.

“The rate at which industry is growing and considering India’s growth rate which was expected to touch seven per cent, composites meant a lot to the country. While the utility of composites are ever-increasing, we need to examine the equipment that will make them and the processes required to strengthen the composite matrix. We should also work on being cost-effective,” Mr. Avinash Chander told the representatives of the industry.

The challenges that needed to be addressed were many, starting from constantly increasing the strength of composites in view of their applications in practically every sphere of activity, to the number of trained personnel required. “Over the next decade, we estimate that we will need at least 1,00,000 engineers who will deal in composites alone. That is why we need to make composites a specialised, standalone subject, like metallurgy, in our universities,” he said.

From high-end defence applications including artillery shells and rocket motor casings to using composites, reinforced plastics are used in building high-speed trains and railway coaches. They are also used for the fuselage of airplanes, Mr. Avinash Chander who is also the Director-General of Defence Research and Development Organisation said.

Earlier, Industries Minister of Telangana Jupally Krishna Rao said the Government of Telangana had a land bank of 2.5 lakh acres and it was keen on making sector-specific allotments. He said that the Government would allotting 200 acres in the Ibrahimpatnam industrial cluster, exclusively for use by industries in the rinforced plastics and composites sector.
 
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As Far I Know Drdo is Great in Composite Materials department Be it Kanchan Armour or Composite Fire Design in Lca.
 
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Great ... And don't make this as a reason to delay our Tejas 2 ... It's need Oh the hour. Keep it flying then we can add more and more fiberglass to make its more lethal ... Small Request to DRDO
 
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As Far I Know Drdo is Great in Composite Materials department Be it Kanchan Armour or Composite Fire Design in Lca.

no doubt!!
Complete fuselage and wings made of composite materials is a new one and probably the first one.
 
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Badi badi batein. Time to say good bye to drdo. Time has come for private joint venryr .
 
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no doubt!!
Complete fuselage and wings made of composite materials is a new one and probably the first one.
Does it increase the strength of the Fuselage ? Compared with metal alloy ?
 
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