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India successfully test fires made-in-India MP-ATGM anti-tank missile

Defence Acquisition Council to take up deal with DRDO through government-to-government rout.

A deal to procure the anti-tank guided missiles from DRDO through the government-to-government route has been brought before the Defence Acquisition Council (DAC) for approval. However, some validation trials have to be held before the deal is signed.


“Validation trials of the infrared seeker (IR) are to be held. Once the DAC accords approval, the trials will be performed during the summer,” a defence source said.

The deal will feature on the agenda of the DAC which is scheduled to meet early this week. The deal is for 170 launchers, 4,500 missiles and 15 simulators.

Another defence source said the missile did not perform as desired in the previous trials during peak summer temperatures in the desert, and hence the need to validate its performance.

The earlier deal was cancelled in January after protracted negotiations, just ahead of the visit of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to India. It was decided that the requirement could be met through the indigenous man-portable missile being developed by the Defence Research and Development Organisation.

However, as the Army is faced with a huge shortage of anti-tank guided missiles and the indigenous system missed development deadlines, it was decided that a smaller number will be procured off the shelf through the government-to-government route.


The earlier $500-million deal for Spike missiles was accorded Acceptance of Necessity (AoN) by the DAC in 2009 and was approved in October 2014, but contract negotiations dragged on over cost and technology transfer. The deal was for 8,000-plus missiles and 300-plus launchers, along with technology transfer to build them in India.

Spike is a third-generation, fire-and-forget, man-portable missile manufactured by Israel’s Rafael.

In all, nearly 40,000 missiles are required to equip the Army’s 382 infantry battalions and 44 mechanised regiments.

The indigenous low-weight missile was successfully flight-tested twice by the DRDO from the Ahmednagar test range last week.
 
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Many suprb new misslies are coming in India's inventory. Akash mk2, QR Sam, Astra, now anti shoulder fire anti tank guided missile etc. An intercepter like Barak 1 is planned to protect ships. Very few countries have matching capabilities.

Pralan and Prahar are also getting ready.
 
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check your quote and previous post , dont change stance when get defeated, as per if india making Mark-II then mark -I is failed , but if PAF and Chinese make then its ok. :rofl::rofl:
Lols its not win or defeat, i am just stating facts @Tristar :crazy::crazy:, we have not vast aerospace as India,JF-17 project is our first project to how to R&D, build and manufacture a modern jet (learning project) @Tristar :angel:
lol, Well IAF is not PAF , Indian test F-16 Most advance version was failed, but Lower version of F-16 is Main fighter of PAF , this tell us lot of our standards , lol:rofl::rofl::rofl: . dear, where PAF specification stop, IAF start making from that point.
its one of the most successful, battle proven jet, and this is not reason for rejection of your F-16 bid but for that F-16 case getting close to an end of production that's why you close your single engine jet bids and tell me one thing why USAF using Block-52 if it is inferior to indian proposed version @Tristar o_O:what::undecided: keep blabbering without a base @Tristar :blah::blah::blah:
When it was tested to drop bombs tell the dates and crashed date , tell me from which dates, f-16 bombing ??dates..lol
here it is
first JF-17 crashed

14-NOV-2011

A CAC/PAC JF-17 Thunder of the Pakistan Air Force crashed into Mullah Mansoor mountain near Attock, about 70 KM west of Islamabad.

The pilot bailed out but was killed after his parachute failed to deploy properly.

The plane was on a routine operational training mission.
https://aviation-safety.net/wikibase/wiki.php?id=139885

second crash

27-SEP-2016


The plane crashed during Exercise High Mark. The pilot ejected safely.
https://aviation-safety.net/wikibase/wiki.php?id=190427

and as for bombing in north/south waziristan

On 18 February 2010, the first JF-17 squadron, No. 26 Black Spiders, was officially inducted into the PAF with an initial strength of 14 fighter planes.[107][108] These aircraft first saw service in the anti-terrorist operation in South Waziristan, during which various types of weapons were evaluated.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CAC/PAC_JF-17_Thunder#Operational_history

bombing run of F-16 on south wziristan
Since May, F-16 multirole fighter jets have flown more than 300 combat missions against militants in the Swat Valley and more than 100 missions in South Waziristan, attacking mountain hide-outs, training centers and ammunition depots, Pakistani military officials said.

https://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/30/world/asia/30pstan.html

sorry to brust your bubble kid @Tristar :sarcastic::suicide::suicide2::lol::rofl:;):enjoy::rofl:
 
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https://www.ndtv.com/india-news/nis...cle-of-indian-army-crashes-in-pokhran-1245328
Homegrown Nishant Drone's Perfect Crash Record

nishant-uav-650_650x400_51447955661.jpg

Army sources said the UAV, the last of the four inducted in 2011, crashed near Pokhran in Jaisalmer district of Rajasthan.

New Delhi: There were meant to be the eyes and ears of the Indian Army - a state of the art unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) meant to give Army commanders high definition images of a battlefield, help designate targets, and provide Electronic and Signal Intelligence information.

Instead, the home-grown Nishant UAV, developed by the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) is a flop with all four aircraft in service with the Indian Army having crashed. And now, the Army has had enough. They want no more Nishant drones from the DRDO. Each drone had cost the Army Rs. 22 crore.

The last of the four Nishants in service with the Army went down near the Pokhran range in Rajasthan today. According to Army sources, "Today's crash is due to a technical glitch." Just 15 days back, another Nishant had gone down, also for a technical reason. Earlier in April, two other Nishant drones had crash landed near the India-Pakistan border near Jaisalmer.

Under development for two decades, the Nishant, designed to fly for four and a half hours, was first inducted into the Indian Army in 2011 after successfully completing confirmatory trials. Launched by a catapult system, the Nishant is recovered after it deploys a parachute at the end of the each mission.

For their part, the DRDO has blamed the user for poor handling of the system, a point categorically denied by the Army.

The DRDO was banking on the success of the Nishant drone and was also developed a wheeled version of the system called the Panchi. The future of this programme now remains unclear.

53 COMMENTS
India's armed forces uses a variety of UAVs including Israeli built Heron and Searcher aircraft which are larger and significantly more capable that the Nishant in its present state of development. A smaller drone, called the Nethra which was developed by graduates of the Indian Institute of
Technology is also in use with the forces and is widely used by police and paramiltiary forces and the National Disaster Relief Force.


You said a 100 crashed...your link says 4 crashed. So tell me again, how do you manage to come up with these beautiful but fictitious stories?
 
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