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Indian defence SME beats out global giants to deliver command system to Malaysian warships

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On Monday, the Royal Malaysian Navy (RMN) cleared a combat management system (CMS) that a small, but cutting-edge, Indian electronics company has developed for two of its frontline warships – the British-origin RMN frigates, KD Leiku and KD Jebat.

A warship’s CMS is the brain of its combat capability. The CMS continuously interacts with all the ship’s sensors and weapons – including radar, sonar, missiles, rockets and torpedoes – and assesses the threats that they detect. Then, the CMS suggests weapons to neutralise the threat; and it fires and controls those weapons.
1568144999-2459.jpg

In addition, the sophisticated CMS software collaborates with friendly warships’ command systems over a real time datalink. This develops a “common operating picture” for fleet operations.

Validating the truism that high-technology is mostly developed by micro, small and medium enterprises (SMEs), C2C DB Systems is the only Indian firm that has developed a complete CMS, including tactical datalink capability and warfighting modules (which navies guard zealously).

For example, the Indian Navy’s warfighting modules are developed secretly by an in-house department called the Weapon and Electronics Engineering Establishment (WESEE). The CMS’ supporting modules are developed by companies like Bharat Electronics Ltd and Tata Power (Strategic Engineering Division).

C2C DB Systems is based in Bengaluru and has a total strength of 50, including senior management, hardware and software engineers and mechanical design engineers. Its annual turnover is around Rs 25 crore.

Yet, this small firm partnered with a Malaysian firm, Marine Crest Technologies, to wrest the tightly contested RMN contract from global competitors such as Thales of France, Saab of Sweden and UK-headquartered BAE Systems.

RMN placed the order for the two CMSs and tactical datalink systems in April 2018, stipulating a delivery period of just nine months for the first system. Typically, developing a similar system in India takes about two years.

With C2C DB demonstrating the complete functionality of the CMS and datalink during “factory acceptance trials” in January 2019, and the system shipped to Malaysia the next month, C2C DB Systems became the only Indian entity to have developed a complete CMS, along with a tactical datalink. It is also the only Indian entity to have exported such a system.

The complete system was installed on board the first RMN frigate in March, after being fully integrated with the warship’s weapons and sensors. “Harbour acceptance trials” of the tactical datalink were unconditionally cleared on Monday, while CMS trials are under way. Next will come “sea acceptance trials” at the end of this month.

C2C DB Systems is tightly integrated into India’s warship production eco-system. It has worked with WESEE to develop the complete front-end software for the CMS of India’s first indigenous aircraft carrier, INS Vikrant. It has also done classified work for the nuclear missile submarine, INS Arihant.

http://ajaishukla.blogspot.com/2019/09/indian-defence-sme-beats-out-global.html
 
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On Monday, the Royal Malaysian Navy (RMN) cleared a combat management system (CMS) that a small, but cutting-edge, Indian electronics company has developed for two of its frontline warships – the British-origin RMN frigates, KD Leiku and KD Jebat.

A warship’s CMS is the brain of its combat capability. The CMS continuously interacts with all the ship’s sensors and weapons – including radar, sonar, missiles, rockets and torpedoes – and assesses the threats that they detect. Then, the CMS suggests weapons to neutralise the threat; and it fires and controls those weapons.
1568144999-2459.jpg

In addition, the sophisticated CMS software collaborates with friendly warships’ command systems over a real time datalink. This develops a “common operating picture” for fleet operations.

Validating the truism that high-technology is mostly developed by micro, small and medium enterprises (SMEs), C2C DB Systems is the only Indian firm that has developed a complete CMS, including tactical datalink capability and warfighting modules (which navies guard zealously).

For example, the Indian Navy’s warfighting modules are developed secretly by an in-house department called the Weapon and Electronics Engineering Establishment (WESEE). The CMS’ supporting modules are developed by companies like Bharat Electronics Ltd and Tata Power (Strategic Engineering Division).

C2C DB Systems is based in Bengaluru and has a total strength of 50, including senior management, hardware and software engineers and mechanical design engineers. Its annual turnover is around Rs 25 crore.

Yet, this small firm partnered with a Malaysian firm, Marine Crest Technologies, to wrest the tightly contested RMN contract from global competitors such as Thales of France, Saab of Sweden and UK-headquartered BAE Systems.

RMN placed the order for the two CMSs and tactical datalink systems in April 2018, stipulating a delivery period of just nine months for the first system. Typically, developing a similar system in India takes about two years.

With C2C DB demonstrating the complete functionality of the CMS and datalink during “factory acceptance trials” in January 2019, and the system shipped to Malaysia the next month, C2C DB Systems became the only Indian entity to have developed a complete CMS, along with a tactical datalink. It is also the only Indian entity to have exported such a system.

The complete system was installed on board the first RMN frigate in March, after being fully integrated with the warship’s weapons and sensors. “Harbour acceptance trials” of the tactical datalink were unconditionally cleared on Monday, while CMS trials are under way. Next will come “sea acceptance trials” at the end of this month.

C2C DB Systems is tightly integrated into India’s warship production eco-system. It has worked with WESEE to develop the complete front-end software for the CMS of India’s first indigenous aircraft carrier, INS Vikrant. It has also done classified work for the nuclear missile submarine, INS Arihant.

http://ajaishukla.blogspot.com/2019/09/indian-defence-sme-beats-out-global.html

LOL, poor indians and their overly self-masturbatory articles in the face of utter humiliation and lack of any achievements.

Just to put things in perspective. 1/20th the size of india, Turkey alone exports more defense equipment around the world than 'mighty' india with 1.4 billion people :rofl:
 
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LOL, poor indians and their overly self-masturbatory articles in the face of utter humiliation and lack of any achievements.

Just to put things in perspective. 1/20th the size of india, Turkey alone exports more defense equipment around the world than 'mighty' india with 1.4 billion people :rofl:

Turkey is still smaller than Pakistan.
 
. . .
You think, please check the numbers.
Do not quote facts when people are riding high on agenda.

On Monday, the Royal Malaysian Navy (RMN) cleared a combat management system (CMS) that a small, but cutting-edge, Indian electronics company has developed for two of its frontline warships – the British-origin RMN frigates, KD Leiku and KD Jebat.

A warship’s CMS is the brain of its combat capability. The CMS continuously interacts with all the ship’s sensors and weapons – including radar, sonar, missiles, rockets and torpedoes – and assesses the threats that they detect. Then, the CMS suggests weapons to neutralise the threat; and it fires and controls those weapons.
1568144999-2459.jpg

In addition, the sophisticated CMS software collaborates with friendly warships’ command systems over a real time datalink. This develops a “common operating picture” for fleet operations.

Validating the truism that high-technology is mostly developed by micro, small and medium enterprises (SMEs), C2C DB Systems is the only Indian firm that has developed a complete CMS, including tactical datalink capability and warfighting modules (which navies guard zealously).

For example, the Indian Navy’s warfighting modules are developed secretly by an in-house department called the Weapon and Electronics Engineering Establishment (WESEE). The CMS’ supporting modules are developed by companies like Bharat Electronics Ltd and Tata Power (Strategic Engineering Division).

C2C DB Systems is based in Bengaluru and has a total strength of 50, including senior management, hardware and software engineers and mechanical design engineers. Its annual turnover is around Rs 25 crore.

Yet, this small firm partnered with a Malaysian firm, Marine Crest Technologies, to wrest the tightly contested RMN contract from global competitors such as Thales of France, Saab of Sweden and UK-headquartered BAE Systems.

RMN placed the order for the two CMSs and tactical datalink systems in April 2018, stipulating a delivery period of just nine months for the first system. Typically, developing a similar system in India takes about two years.

With C2C DB demonstrating the complete functionality of the CMS and datalink during “factory acceptance trials” in January 2019, and the system shipped to Malaysia the next month, C2C DB Systems became the only Indian entity to have developed a complete CMS, along with a tactical datalink. It is also the only Indian entity to have exported such a system.

The complete system was installed on board the first RMN frigate in March, after being fully integrated with the warship’s weapons and sensors. “Harbour acceptance trials” of the tactical datalink were unconditionally cleared on Monday, while CMS trials are under way. Next will come “sea acceptance trials” at the end of this month.

C2C DB Systems is tightly integrated into India’s warship production eco-system. It has worked with WESEE to develop the complete front-end software for the CMS of India’s first indigenous aircraft carrier, INS Vikrant. It has also done classified work for the nuclear missile submarine, INS Arihant.

http://ajaishukla.blogspot.com/2019/09/indian-defence-sme-beats-out-global.html

If news is correct then very interesting capability being developed in India.
 
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And on per capita basis, Pakistan's in-house defence production and exports are still far higher than india's lmao.
Per-Capita defence production?
What the hell is that and how is it relevant? Did you come up with a metric out of thin air?
Defence production per capita is meaningless because MOST of the population is not involved in defence production. HECK defence production does not scale with population.

http://armstrade.sipri.org/armstrade/html/export_toplist.php

Actually, even by those artificial terms, Pakistan will be way behind. 2 Billion dollars for 210 million people Vs 46 billion dollar for 1.4 billion people. Thats 23 times smaller vs 7 times smaller.

Anyways, population is very poor metric in defence production and export.

Just to put things in perspective. 1/20th the size of india, Turkey alone exports more defense equipment around the world than 'mighty' india with 1.4 billion people :rofl:
You could have quoted Israel. Actually Israel will put Turkey China and everyone else to shame.

Important point again: When it comes to defense exports, size is meaningless.
 
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Awesome news. We hope india gives them system based on their own systems.. So that malaysia can help us understand and decrypt it . could be an asset in war time. I hope to see pakistan navy and airforce excercises to share these information in months to come .
Looks good!
 
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Awesome news. We hope india gives them system based on their own systems.. So that malaysia can help us understand and decrypt it . could be an asset in war time. I hope to see pakistan navy and airforce excercises to share these information in months to come .
Looks good!
The beauty of any system worth its salt is that its strength does not lies in the secrecy of its design but secrets outside the design. If India has done her homework, even if the entire design is made public it will be of not much use.
 
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The beauty of any system worth its salt is that its strength does not lies in the secrecy of its design but secrets outside the design. If India has done her homework, even if the entire design is made public it will be of not much use.

Yes exactly as Qatari Rafale are of no use to pakistan air force personnel and tejas to malaysia are of no use to paf personnel. I get it.
 
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Yes exactly as Qatari Rafale are of no use to pakistan air force personnel and tejas to malaysia are of no use to paf personnel. I get it.
Yes, exactly like that. Or Indian Su30s will not be of much use to understand and defeat Chinese Su30s.
 
. . .
http://armstrade.sipri.org/armstrade/html/export_toplist.php

Actually, even by those artificial terms, Pakistan will be way behind. 2 Billion dollars for 210 million people Vs 46 billion dollar for 1.4 billion people. Thats 23 times smaller vs 7 times smaller.

Anyways, population is very poor metric in defence production and export.

:rofl::rofl::rofl::rofl::rofl::rofl::rofl::rofl::rofl:

What the f*ck are you even blabbering about? Show me where did india exported $46 billion worth of defence equipment annually? The link you gave is broken to begin with. India is not even mentioned in 2015 in SIPRI's new report for 2019.

You are probably confusing IMPORTS with exports :lol::lol::lol:...Re-read your own f*cking link dude...and this time, try to be less obviously drunk on cow piss, indian...lol

Pakistan's defence sector has been far more successful than india's slow, disorganized, and bureaucratic defence sector. Highly successful JF-17 project vs absolutely laughable Tejas project is clear example of how Pakistan's defence sector delivers while india's is an embarrassment...

And oh, change your flags while you're at it. i know its embarrassing to be an indian but still...c'mon
 
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Per-Capita defence production?
What the hell is that and how is it relevant? Did you come up with a metric out of thin air?
Defence production per capita is meaningless because MOST of the population is not involved in defence production. HECK defence production does not scale with population.

http://armstrade.sipri.org/armstrade/html/export_toplist.php

Actually, even by those artificial terms, Pakistan will be way behind. 2 Billion dollars for 210 million people Vs 46 billion dollar for 1.4 billion people. Thats 23 times smaller vs 7 times smaller.

Anyways, population is very poor metric in defence production and export.


You could have quoted Israel. Actually Israel will put Turkey China and everyone else to shame.

Important point again: When it comes to defense exports, size is meaningless.

Indian masquerading as a candian.
 
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