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Indian HALE UAV Requirement Draws Interest
The Indian navy's interest in a long-endurance maritime-surveillance unmanned aircraft system is drawing the attention of vendors in Israel, Europe and the U.S., and Northrop Grumman has been cleared by the U.S. government to conduct preliminary discussions with the Indian navy on the MQ-4C Triton...
...Elbit Systems' Hermes 900 MP is another maritime-patrol UAS that has caught the Indian navy's attention. Boeing InSitu's ScanEagle small UAS, which can be launched from ships but is not a long-endurance vehicle, is also in the mix.
In 2010, the Indian navy announced its interest in acquiring a fleet of high-altitude long-endurance (HALE) maritime UAVs. It stipulated at the time that it was looking for an aircraft with a mission endurance of at least 25 hr., maximum all-up weight of 15 tons, cruising speed of 100 kt. and service ceiling of 40,000 ft...
...For more than two years, the navy has also been in the market for shipborne rotary-wing UAS. Competitors include the Northrop Grumman MQ-8 Fire Scout, Saab Skeldar V-200 and EADS Cassidian Tanan 300. The requirement was floated following slow movement on the naval rotary UAV program, on which Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd. (HAL) is working with IAI, based on the locally built Chetak (Alouette III) helicopter. The program has run into several hurdles with the autopilot and other systems, delaying it indefinitely and compelling the navy to remove it from its immediate requirements list.
India's indigenously designed Rustom-H HALE UAS is slated for a first flight in February 2014 and has commenced ground tests. Powered by twin turboprop engines, the UAS will be developed into three variants: one for land surveillance, one for extended maritime reconnaissance and a hunter-killer variant that will be built to deploy stand-off strike weapons.
Indian HALE UAV Requirement Draws Interest