What's new

NAL gets India's first facility to test Micro-Air Vehicles

RPK

SENIOR MEMBER
Joined
Jul 6, 2009
Messages
6,862
Reaction score
-6
Country
India
Location
United States
NAL gets India's first facility to test Micro-Air Vehicles - Bangalore - DNA


India’s Rs 80 crore national Micro Air Vehicle (MAV) programme to design and develop MAV has got a boost with the setting up of a Micro Air Vehicle Aerodynamics Research Tunnel in the National Aerospace Laboratories (NAL) campus in the city -- the first of its kind in India to test fixed-, flapping- and rotary-wing MAVs in the 500 mm (50- cm) wingspan category.

The Union home ministry is planning to technologically beef up internal security to fight terror and naxalism within the country’s borders through low-intensity, contained conflicts.

And it is looking at MAVs for the purpose due to which the MAV programme was kick-started.

The national programme is a joint initiative of Defence Research and Development Organization (DRDO), Department of Science and Technology, Centre for Science and Industrial Research (CSIR), NAL, private industries and academia. A few products have already been developed by DRDO laboratories along with the private industry, like the autonomous Unmanned Air Vehicle, Netra, which featured in the Bollywood movie, 3 Idiots.

This has already been inducted by Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) and Border Security Force (BSF). Similarly, NAL has also developed three MAVs: Black Kite, Golden Hawk and Pushpak. The Black Kite -- a 300mm wingspan fixed wing autonomous MAV with an endurance of 30 minutes -- has an autopilot system developed indigenously.

Golden Hawk is a fixed-wing MAV. The two prototypes developed by NAL are based on conventional and the blended wing. That apart city-based National Design and Research Forum (NDRF) is also involved in the research and development MAV’s in the 300 mm to 1000 mm class.
 
so now NAL is also developing. I hope in future we will be having two premier aerospace companies that will be healthy for our IAF and also that will reduce HAL's workload.
 
Back
Top Bottom