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New jacket Invented in India, tested by Indian army in -40C at Siachen gla

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New jacket Invented in India, tested by Indian army in -40C at Siachen glacier

_53029386_maninjacket.jpg

Mr Vistakula the inventor wearing same jacket


By Omer Farooq BBC News, Hyderabad

Kranthi Kumar Vistakula models his climate-control jacket Mr Vistakula says he is even considering designing a jacket for cows

An Indian inventor is developing clothes which keep the wearer comfortable in extreme temperatures.

Kranthi Kiran Vistakula started with a jacket and is now applying his idea to shoes, scarves and even dinner plates.

The clothes use Peltier light-weight plastic plates with a thermo electric device.

The device is powered by rechargeable batteries which can be topped up by vehicles or even solar panels. They can last up to eight hours on one charge.

Mr Vistakula works with an enthusiastic young team in an isolated building near Hyderabad city, the capital of the southern Indian state of Andhra Pradesh.

Outside, the summer temperature is more than 40C. But Mr Vistakula looks as comfortable as if he is in a cool climate.

He is wearing a state of the art ClimaWare-jacket based on his own patented technology.


A Peltier plate consists of a junction between two metals. When an electric current passes through the junction, metal on one side heats up and on the other side it cools down, he explains.

The climate-controlled jacket, which weighs a little more than 1kg, has been successfully tested by the Indian army in Siachen glacier where temperatures are as low as -40C in winter. :yahoo::sniper:

Mr Vistakula's company, Dhama Innovations, is now developing a range of other products using the same technology.

"We have also developed shoes and they have been immensely liked by the army personnel in Siachen glacier," he says. :cheers:

Frostbite is a big problem for the army and the shoes have really helped, he said. :cheers:

Jacket for cows

Mr Vistakula is now setting up a manufacturing facility near Hyderabad for the mass production of his products, which include jackets, shoes, scarves, gloves and ear muffs. :cheers:

He is even considering a special jacket for cows.

"Basically when the cow is cooled, it gives more milk in summer," he explained. "So we're working on a jacket like that - a huge one."

Mr Vistakula says he started to develop the idea when he moved from his home city of Hyderabad to study engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of technology.

The difference in temperature came as a shock to him.

His first attempt weighed about 5kgs and had wires and fans. Everybody joked that he looked like a bomber. Then he started using Peltier plates.

There may also be a medical application for the technology. The team is working on a product called Haemosave which can freeze blood oozing out of a wound.

It is described as a potential life saver. It uses cryo or ice therapy to stop the blood flow and contract the blood vessels.

Other medical products include knee, neck wraps and elbow wraps. These devices can go instantly from 0C to 50C and help in controlling pain.

BBC News - Indian inventor develops jacket to heat or cool wearer
 
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Army should place bulk order for cold areas like Kashmir, Arunanchal Pradesh, HP, UK and hot areas like Rajasthan.

Its invented in India, made in India, made by Indian but after using it we can also export and earn from it.
 
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But peltiers are not that electrically efficient so they will require heavy bulky batteries unless the inventor has a clever answer to that with new tech batteries

Secondly, when current passes through a peltier one side heats up and other cools down. To continuously keep it heated, the cold should should lose energy rapidly or else the peltier will reach point of equilibrium. Removing cold energy in cold climate sounds like a challenge already in -40 C.

Thirdly, to call it an invention is mis leading because such gear has been used by motorcycle riders for years. Just Google

peltier heated jacket - Google Search

And the commercially available gear has battery life of 10-12 hours nominal.

Dont be in hurry to jump the indigenous band wagon.
 
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Oh one guy may say we did with the help of russia... and its not indigenous...
 
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Climate-controlled clothing: Don't forget to recharge your jacket | The Economist

Climate-controlled clothing
Don't forget to recharge your jacket
May 18th 2011, 17:35 by A.A.K. | MUMBAI

WHAT happens when a young Indian engineer moves from the sweltering heat of Andhra Pradesh to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), in a state notorious for its -15°C winters? He feels very cold and has to wear multiple layers of clothing, which he then finds himself wanting to remove whenever he enters a warm classroom. Kranthi Vistakula, who found himself in just this situation, credits a dazed mind, as well as his professors at MIT, for his decision to invent an all-weather jacket designed to cope with extreme temperatures—from the heat of Mumbai to the chill of a Mount Everest base camp.

His first approach was to build a jacket with built-in heating and cooling systems. Packed with motorised fans, heating pipes and electric wiring, the resulting apparel was bulky and weighed 7 kilograms. “When I wore it to college, my friends joked that I was going to blow up the place," says Mr Vistakula. So he went back to the drawing board, and turned instead to a thermoelectric device called a Peltier plate, which operates like its better-known cousin, the thermocouple, but in reverse. A thermocouple consists of a junction between two different metals, which produces an electrical voltage related to the difference in temperature between them. Thermocouples are widely used as temperature sensors. A Peltier plate also consists of a junction between two metals, but forcing an electric current across the junction causes the metal on one side to heat up, and the metal on the other side to cool down. A Peltier plate can thus be used as a heat pump.

Mr Vistakula ended up incorporating multiple Peltier plates, built into lightweight plastic tiles, into a jacket. The tiles are powered by a rechargeable battery that is also incorporated into the garment. Depending on the direction of the current flow, the jacket can either pump heat from the interior to the exterior (providing a cooling effect in hot weather) or vice versa (warming the wearer). A proprietary coating on the outside of each Peltier cell helps accelerate the flow of heat. In 2007 Mr Vistakula returned to India to set up a company to refine his new invention, with support from a government incubator fund and the venture-capital arm of Reliance Group, an industrial giant. (Reliance has since sold its stake in the firm.)

The finished jacket weighs about 650 grams, can maintain internal temperatures of between 20 and 40°C and can operate in ambient temperatures between −50 and 50°C. It runs for about eight hours on a single charge. So far the Climaware jacket has been tested successfully by the Border Roads Association, part of the Indian Army. It tried out the jacket’s heating function in environments including Khardungla, the world’s highest road for motor vehicles, and the Siachin glacier, the world’s highest battlefield, on the contested border with Pakistan. Other companies including Aspen Systems, Med-eng, Outlast and Foster-Miller offer similar products, in some cases using a chemical rather than an electrical approach to cooling and heating. Mr Vistakula says his technology, which he calls ClimaCon, is more easily recharged and results in lighter clothes.

ClimaCon is also being applied to other products by his company, Dhama Innovations, which is based in Hyderabad and employs 18 people. These include climate-controlled helmets, gloves, pain-relieving back and elbow wraps, car seats, shoes, and a cooling neck scarf for cricketers. “We can apply it anywhere,” says Mr Vistakula. One young engineer warmed a cup of coffee using a pair of ClimaCon shoes, which led to the idea of using the technology to make coasters and hot-plates. Climaware products for medical use went on sale in April, and an online store selling to consumers will open shortly. Will the market warm to Mr Vistakula’s invention? He will soon find out.

:enjoy:
 
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here are some of the specification.
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Features & Benefits

Extremely lightweight (~ 800 g
excluding batteries; weight of
battery ~ 600 g) and
manageable to maximize
performance and facililate easy,
unrestrained movement.
The USP of the technology is
that it combines heating and
cooling in a single jacket, so the
same jacket can be used in
multiple places of military duty.

18-22 points strategically placed
on the torso give maximum heat
dissipation.
Our unique system, for the first
time, empowers the wearer to
control the temperature inside
the jacket, within a range that is
optimum for performance and
protection. Temperature range
(inside jacket): ~ 18o C (64.4o
F ) to ~40oC (104o F) Operating
ambient temperature: -30o C
(-86o F) to 55o C (131o F).

Enduring quality and robustness
that is immune to damage in
adverse conditions.
The construction uses State of
the Art technology for absolute
precision and perfection.
Easily rechargeable LiPo (Lithium
Polymer) batteries, which come
in the form of a convenient
detachable belt, power the
system. A single charge of
battery lasts up to 8 hours of
complete performance.
Unique fabric technology
characterized by high wicking
action, advanced breathability
and anti-bacterial
treatment
ensures enhanced comfort and
odor-free prolonged use. The
jacket is perfectly contoured for
an excellent fit and ease of
movement.
SIMO (Single Inner Multiple
Outer) construction technology
provides the flexibility to use the
same inner layer (embedded
with the heating and cooling
technology) with varying outers
to comply with uniform protocol
and codes of conduct.

For a high-technology heavy-
duty performance jacket, it is
surprisingly easy to wash and
maintain. The inner layer can be
cleaned using a wet cloth or
sprayed with water steam when
in a hanging position. The
detachable outer layer can be
taken off and given a normal
regular wash.
Assured safety with the use of CE
certified electronic components.
100% Warranty for one year
extendable to three years.
Maximum protection and
maximum performance with
minimum weight addition.
ClimaWare - Jacket for the
soldiers working constantly
under extreme temperatures.
Carrying 30 to 40 pounds of gear
under a blistering 40oC sun
could easily lead to heat
exhaustion, heatstroke or even a
loss of life. Yet soldiers brave
these conditions everyday in
hostile locales with extreme
temperatures that make survival
a challenge for them.
Our
revolutionary product lessens
their ordeal without adding to
their burden.
The ClimaWare-extreme
performance jacket, ingrained
with unique high - technology
heating/cooling function, is
specially designed for use by
soldiers. Weighing no more than
a regular pair of denims, it is an
extremely lightweight product
that aids survival and enhances
performance without hampering
movement and agility. It is
designed to combine
compactness and ruggedness to
match up to the toughest of
military requirements.[/A]
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this is from the inventors company with some other project development
Dhama Innovations
 
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here are some other products
.
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af_haemosave.jpg

.
.
HAEMOSAVE.
.
More lives are lost to blood loss
than to the bullet itself. And
therefore, we made Haemosave
possible.
Timely prevention of critical
blood loss can significantly bring
down soldier mortality by
increasing the chances of survival
and recovery. ClimaWare -
Haemosave is a brilliantly
designed system that instantly
controls severe bleeding, pain
and inflammation by way of
rapid four-point action: Cooling,
Coagulation, Compression and
Sterilization.
ClimaWare - Haemosave System
enables contraction of blood
vessels by applying Ice-Therapy
(Cryotherapy) with the help of
optimal prompt cooling points.
This process called
'Vasoconstriction' controls
bleeding, pain and inflammation.
The cooling points are
strategically placed so as to
encircle the injury for maximum
effective cooling but do not
press directly onto the wound to
cause abrasion and cold injury.
.
Dhama Innovations
 
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What will be cost of it, I will buy a blanket and used it for cooling.
 
. .
But peltiers are not that electrically efficient so they will require heavy bulky batteries unless the inventor has a clever answer to that with new tech batteries

Secondly, when current passes through a peltier one side heats up and other cools down. To continuously keep it heated, the cold should should lose energy rapidly or else the peltier will reach point of equilibrium. Removing cold energy in cold climate sounds like a challenge already in -40 C.

Thirdly, to call it an invention is mis leading because such gear has been used by motorcycle riders for years. Just Google

peltier heated jacket - Google Search

And the commercially available gear has battery life of 10-12 hours nominal.

Dont be in hurry to jump the indigenous band wagon.

It is just in early stages and will keep getting better.and what is best it is Indian.. but since there have been such products before it will not be called Indigenous by Pakistanis

---------- Post added at 10:13 PM ---------- Previous post was at 10:13 PM ----------

These are things which make me believe in India ..despite all the corruption ..there are people trying to bring better products and try something differe nt
 
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guys pls dnt make anti sentnce on this. bcz it is for brave warriors who is suffering with such horrible climate to provide security to us. we can make comments easy n we r njoying luxury life but dey r suffering for us.
 
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wait for a month or two you will get it at a very very low price, + embedded torch +embedded compass, and many funky colours to choose from. YES ITS
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made in China maal :D

just my foresight :)
 
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