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Nirbhay cruise missile to be tested by next month finally

Its Time to Test DRDO’s Problem Child Astra BVR and Nirbhay Cruise Missile | Indian Defence Forum


After successful demonstration tests of two crucial Aerial defence systems for countries armed forces, DRDO Scientist are upbeat and are looking forward for new missile test in next few days . Both Akash Surface to Air Missile and New Interceptor Ballistic Defence Missile which are crucial missiles for Aerial defence system have been successful tested and Now the focus is quickly shifting to other missiles which DRDO plans to test in next few days .
Astra BVRAAM (Beyond Visual Range Air to Air ) missile has been called ” Problem Child ” of DRDO due to repeated problems missile faced over last decade . Astra missile which has been in development for last 15 years now was first test fired from Special Ground launcher on 9th May 2003 and also carried out repeated tests in 2007 and 2011, Media reports reported that tests were Successful but in reality tests were termed Partial success because it failed to achieve desired results , Missile faced repeated stability problems in-flight , DRDO did carry out minor design corrections but still failed to get desired results .
It was back to drawing board for DRDO and Breakthrough only came in December 2012 when a reconfigured and redesigned version of Astra BVR was successfully tested from the integrated test range (ITR) at Chandipur off the Odisha coast. Missile was fired from ground launcher and successfully intercepted a pilotless target aircraft (PTA) – Lakshya , tests were declared successful and extensive captive trials of Astra were carried on Sukhoi-30 aircraft in Pune for few months in 2013 , which also included detachment tests .
Astra BVR finally is integrated with Sukhoi 30 systems and will fire from the aircraft soon , Successful test of Astra will boost India’s BVR arsenal which In the absence of a low-cost indigenous BVRAAM, have forced IAF to import missiles from Israel, Russia and France to equip its fighter fleet.DRDO also plans to integrate missile on indigenously developed Light Combat Aircraft (Tejas), Mirage 2000, Su-30 MKI and even the Sea Harrier at later stage. DRDO plans two Variant, Astra Mark-I, which will have a range of 44 km, and Astra Mark-II, with a range of over 100km. DRDO is hopeful that Astra Mark-I will be ready to enter production by end of 2015 and enter active service in IAF by 2016 .
Other Problem missile for DRDO has been India’s first subsonic Nirbhay Cruise missile which had partial success in last years first test . failure of fail safe component of the missile lead to aborting of test flight mid way, which also lead to major redesign of the failed component and also lead to some software upgrade but DRDO was not able to Fix problems of the missile and carry out another test by year end in 2013 , Indian Army operates supersonic cruise missile BrahMos and was the first to ask DRDO to develop low cost subsonic cruise missile , Indian Navy too will be watching next test of Nirbhay cruise missile carefully, who already have plans to integrate Nirbhay cruise missile in Naval ships in Future .
but when its already may
 
Sometimes the Indian trolls get on your nerves and you have to deliver them an equal treatment. And then they get pissed off.....being a hypocrite gslv mk3 ???

What the hell do you mean ? Indian members trolling or even expressing criticism in Pakistani threads would be infracted/thread banned & the posts would be deleted immediately( I have a few experiences in case of criticism )
Hypocrisy,I would say ...

Now if you hadn't trolled here,no Indian member would have mentioned the name of Pakistan here. (except for some comparison with Babur & the like )
 
Oman Tribune - the edge of knowledge

Nirbhay missile has sub-metre accuracy, says DRDO ex-chief
Jeta Pillai

MUSCAT Nirbhay, India’s long range sub-sonic cruise missile, which is undergoing trials, will have sub-metre accuracy, according to Dr VK Saraswat, former director-general of Defence Research and Development Organisation, the developers of the missile.

This will give it the ability to hit a small target among multiple objects at a range of up to 1,000km. The BrahMos supersonic cruise missile, with a range of 300km, has an accuracy of a few metres.

Saraswat, who is currently holder of Department of Atomic Energy’s Homi Bhabha Chair, was presented this year’s ‘Dr ASG Jaykar Award’ at Indian School Wadi Kabir as part of the Science India Fiesta 2014 that concluded on Saturday.

BrahMos, he said, will not be affected even if satellite navigation is jammed because it has a very good homing radar seeker which takes care of all mid-course errors.

About Astra, the active radar homing beyond-visual-range (BVR) air-to-air missile reportedly undergoing trials using Sukhoi 30MKI fighters, he said: It is state-of-the-art, in terms of homing capability, probability of intercept and success rate of the mission. The best aircraft, whatever manoeuvrs it can make, Astra will outwit it.”

Dhanush, a ship launched version of Prithvi missile with a range of 359km, has an accuracy of less than 10m and is mainly for static targets, including those on land, said Saraswat. The missile was test-fired successfully in November 2013.

On the suggestion that India’s Ballistic Missile Defence (BMD) system would disturb military balance in the region, Saraswat said: “It is like any other weapon. When the number of fighter squadrons or tanks, is increased, it will also result in military imbalance.”

But, since India has a policy of no first use of N-weapons, we should have the capability to defend against a rogue N-attack. It must have the time to counter-attack and that is possible only with BMD, which can destroy an incoming missile, he added.

On the possibility of new radars detecting stealth aircraft, he said: “Already there are radars that can detect very low cross-section systems. Aircraft exhaust has infrared (IR) radiation that can be detected, therefore work is on to suppress IR radiation from aircraft. Similarly, ground radars are also becoming more potent with ‘low probability of intercept’ radars and hi-fidelity radars. Then there are passive radars or no transmission radars which only receive signatures from transmissions that are in the environment and then try to find out where they are coming from. With more signal processing techniques, radars will overcome the stealth.”

Saraswat said the level of autonomy in electronic warfare systems on fighter aircraft continues to increase and are able to decide ‘what the threat is, how to overcome it’ and how to make yourself safer against it. “All future radars and radar warning receivers will have that capability and a lot of it is happening today. In many cases missile firing is also done automatically, but

India, he said, was waiting for its first thorium-based reactor to become operational which would be a breakthrough in the effort to meet its energy needs as Kerala had very large deposits of thorium.

Saraswat said the Kaveri engine, which was originally developed for the Light Combat Aircraft ‘Tejas’, had passed all tests and would now be used for large Unmanned Aerial Vehicles that are under development.
 
Can you,the 'TTA' or any other 4 'experts' (@Jf Thunder,@ArmchairPrivate,@DESERT FIGHTER,@rockstar08) who thanked this explain what is meant by this shit ?

We had failures,but we have overcome them,and has ICBMs,SLBMs,BMD systems,SAMs-which you cant develop.

Just because your establishments even calls failures as 'successes' (and mysterious 'daadu' falls on villagers) doesnt mean that you never had any failure .
It is better for you to research about a gigantic failure -'Pakistani space program' than a few failures of our missile program.
i thanked it, cuz i liked it
 
Stage set for test of nuclear-capable cruise missile Nirbhay - The Times of India


NEW DELHI: India is gearing up to test its first long-range cruise missile 'Nirbhay' (the fearless), which can carry nuclear warheads with a strike range of over 1,000 km, within a month or so.

A stealth missile long in the making, Nirbhay is meant to fulfill the armed forces' demand for nuclear-tipped land-attack cruise missiles (LACMs) versatile enough to be fired from land, air and sea.

Flaunted as India's answer to the famed American Tomahawk missiles as well as an effective counter to Pakistan's Babur LACM, Nirbhay was experimentally fired for the first time in March last year.

But the test went awry. "We had to abort the flight after a snag in one of the components made the missile deviate from its flight trajectory at a waypoint. The problem has now been resolved. The maiden test-firing did prove most of the required critical technologies," said a DRDO scientist.

"Preparations for the fresh test (from the Chandipur launch complex off Odisha coast) are more or less complete. Depending on the slot available, we will test Nirbhay around early-June,'' he added.

India already has the 290-km supersonic BrahMos cruise missile as well as the Agni series of nuclear-capable missiles with strike ranges varying from 700 km to over 5,000 km.

But while BrahMos is a short-range conventional weapon, not a nuclear one, the Agni missiles are ballistic ones that follow a parabolic trajectory. Cruise missiles like Nirbhay are designed to fly at low altitudes, virtually hugging the terrain, to evade enemy radars and missile defence systems. Cruise missiles are also much cheaper and easier to operate than ballistic missiles.

Nirbhay, after an initial blast off with a solid-propellant booster rocket engine to gain speed and altitude, deploys its smallish wings and tail fins in the second stage to fly like an aircraft thereafter.

The sub-sonic missile, which flies at a speed of 0.6-0.7 Mach, is said to be highly maneuverable with "loitering capabilities" to first identify and then hit the intended target. "In the test last year, Nirbhay's launch was perfect. The wings were deployed properly after the 'aircraft engine' took over following the separation of the booster motor from the main missile... the flight had stabilized," said another scientist.

"But we had to resort to the self-destruct mode after there was inertial navigation control failure and the missile began to drift towards the coast. Yes, the missile's turbo-fan is imported as of now but the indigenous engine is also getting ready," the scientist said.
 
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Nirbhay missile has sub-metre accuracy, says DRDO ex-chief | idrw.org
 
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