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Shivalik Class Frigates Thread

MORAL OF THE STORY - DONT MESS WITH THE INDIAN NAVY

There is no doubt about Indian Navy's capabilities. I like Indian navy as they are the one who belives in Indigeneous products from a long time, they simply donot change the requirement time to time but they sit with DRDO and decide the future requirements and timely gets the delivery.
Most important factor they are the one who really gives big punch with our old adversaries n proved their metal.
These stealth frigates and destroyers , AC will give a new dimension to Indian Navy in coming decade.
 
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Eat dosa, sink enemy
SUJAN DUTTA
INS Shivalik

22shiv.jpg

New Delhi, April 21: India’s first warship with a chapati-maker and a dosa-maker on board is scheduled to be commissioned next week, signalling that the naval headquarters has decided to put crew-comfort on its list of priorities along with firepower.

The modular furnishings in crew quarters — designed for the navy by a private company in the business — will also allow for modifications should the government, at a later date, change policy and allow women on board warships. Women’s quarters would have attached toilets.

The navy’s older warships are either of Soviet/Russian vintage or based on designs that discounted comfort for the crew (except for the senior officers). This meant that crew often had to “hot bunk” (share a bunk) in beds tucked into nooks and crannies that were available after the machinery and weapons were mounted.

The INS Shivalik (Project 17) is the first “stealth” frigate — so called because it is expected to be more difficult to detect by enemy radar — to be made in the country, at the Mazagon Docks Limited in Mumbai. The vessel’s architecture has been conceived by the navy’s own design directorate.

“We have modular accommodation for the crew which will mean more comfortable and hygienic living conditions,” the director-general of the Naval Design Directorate, Rear Admiral K.N. Vaidyanathan, said here. Vaidyanathan has been with the project since its designing began in 2000.

The chapati-maker in the fully air-conditioned galley (kitchen) will turn out nearly 500 rotis per hour. The ship will have a crew of about 250, including 35 officers. The first commanding officer is Captain B. Suresh. In the navy’s other (older) warships, the crew includes a larger complement of cooks and helpers than the Shivalik will need.

Like every other piece of equipment on board, the chapati-maker and the dosa-maker have been configured to remain steady despite the rolling and the pitching of the ship as it sails and conducts manoeuvres.

Vaidyanathan said the new interiors for the crew would be a standard in the warships that are being built now. Among them are two more frigates of the Shivalik class (the INS Satpura and the INS Sahyadri) and the larger destroyers of the INS Kolkata class (three).

The INS Kolkata is now moored in the Mumbai docks— it was put out to sea because of a shortage of berths — and is awaiting trials before being commissioned in 2012.

The Shivalik was delayed partly because the Obama administration last year asked the US firm supplying the gas turbines for it to wait for a go-ahead. India negotiated that roadblock and the frigate now has a Cobog (combined diesel or gas) propulsion system capable of powering it to 30 knots (more than 50 kmph).

At the heart of the 5,600-tonne frigate is a ship-wide integrated data network and a combat management system. Every surface of the ship is “slanted” to deflect radar signals.

Commodore Anil Kumar Saxena, the project director, said stealth features also incorporated technology to suppress heat emitted from the engines, noise from the propellers and the vibration of the machinery. The deck, on which the guns are mounted and the missile-silos embedded, is fully covered.

The Shivalik, whose keel was laid in 2002, is estimated to have cost Rs 2,300 crore. The entire project of three frigates could cost more than Rs 8,000 crore. The second vessel is scheduled for commissioning in November this year and the third in mid-2011.

http://www.telegraphindia.com/1100422/jsp/nation/story_12366830.jsp
 
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Stealth, or deception, has always been a game-changer in warfare. With India’s first indigenously-designed and manufactured ‘‘stealth’’ frigate INS Shivalik finally all set to be commissioned on April 29, the Navy is steaming ahead to induct even stealthier warships.

The new advanced stealth warships will include seven frigates under Project-17A and four guided-missile destroyers under Project-15B, which in all will cost upwards of Rs 65,000 crore. Navy, in fact, wants to induct all these seven advanced frigates by 2020 for a greater blue-water warfare punch. With the government according ‘‘acceptance of necessity’’ in June 2009, the seven frigates will be built at Mazagon Docks in Mumbai and GRSE in Kolkata with ‘‘integrated construction technology’’.

Apart from the indigenous efforts to turn stealthy, Navy is also going to get three more stealth frigates (Teg, Tarkash and Trikhand) from Russia under a Rs 5,514-crore project from 2011-2012 onwards, which will add to the three such warships (Talwar, Trishul and Tabar) already inducted in 2003-2004.

Navy’s endeavour is to go in for warships with ‘‘minimal’’ radar, infra-red, noise, frequency and magnetic ‘‘signatures’’ to beat enemy detection and radar systems.
 
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You know what i have found out here on this website..
Every indian guy here dont give us source.
GIVE US THE DAMN SOURCE!!!
 
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The Indian Navy is to get 16 stealth frigates in the next 10 years, with 10 being built indigenously, three imported from Russia and another three on order, an officer said on Wednesday.

The first indigenously-built stealth ship, INS Shivalik, will be commissioned on April 29. The 6,000-tonne ship was built at Mumbai's Mazagaon Docks Limited under Project 17. Two more such vessels - INS Satpura and Sahyadri - are under construction and are likely to be commissioned in the next one year.

The cost of each frigate is nearly Rs 2,300 crore. The stealth features prevent a ship from being easily detected by radar, reduce underwater radiated noise signatures and ensure infrared suppression.

The ship is fitted with state-of-the-art technology and bristles with a sophisticated system of radars and weaponry. Its armaments include the Klub surface-to-surface missiles and the Shtil and Barak air defence missiles, rocket launchers and indigenously designed sonar systems meant for detecting and attacking submarines.

Shivalik, which has a crew of 250, "is equipped with a judicious mix of Russian, Western and indigenous weapons and sensors. The indigenous effort accounts for over 60 per cent of the ship's cost," Rear Admiral KN Vaidyanathan, director general (Naval Design), told reporters in New Delhi.

"Besides design and construction, which is totally indigenous, the ship incorporates technologically advanced indigenous systems such as the integrated versatile console system, ship-wide data network and the jointly developed (with Russia) combat management system," he added.

According to naval officers, the Shivalik class vessels will be the mainstay frigates of the Indian Navy in the first half of the 21st century.

The ships also have the indigenous Kavach chaff-dispensing system to counter incoming missiles, as also indigenous sonars and anti-submarine warfare systems.

Vaidyanathan pointed out that for the first time, an Indian Navy ship would be powered by combined diesel or gas (CODOG) technology. "The propulsion plant combines the long endurance of diesel propulsion with the high-power of the gas turbine for high speeds."

He said designing is in an advanced stage of the Project 17A vessels, a follow on of the Shivalik class frigates with advanced weapons and sensor suites and improved stealth features. Seven such vessels will be built.

"Acceptance of necessity (AON) has been accorded in June 2009 for building seven ships of this class," he added.

The Indian Navy operates three stealth frigates - Talwar, Trishul and Tabar - bought from Russia. Three more are being built in Russia and likely to be commissioned by next year. With the completion of Project 17A, the Indian Navy will have 16 stealth frigates in its fleet.

http://http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/articleshow/5840759.cms
 
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hi
i would like to know the difference between the air defense of INS Shivalik which is most advanced in indian navy with Aeigis combat system. Comments welcome.....
 
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Aegis is waaaaaay more advanced than the Shivalik. The Aegis equipped Aleigh-Burke class is the principle secondary air defence system of the US CBG...comparing it with Shivalik is a waste of time. The air defence system on Shivalik is only for self defence.
 
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