
what a major goof up in that image , they didnt even notice it before giving it for printing
Happens, they focus on the 'future'.krishnan wrote:![]()
what a major goof up in that image , they didnt even notice it before giving it for printing
AFAIK the production target has been hiked to 100 guns/year to be reached in 2 years.Marten wrote:Same applies to production values. OFB manuactures 18 guns a year. EIGHTEEN! To expect 200 guns/year from a private firm where firm orders are expected to be around 400 is unrealistic.
Arun Menon wrote:^One ultralight gun is 105 mm and the other is 155 mm. Both were featured in defexpo, but only 105 mm was an actual working specimen (on a humvee I think), the other one was just a poster.
It's never been lack of capability. It has always been lack of will.nik wrote:...
We need a gun every 10 KM on Paki border to send cockroaches back in to their holes. Total required = 2900KMS/10KM~300 guns only. With a basic range of 30 kms, we can get 7 guns barraging on any dumb jihadi's head if he gets anywhere near the border. If the a**holes like heads then we will serve them in plenty.
BTW please don't think the Dhanush is simply a 45 calibre version of the FH-77B. It is a generation ahead with a lot of valuable electronics
for instance Dhanush has an onboard muzzle velocity radar for recordings. In FH-77B this is done on board.
All ballistic calculations are also done on board using an enhanced tactical computer for the Dhanush.
Austin wrote:via saurav jha tweet
BTW please don't think the Dhanush is simply a 45 calibre version of the FH-77B. It is a generation ahead with a lot of valuable electronics
for instance Dhanush has an onboard muzzle velocity radar for recordings. In FH-77B this is done on board.
All ballistic calculations are also done on board using an enhanced tactical computer for the Dhanush.
Kiss OFB goodbye in a few years. These guys are one of the biggest parasites on the indian tax payer. DRDO is next.
What incentive do they have to even market their products? They live in a bubble funded by the indian tax payer.krishnan wrote:![]()
what a major goof up in that image , they didnt even notice it before giving it for printing
Not going to happen. Given the budgetary allocations, its clear OFB is being given a overhaul and modernization, and DRDO is well on its way to becoming an end to end weapons system design provider in specific areas (missiles, radars & electronic systems).RoyG wrote:Kiss OFB goodbye in a few years. These guys are one of the biggest parasites on the indian tax payer. DRDO is next.
http://www.indiandefencereview.com/idr- ... ssue_id=47There has been a massive increase in funding to the Defence Research & Development Organisation (DRDO). DRDO’s capital allocation of Rs 5,985 crore, provided in February’s interim Budget, has been increased by almost 60 per cent to Rs 9,298 crore — the largest jump in DRDO’s history.
This takes R&D in the defence sector to Rs 15,283 crore, almost seven per cent of the Rs 2,29,000 crore-defence budget. DRDO, which has been receiving about 5 per cent of the defence budget, has long pleaded for 7 to 8 per cent.
The capital allocation for the Ordnance Factory Board (OFB), which will be used for modernising the ministry’s network of 41 factories that manufacture arms, ammunition and equipment for the military, was doubled. The OFB’s allocation of Rs 530 crore has been raised to Rs 1,207 crore.
Waah!!nik wrote:We need a gun every 10 KM on Paki border to send cockroaches back in to their holes. Total required = 2900KMS/10KM~300 guns only. With a basic range of 30 kms, we can get 7 guns barraging on any dumb jihadi's head if he gets anywhere near the border.
This is intresting, so the DRDO is also thinking on the lines of a larger 25L chamber. Doesnt look like they have made up their mind though!!hecky wrote:
I don't see any reason to buy guns whose IP we don't own (TATA, L&T etc) when we have our own guns from Bharat Forge and OFB.Santosh wrote:So we now have -
155mm/52 cal Bharat Forge gun which is basically an upgraded GHN/GC-45 design
155mm/52 cal upgraded Bofors design by OFB
155mm/52 cal truck mounted TATA/Denel design which is also likely based on GHN/GC-45 design
155mm/52 cal tracked L&T Samsung Vajra ased on K9 design
Technically, they can all win. The towed order can be split between Bharat Forge and OFB. Tata and L&T is lone runners in their respective categories.
Also, is the OFB 155mm/45 cal gun a done deal for IA?
That is absolutely right. It makes much more sense for Tata, the indigenous prime mover expert, to tie up with Bharat Forge, the local gun expert, rather than having Tata import a gun or BF import a prime mover. Why import from Denel/ Samsung/ whoever when both parts to the solution are available indigenously from companies that are (a) in the same city (Pune); (b) have complementary and not competing product lines; and (c) each have expertise in one of the two components of a complete solution. I do not include the OFB in this because they do not play well with others, and their delivery capability is suspect.abhik wrote:I don't see any reason to buy guns whose IP we don't own (TATA, L&T etc) when we have our own guns from Bharat Forge and OFB.Santosh wrote:So we now have -
155mm/52 cal Bharat Forge gun which is basically an upgraded GHN/GC-45 design
155mm/52 cal upgraded Bofors design by OFB
155mm/52 cal truck mounted TATA/Denel design which is also likely based on GHN/GC-45 design
155mm/52 cal tracked L&T Samsung Vajra ased on K9 design
Technically, they can all win. The towed order can be split between Bharat Forge and OFB. Tata and L&T is lone runners in their respective categories.
Also, is the OFB 155mm/45 cal gun a done deal for IA?
Thanks Ankit.Ankit Desai wrote:155mm refers to the diameter of the barrel.
52 caliber refers to the length of the barrel.
http://fas.org/man/dod-101/sys/land/m198.htm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caliber#Ca ... _of_length
https://answers.yahoo.com/question/inde ... 834AALur6M
-Ankit
After an almost 26-year wait, the Indian Army may finally lay its hands on what are being touted as modern artillery guns developed by the Defence Research and Development Organisation.
The army will get 40 self-propelled guns (SPG), recently developed by the Chennai-based Central Vehicle Research and Development Establishment of DRDO, worth R820 crore to meet the force's requirements, sources said.
Though these 130-mm guns will not be a substitute to the aging Bofors received from Sweden in 1986, or the ultra-light Howitzers, they will help bolster the force's firepower.
The gun's system, called in artillery terminology a “catapult”, comprises a 130-mm gun mounted on a main battle tank (MBT) — in this case, the chassis of the DRDO-developed Arjun tank — allowing it to keep up with tank columns and provide them support in battle. “Catapult is mainly used to engage in indirect fire. Its targets are enemy artillery units, tanks, troops at their concentration areas, permanent defensive installations and other field fortifications,” said an officer. “The gun has an indirect firing range of 27.4 km, and direct firing range of 1.4 km. It can be fired at various angles of elevation as well. But, it is surely not a substitute to high-end artillery like Howitzers,” an officer said.
Sources said the army's 220 artillery regiments have received no new artillery since the 1980s, when the FH-77B, 155-mm/39-calibre Bofors were bought from Sweden. However, after allegations of kickbacks, only 400 Bofors guns were delivered and rest of the contract annulled.
But, the Ordnance Factory Board’s effort to build a 155-mm/45-calibre indigenous gun is facing trouble after the gun barrel was burst during its trials. The procurement of 145 M777 Ultra-Light Howitzers through the the US Government also stands cancelled due to cost issues and because the vendor's proposal is not fully compliant to the offset requirements, the defence ministry claims.
The defence ministry has already put in place a R35,000-crore plan to modernise artillery.
In the long run, the armed forces could provide orders worth over R1.5 lakh crore to domestic companies. Already, Tata Power Strategic Electronics Division, L&T and Bharat Forge are engaged in developing prototype of this gun so that they can get into production of these advanced guns after approval by the end-user, which is the army in this case. The Modi-led government has also cleared more support to the DRDO-developed Arjun tank by renewing a R6,600-crore clearance for 118 Arjun Mark II tanks. This will equip two army tank regiments, adding to an earlier order for 124 Arjun Mark I tanks.
Army is getting the 130mm Catapult system from CVRDE and private companies are elbowing into the action with full force with state-of-the-art 155mm artillery. Win-win-win is what I read. What is dumber and dumber about it?Arun Menon wrote:^Seems like defense reporting is getting more and more dumber, something I previously thought impossible, because they already seemed to have hit rock bottom.
Victor wrote:Army is getting the 130mm Catapult system from CVRDE and private companies are elbowing into the action with full force with state-of-the-art 155mm artillery. Win-win-win is what I read. What is dumber and dumber about it?Arun Menon wrote:^Seems like defense reporting is getting more and more dumber, something I previously thought impossible, because they already seemed to have hit rock bottom.
Hold up the mirror--it seems "what I read" in my post escaped your reading capability. About the Dhanush, papa MoD may place orders but the Army will not use a gun that had a barrel burst/fall off until the trials conclusively prove that the gun is more dangerous to the enemy than the user. That has yet to happen and future orders are vaporware in the meantime. The Catapult is a rare success and something the army can use, even if it is strictly a back-room jugaad product. And the very fact that Tata and others are coming in spells the end of OFB, which IMO is the biggest win of all. The reporter was on the dot, hence the question. If you check around, you will find that abusive language is a characteristic of internet pakis who resort to name-calling when facts don't suit them.Arun Menon wrote: I said defense reporting, do you have trouble reading? If you still have trouble understanding, please look into the 155/45 howitzer Dhanush's trials and results and how many orders have been placed and how many future orders are expected. Either the journo is a dumba$$ who has no idea about what he is writing about or he is a paid presstitute. Either way, defense reporting is becoming dumber.
Now does that sound like what you are trying to imply?Both the Army and OFB, in fact, are "quite excited" about Dhanush
Marten wrote:...
Same applies to production values. OFB manuactures 18 guns a year. EIGHTEEN! To expect 200 guns/year from a private firm where firm orders are expected to be around 400 is unrealistic. ...
Based on the current production plan, it will take around 6 years (2020) to produce all 414 Dhanush guns.Jun 20, 2014
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The Army hopes to plug at least some of its operational gaps in long-range, high-volume firepower through the initial induction of 414 Dhanush guns. The OFB has already been given an order of over Rs 1,260 crore to make 114 howitzers.
"Dhanush is around 80% indigenous now. It costs just about Rs 14 crore apiece. Only its APU (auxiliary power unit), electronic dial sights and a few other small items are imported. As per the plan, OFB will manufacture 18 howitzers in this financial year, followed by 50 in the next, and 100 per year thereafter," said the official.
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