
pic taken Sept 14, 2015-- Russia
Question for you is in what kind of situations do you foresee one IN ship using more than 32 SAMs in one deployment?Akshay Kapoor wrote:Question for Naval gurus - what is our doctrine that leads us to have just 32 VLS cells for SAMs in our Project 15 A and B destroyers. There must be some logic to this ??
In recent days the rumor gets hard on a possible solution to the power plant for the project 11356 frigates for the Russian Navy modified. We talked about the 4th and 5th under construction but will not receive the Ukrainian turbines if ships are built for the Russian Navy.
And the tone is that not receive Ukrainian turbines if ships are destined for the Russian Navy. There, as they say, is when the kill. It seems that speculated that India acquire vessels (in fact negotiates for another 3 Project 11356 frigates) killing two birds with one stone; on the one hand, the construction of these frigates would be finalized and, on the other, India would get two more advanced than expected and installing equipment for the Russian Navy frigates. Especially in reference to air defense system Shtil 1.
During a visit to Kaliningrad shipyard Yantar Ambassador of India in Russia, Srinivasan Raghavan, made it clear that his country is interested in acquiring the three frigates 11356 modified project that are under construction in the Shipyard yore and suffering delays due to the cancellation of the collaboration on boat engines for Russians and Ukrainians carried out. The solution to this problem may be that these three frigates sold to India and save the pitfall of Ukrainian turbines in this case being to another country that was not Russia, could be delivered and installed in these frigates ... again
RBU launches relatively cheap, unguided munitions. Any VLS system will require smart missiles.Rahul M wrote:or move to a VLS system for RBU.
The 90R missile there has a hydroacoustic guidance that lets it home to the target but it does not have a propulsion its driven by gravity.Aditya G wrote:RBU launches relatively cheap, unguided munitions. Any VLS system will require smart missiles.
Like Singha said, the missile is basically a rocket without any maneuvering capability. What you describe is basically a 'fuse'.Austin wrote:The 90R missile there has a hydroacoustic guidance that lets it home to the target but it does not have a propulsion its driven by gravity.Aditya G wrote:RBU launches relatively cheap, unguided munitions. Any VLS system will require smart missiles.
Sanjay Mahindru new Flag Officer Submarines of Navy
Last Updated: Friday, September 25, 2015 - 19:41
New Delhi: Rear Admiral Sanjay Mahindru on Friday took charge as the Flag Officer Submarines as the Navy carried out senior level changes in its ranks.
Rear Admiral Ravneet Singh has been appointed as Flag Officer Commanding Western Naval Fleet. He was the Flag Officer Naval Aviation and Flag Officer Goa Area.
Rear Admiral SV Bokhare, who was the Flag Officer Submarines, has been made the Flag Officer Commanding Eastern Fleet.
Rear Admiral Mahindru was commissioned on January 1, 1985, and has served 27 years in the Submarine Arm.
He has commanded a conventional submarine, frigate and a destroyer prior assuming Command of nuclear submarine Arihant, which is currently going through trials.
Whilst serving ashore, the officer commanded the Navy's Submarine Training Establishment and been a Director at Naval Headquarters.
He is an alumnus of prestigious College of Naval Warfare and has also completed the Staff Course in the United Kingdom.
In other appointments, Rear Admiral Hari Kumar has been appointed as the Chief of Staff Headquarters at Western Naval Command.
Rear Admiral SN Ghoirmade as been appointed as Flag Officer commanding Maharashtra Area while Rear Admiral Nadkarni has been appointed as Flag Officer commanding Karwar.
Rear Admiral MS Pawar has been appointed as Flag Officer Commanding Gujarat Naval Area, a newly created billet.
So it crossed the Indian ocean, a shot across India's bow! Hope someone is paying attention.DEBKAfile’s military sources report that the Chinese aircraft carrier passed through the Suez Canal on Sept. 22,
http://www.defensenews.com/story/defens ... /72730048/
India Seeks Global Tranfer of Technology To Build MCMV
By Vivek Raghuvanshi 12:26 p.m. EDT September 26, 2015
NEW DELHI — India's Goa Shipyard Ltd. (GSL) is looking for international companies with the technology the state-owned company needs to build 12 mine countermeasures vessels (MCMVs) for the Indian Navy.
GSL, which was awarded the $5 billion noncompetitive contract in 2014, has floated a global expression of interest (EOI) from companies willing to transfer the technology to build the vessels to the Indian shipyard.
Such a move could push the cost of building the ships in India higher compared with those built overseas, analysts here said, but the absorption of the technology would, in the long run, allow India to build more MCMVs.
A GSL executive said the company hopes for a good response to get the technology it needs from overseas. The EOI was sent to South Korea's Kangnam, Italy's Intermarine, Spain's Navantia, US-based Lockheed Martin, Germany's Thyssenkrupp and two Russian shipyards, he said.
GSL will short-list foreign shipyards with capability for design and construction of a single-skin, non-stiffened structure for the MCMV. A formal tender to the short-listed companies will follow, the GSL executive said.
The value of the transfer of technology contract is more than $1 billion, or about 20 percent of the total value of the contract, an Indian Navy official said.
Last year, the Ministry of Defense canceled a 2008 global tender in which Kangnam had emerged as the winner because of the South Korean company's alleged use of defense agents in pursuing the deal, which overseas defense companies are not allowed to do under Indian law.
Kangnam, however, appears to be staging a re-entry for the new technology transfer contract, analysts said.
"Kangnam have already invested time and effort and would be ready with the details," said Shyam Kumar Singh, a retired Indian navy captain. "As far as Intermarine of Italy is concerned, they have to compete with Kangnam, which is already ahead."
While the MCMV acquisition is delayed due to cancellation of the original tender and the GSL contract award, analysts say the absorption of technology would help in building more vessels in the future.
"Minesweepers or mine countermeasure vessels are very sophisticated technology products," said Sujeet Samaddar, a retired Indian Navy commodore. "Including hull material, acoustic and magnetic reduced signatures, mine-hunting sonars and remotely piloted vehicles, and also the design methodology are not easy. That said, it is not undoable in India, but that is like reinventing the wheel."
Anil Jai Singh, a retired Indian Navy commodore, said building the MCMV may not be exceedingly expensive. "More important will be the development of an indigenous capability to build a specialized vessel," he said. "On the choice of hull, the Navy must have taken an informed decision."
The Navy wants 800- to 1,000-ton vessels with composite anti-magnetic hulls that can clear sea mines laid by enemy warships, submarines and aircraft to blockade harbors during war, the Navy official said, and will aquire 24 such vessels over the next decade. The construction of the first vessel is expected to begin in April 2018, with deliveries to be completed between April 2021 and April 2026.
Currently the Indian Navy operates six to seven Soviet-built minesweepers bought in the late 1970s
India would be building an MCMV for the first time in a state-owned shipyard that was awarded the contract without competition, or through nomination, Samaddar said, noting that "nomination is always a bad idea, and the MoD has repeatedly said it will not nominate but continues to do so."
This sounds like a load of bollocks to me. The purpose of a carrier is to have a mobile seaborne air base. That carrier would normally move around in a battle group that protect each other from attack. No carrier groups cross the Indian Ocean - maybe a lone empty carrier did. If it is going to sit near Syria and then have planes loaded who will supply the fuel, the munitions and the support for them in Syria with no support ships? And what sort of protection would this carrier have from interested parties?Paul wrote:The chinese aircraft carrier Liaoning is in Tartus port per reports. It must have crossed the Indian ocean/Red sea to make it to Syria. Did the Navy track it as it crossed the Indian ocean?
If true it is the first overseas deployment for the chinese AC. The Indian navy would do well to watch the developments closely and prepare for upping the ante if required.
http://debka.com/article/24909/A-Chines ... y-buildup-
So it crossed the Indian ocean, a shot across India's bow! Hope someone is paying attention.DEBKAfile’s military sources report that the Chinese aircraft carrier passed through the Suez Canal on Sept. 22,
NEW DELHI: For the first time India has options when it comes to finding a partner to build a military nuclear asset. Besides Russia, ship builders from France and the US have started initial conversations with the defence ministry on participating in an Indian effort to build a new class of nuclear-powered attack submarines.
Russia has been the traditional ally of India when it comes to sensitive technology and strategic systems.
But a Navy plan for constructing six new nuclear-powered attack submarines (SSNs) to patrol the Indian Ocean Region (IOR) and beyond has prompted 'discussions' with the two western nations, sources familiar with the development told ET. The Cabinet Committee on Security had cleared Navy's proposal in February.
The Indian SSN project — expected to cost over Rs 1 lakh crore — is an ambitious plan to design and produce a nuclear attack boat with the help of the private sector. If this materialises, it will propel India into a select league of the five nuclear powers that have such a capability. SSNs are nuclear powered submarines, but do not carry nuclear warheads, relying instead on conventional weapons and stealth to hunt ships and other submarines. The last country to enter this club was China in 1974 with its Han class boats.
Sources told ET that senior representatives from the submarine branch of a leading US conglomerate have met key Indian defence ministry officials regarding the project. The efforts included a top level meeting in July. The discussions have been kept low key given the sensitivity of the project and details are not available.
Similarly, French representatives have also approached the Indian side for exploring avenues for cooperation on the project in the past few months. While the French submarine manufacturer has not commented on the project, the Indian side is interested in the new 'Barracuda' SSN being developed by French ship builder DCNS. A senior DCNS representative refused to take questions on the matter.
The new nuclear submarine for the French Navy is currently under construction and is expected to start sea trials by next year. The Barracuda was also showcased at the Defence Expo held in New Delhi last year. As reported by ET, India is also in talks with Russia to lease a nuclear attack submarine — a newly built, customised boat that could give engineers a first-hand look at construction technology and process.
Unlike a nuclear missile armed submarines (SSBN) that is designed to carry out a nuclear strike, nuclear propelled attack boats (SSNs) are considered less sensitive, with their primary role being hunting vital enemy naval ships and submarines. While foreign assistance on SSBNs is a complex matter, there have been examples of nations sharing non-nuclear technology for SSNs. France is at present assisting Brazil with its first nuclear submarine project. The deal involves France helping Brazil with the non-nuclear components of the submarine, with the South American nation using its own reactor and fuel.
India's first SSBN, the INS Arihant, is currently undergoing sea trials in Vizag. It is expected to carry out a weapons test shortly. The only SSN in service with the Navy at present is the INS Chakra, an Akula class submarine on a 10 year lease from Russia to train Indian crew for such operations.
Economic Times
Great news!Viv S wrote:Long overdue. Like I've said before, India is going to gets its nuke attack subs one way or the other. All their reticence did so far is let the Russians walk away with a fair bit of business. That said, I expected their overtures to come from UK and France. Astute v Barracuda. Surprised to see US joining the party. I wouldn't be surprised if the Euros submit a much stronger proposal.
India may get US, French cos as partners for building nuclear submarines
NEW DELHI: For the first time India has options when it comes to finding a partner to build a military nuclear asset. Besides Russia, ship builders from France and the US have started initial conversations with the defence ministry on participating in an Indian effort to build a new class of nuclear-powered attack submarines.
Russia has been the traditional ally of India when it comes to sensitive technology and strategic systems.
But a Navy plan for constructing six new nuclear-powered attack submarines (SSNs) to patrol the Indian Ocean Region (IOR) and beyond has prompted 'discussions' with the two western nations, sources familiar with the development told ET. The Cabinet Committee on Security had cleared Navy's proposal in February.
The Indian SSN project — expected to cost over Rs 1 lakh crore — is an ambitious plan to design and produce a nuclear attack boat with the help of the private sector. If this materialises, it will propel India into a select league of the five nuclear powers that have such a capability. SSNs are nuclear powered submarines, but do not carry nuclear warheads, relying instead on conventional weapons and stealth to hunt ships and other submarines. The last country to enter this club was China in 1974 with its Han class boats.
Sources told ET that senior representatives from the submarine branch of a leading US conglomerate have met key Indian defence ministry officials regarding the project. The efforts included a top level meeting in July. The discussions have been kept low key given the sensitivity of the project and details are not available.
Similarly, French representatives have also approached the Indian side for exploring avenues for cooperation on the project in the past few months. While the French submarine manufacturer has not commented on the project, the Indian side is interested in the new 'Barracuda' SSN being developed by French ship builder DCNS. A senior DCNS representative refused to take questions on the matter.
The new nuclear submarine for the French Navy is currently under construction and is expected to start sea trials by next year. The Barracuda was also showcased at the Defence Expo held in New Delhi last year. As reported by ET, India is also in talks with Russia to lease a nuclear attack submarine — a newly built, customised boat that could give engineers a first-hand look at construction technology and process.
Unlike a nuclear missile armed submarines (SSBN) that is designed to carry out a nuclear strike, nuclear propelled attack boats (SSNs) are considered less sensitive, with their primary role being hunting vital enemy naval ships and submarines. While foreign assistance on SSBNs is a complex matter, there have been examples of nations sharing non-nuclear technology for SSNs. France is at present assisting Brazil with its first nuclear submarine project. The deal involves France helping Brazil with the non-nuclear components of the submarine, with the South American nation using its own reactor and fuel.
India's first SSBN, the INS Arihant, is currently undergoing sea trials in Vizag. It is expected to carry out a weapons test shortly. The only SSN in service with the Navy at present is the INS Chakra, an Akula class submarine on a 10 year lease from Russia to train Indian crew for such operations.
Economic Times
To me it sounds really stupid to pay extra for one item for simply getting a "promise" that something will come later. Especially a nuke submarine - it sounds like pure snake oil to me if true, although I don't believe that is the case.soumik wrote:
Great news!
My speculation in the Rafale thread about the high cost of Rafale being used to hide SSN tech transfer may have some truth in it after all.
What you say is probably an incontrovertible fact. What I think is totally wrong is the idea that we pay extra for Rafale for a "promise of technology" for nuclear submarines. To me this is a mixing up of issues and trying to explain away the cost of Rafale by cooking up hopeful excuses without knowing what we are getting with the Rafale deal.JTull wrote:shiv, there are lot of non-nuclear sub-systems where Franch and US can help with the latest tech and automation tools.
How about starting with those optronic scopes?
Great news!Viv S wrote:Long overdue. Like I've said before, India is going to gets its nuke attack subs one way or the other. All their reticence did so far is let the Russians walk away with a fair bit of business. That said, I expected their overtures to come from UK and France. Astute v Barracuda. Surprised to see US joining the party. I wouldn't be surprised if the Euros submit a much stronger proposal.
India may get US, French cos as partners for building nuclear submarines
NEW DELHI: For the first time India has options when it comes to finding a partner to build a military nuclear asset. Besides Russia, ship builders from France and the US have started initial conversations with the defence ministry on participating in an Indian effort to build a new class of nuclear-powered attack submarines.
Russia has been the traditional ally of India when it comes to sensitive technology and strategic systems.
But a Navy plan for constructing six new nuclear-powered attack submarines (SSNs) to patrol the Indian Ocean Region (IOR) and beyond has prompted 'discussions' with the two western nations, sources familiar with the development told ET. The Cabinet Committee on Security had cleared Navy's proposal in February.
The Indian SSN project — expected to cost over Rs 1 lakh crore — is an ambitious plan to design and produce a nuclear attack boat with the help of the private sector. If this materialises, it will propel India into a select league of the five nuclear powers that have such a capability. SSNs are nuclear powered submarines, but do not carry nuclear warheads, relying instead on conventional weapons and stealth to hunt ships and other submarines. The last country to enter this club was China in 1974 with its Han class boats.
Sources told ET that senior representatives from the submarine branch of a leading US conglomerate have met key Indian defence ministry officials regarding the project. The efforts included a top level meeting in July. The discussions have been kept low key given the sensitivity of the project and details are not available.
Similarly, French representatives have also approached the Indian side for exploring avenues for cooperation on the project in the past few months. While the French submarine manufacturer has not commented on the project, the Indian side is interested in the new 'Barracuda' SSN being developed by French ship builder DCNS. A senior DCNS representative refused to take questions on the matter.
The new nuclear submarine for the French Navy is currently under construction and is expected to start sea trials by next year. The Barracuda was also showcased at the Defence Expo held in New Delhi last year. As reported by ET, India is also in talks with Russia to lease a nuclear attack submarine — a newly built, customised boat that could give engineers a first-hand look at construction technology and process.
Unlike a nuclear missile armed submarines (SSBN) that is designed to carry out a nuclear strike, nuclear propelled attack boats (SSNs) are considered less sensitive, with their primary role being hunting vital enemy naval ships and submarines. While foreign assistance on SSBNs is a complex matter, there have been examples of nations sharing non-nuclear technology for SSNs. France is at present assisting Brazil with its first nuclear submarine project. The deal involves France helping Brazil with the non-nuclear components of the submarine, with the South American nation using its own reactor and fuel.
India's first SSBN, the INS Arihant, is currently undergoing sea trials in Vizag. It is expected to carry out a weapons test shortly. The only SSN in service with the Navy at present is the INS Chakra, an Akula class submarine on a 10 year lease from Russia to train Indian crew for such operations.
Economic Times
There's nothing hidden about the SSN negotiations with US/France etc. And if they wanted to bury some transactions, they wouldn't have done it in a high profile purchase like the Rafale. Can anyone say, for example, what the ATV (Arihant) development costed? Or what it should ideally have costed?soumik wrote:Great news!
My speculation in the Rafale thread about the high cost of Rafale being used to hide SSN tech transfer may have some truth in it after all.
good writeup by VSom. one question. in the story he mentions both the fore and aft VLS as having 16 + 16 barak8 = 32.Austin wrote:Inside India's New and Deadliest Warship - Written by Vishnu Som
http://www.ndtv.com/india-news/inside-i ... eststories