they already have hybrid and ev domestic cos manufacturing at scale
http://www.byd.com/la/auto/e6.html
we only have the scrawny golf cartish mahindra e2o and maini reva.

I wonder if this is the key point that must go into that one-pager. But what is the solution to propose?at present only HAL and GOI insiders know and they are not telling...
I'm guessing that HAL's bureaucracy and unions would not be able to handle itUlanBatori wrote:I heard a 400% reliable rumor: That HAL etc flat-out declined to accept an offer from a major Oiropean manufacturer (named above), to ship the entire line of production to India. Because India simply could not handle the technology, or train enough ppl to take the tech.
So we are going to match Cheen with UCAVs when Cheen is the largest drone maker on earth and has not only armed its own military with the stuff but has sold hundreds of its Predator rip-offs to unethical wahabbi regimes that are already killing people in the Middle East? While we are still monkeying around with an unarmed Rustom for ages and ages?One thing I do want to say is that the only way to match and pass China-type numbers is by going to UCAVs. And mass production and test-to-destruction in large numbers.
The missile, fitted with a fire-and-forget guidance system, has an estimated range of over 50 kilometers and an estimated speed of Mach 4. According to Rafael, the LCA could be equipped with an extended-range variant of the I-Derby with a range of up to 100 kilometers. The weapon can be fired from missile rail launchers fitted underneath the aircraft’s wings.
The Tejas LCA is a supersonic, single-seat, single-engine multirole light fighter aircraft, which has been under development since 1983 by the Aeronautical Development Agency in cooperation with Indian state-owned military aircraft maker Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL). As I noted elsewhere:
The Indian Air Force intends to induct a total of 123 Tejas Mark-IA aircraft. In November 2016, the Indian MoD cleared the purchase of a first batch of 83 Mark-IA LCAs. The IAF is also currently slated to receive 40 Tejas Mark-I aircraft by early 2018.
However, HAL has so far not yet been able to meet the target of eight aircraft per year. In July 2016, the IAF inducted the first two serially-produced LCAs, followed by three more aircraft during the year. A sixth LCA is expected to join the IAFs Number 45 Squadron. HAL is expected to produce 16 LCAs during the full-production phase.
In addition, I explained (See: “India’s Newest Fighter Jet Completes Maiden Flight”):
The Mark-I variant (…) suffered from a number of technical shortfalls, according to a May 2015 report by the Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) of India — the Indian government’s principal oversight body — including inadequate electronic warfare capabilities, problems with the on board radar system, and reduced internal-fuel capacity.
The technical shortcomings will be corrected in the Mark I-A variant. Gun trials for the LCA are slated to commence in August 2017.
OT, but there is no hope of deterring Cheen with a few glamorized and budget-breaking pieces of anything. Yes, India may be way behind in UAV production, but there is no joy in just ignoring that. UCAV vs. F16 is the old story of horse vs. elephant. If the horse gets near enough the elephant can core/stomp one or two, but what happens when 10 attack at the same time?We need something we are good at that can tip the balance. I am thinking ISRO and maybe rocketships.
Singha ji, I was reading somewhere that lockheed's final production plan for F-35 envisages completion of one F-35 daily i.e 365 F-35's annually. Now that is what you call manufacturing prowess. The aircraft itself might not be upto the mark as far as reliability and quality are concerned. But scale of production will more than make up for all the F-35 flaws.Singha wrote:might be good to bring in a outside agency to compare the productivity and manufacturing tech at HAL vs say EF or lockheed. at present only HAL and GOI insiders know and they are not telling...
it might actually be lockheed makes 3x the planes with 3x less labour due to automation. thats a huge red flag to the unions here.
HAL could have funded their LUH and HTT-40 earlier with those "surplus profit".Singha wrote:i think part of HALs clout is being a navaratna and generating a surplus profit from its guaranteed order book which is duly returned to the finance ministry.
with 80 Mk1A orders I dont see why they cannot order the tools and train the people necessary to turn out 16 a year.
its not as if the jigs and tools will need to be thrown away, most of it can be reused for whatever is next or sold to PAC kamra.
Jeevan to HAL employee bhi khapa raha hai par paperwork aur regulation mein.(Translation: HAl Employees are also sacrificing their entire lives but in paperwork and regulation). The same is true for all DPSUs and other PSUs too. They are always busy. Busy in drafting office note/backdated letters etc. Never in actual productive work.negi wrote:In words of the honorable PM the equivalent phrase is "khud ka jeevan khapa dene ki aur kuch kar gujarne ki ichcha honi chahiye" (desire to do something and give one's entire life to the cause).
Singha wrote:like modular shipbuilding where 90% complete sections of ships incl internal fittings are welded together and pipes and wires connected, i wonder if the goras have done that to aircraft...ie assemble nearly complete sections and then rivet them and connect wires. our crates seem to stand on assembly line for a year with people crawling in and out connecting miles and miles of wires, while these gora chi chi kittens seem to roll off like camry cars
Moovies.ldev wrote:Forget about aircraft. I cannot think of a single product, conceived, designed and mass produced in India which is not as a result of foreign colloboration. I will be happy to be corrected. Even the Hindustan Ambassador is the Old Morris Oxford. There seems to be an inability to learn the production techniques and lessons learned from a foreign collaboration and apply them to a completely domestic product
As far as "fire in the belly" is concerned, there was only one opportunity India had to generate that "fire in the belly" on a large enough scale and that was within I would say 20-30 years of independence. That initial "fire in the belly" that people had in the 1947-1967 period, to do that they could for their newly independent country, never saw any results because of the flawed economic policies of Nehru. Human psychology dictates that if you do not see tangible improvements to your and your children's lives in one generation, people stop believing in the system. And they then tend to do what is necessary to improve their economic well being by resorting to corruption if in India and emigration if there were no options in India. Countries such as South Korea delivered on that promise of tangible improvements to their people's lives in one generation and so people there believe in the system and will therefore do whatever is needed.
chola wrote: Moovies.
Dangal and Bahubali 1|2 are breaking records. Completely produced in Bharat.
Yes this is done on the Military side as well. On the JSF, Northrop Grumman ( which has offloaded some of this work to foreign companies for partner nations and/or FMS customers according to their program participation status) delivers completed and pre-wired center fuselage sections from its Palmdale production site to Lockheed Fort Worth for final assembly. The aft fuesalage is made by BAE in UK and shipped wired as well while Lockheed makes the forward section and the wings at the Fort Worth plant (with work having been offloaded to international partners and FMS customers )Singha wrote:like modular shipbuilding where 90% complete sections of ships incl internal fittings are welded together and pipes and wires connected, i wonder if the goras have done that to aircraft...ie assemble nearly complete sections and then rivet them and connect wires.
In 70 years, if all we have learnt is to make movies than we are doomed. Anything of worthwhile value in india has largely been screwdrivergiri. And with the MII SE program, we will do the same. As per the AWST article that Kartik posted, we are onlee doing screwdrivergiri (FACO line) on the F-Solah. The Gripen E aka vaporware will be no different.chola wrote:Moovies.
Dangal and Bahubali 1|2 are breaking records. Completely produced in Bharat.
...
Lockheed hopes the deal with Tata Advanced Systems Ltd., the defense arm of India’s Tata Group, will help tip the scales in the F-16’s favor. If India chooses Lockheed’s Fighting Falcon over Saab’s Gripen for the new fleet, Tata will be Lockheed’s primary partner for final assembly of the aircraft in India, says John Rood, senior vice president of Lockheed Martin International.
The agreement is a clear nod to Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s “Make in India” campaign to boost local manufacturing. If New Delhi elects to buy at least 100 F-16s, Lockheed is looking to permanently shift final assembly of all new Fighting Falcons to India.
In that case, Lockheed and Tata will set up and operate an in-country facility where the new fighters will be assembled, Rood says. Lockheed will still build most components in the U.S., but the two companies are in talks to potentially build certain parts in India.
If the deal materializes, Lockheed and Tata would jointly build a new Indian fleet of F-16Vs, also known as “Block 70s.” The V configuration sees the addition of Northrop Grumman’s APG-83 scalable, agile-beam active, electronically scanned array radar; a center pedestal display; a new advanced mission computer; a joint helmet-mounted cueing system; and the auto-ground collision-avoidance system. Lockheed is already under contract with Singapore, South Korea and Taiwan to upgrade a total of more than 300 F-16s to the V configuration.
..
At what cost, though? Defence spending is already more than 17% of total government expenditure. Are we willing to make drastic cuts to personnel numbers so that more of that money could be allocated to capital expenditures? Or make cuts in other areas? Our spending on healthcare and human resource development is already piss-poor. To give you some rough numbers, China officially spends something like 5.5% of it's total budget on defence. It spends approximately 17% on education and 9% on healthcare. Our numbers in those areas are something like 3.5% and 2% respectively. Spending on roads and railways is less than 6%. Agriculture, food distribution, etc. take up 10%, but best of luck making cuts there without starving people to death.Rakesh wrote:Point 11 - All the above requires serious infusion of cash. Increase the % of GDP in relation in defence and R&D in defence.
This is the dangled bait. Export market. Jobs in US because with lower cost they can beat the Oiropeans and Rooskies for phoren contracts. Jobs in India assembling these components. Inspired by car companies.permanently shift final assembly of all new Fighting Falcons to India.
I do not believe the IAF needs thousands or tens of thousands, but to achieve a 60+ squadron strength to fight the 2.5 wars that Ramanaji has stated...you will need to cough up some serious money. Where is this going to come from if there is no money available or the govt spends on projects without any long term planning?4. To seriously deter China, India needs thousands, perhaps tens of thousands, of aerial fighters.
5. Such numbers cannot be bought, they must come from indigenous production.
6. Engines, and miniaturized electronics, are areas where India does not have 21st century manufacturing capabilities. Without these, Item 1 cannot be satisfied. Hence it is the greater priority.
7. Engines cannot be developed to 21st century standards without a massive program of test-to-failure and pushing the boundaries. This requires a close partnership under a very focused program, between govt, academic research, national labs, DRDO, the Armed Forces - and - the automobile mass manufacturing sector.
Oh come on! 50-100!brar_w wrote:As far as the export market unless cost falls significantly you are looking at at the most (best case) 50-100 aircraft.
Amen and Agree with the Admiral.Rakesh wrote:In 70 years, if all we have learnt is to make movies than we are doomed. Anything of worthwhile value in india has largely been screwdrivergiri. And with the MII SE program, we will do the same. As per the AWST article that Kartik posted, we are onlee doing screwdrivergiri (FACO line) on the F-Solah. The Gripen E aka vaporware will be no different.chola wrote:Moovies.
Dangal and Bahubali 1|2 are breaking records. Completely produced in Bharat.
There are companies in India that design ASICs (??) which may not be exported to IndiaUlanBatori wrote:..
Then again, note that a lot of CAD etc for aircraft parts is actually done in B'Looru by entities like RANAL. So maybe the plane is conceived in B'looru and ends up being born in Mumbai, traveling all over the world in between. Once you have Final Assembly, the manufacturer is motivated to move more of the production nearer. Look at the pains they undertake with the multi-nation Airboos 380, shipping huge pieces by road and canal! All political.