do u believe evey statement of our MinistersVivek K wrote:d_berwal IIRC even one of the Ministers accused the IA of sabotage at the AUCRT. So please stop harping on it.
am i the only one Harping
every one is harping on ARJUN vs T-90
do u believe evey statement of our MinistersVivek K wrote:d_berwal IIRC even one of the Ministers accused the IA of sabotage at the AUCRT. So please stop harping on it.
No I only believe the statement of Lt. Gen Shekhawat and all he says is true!d_berwal wrote:do u believe evey statement of our MinistersVivek K wrote:d_berwal IIRC even one of the Ministers accused the IA of sabotage at the AUCRT. So please stop harping on it.
Please stop peddling BS on the forum. It did not take Avadi to manufacture 10 years the said number of tanks. Remember the AUCRT trials and orders for Arjuns? This is what Ajai Shukla says on his blog:they took 10yrs to build 100.... (how is it self-defeating logic: it was ordered in 2000.... do u knwo which year we are in ?
Falsehood No. 1: “70 Arjuns have been rolled out in 8 years!
Wrong. These 70 tanks have taken less than two years to manufacture. The Arjun’s series production didn’t start in 2000… it only began last year. And the Arjun production line is already very close to producing its installed capacity of 50 tanks a year.
And which test did Arjun fail? The problem was with transmission and not engine..though the whole damn engine was changed in 40 minutes. Can you tell me, what would have happened in case of T-90/72 in similar situation?If an equipment fails a test it will be rejected !!!PERIOD!!! it is his job to reject it.
This is like a aha! statement.....how many kilometers did T-90 or any other tank in IA service run before they were inducted and underwent the AUCRT? Or are you implying that T-90 entered IA service without AUCRT? And is AUCRT like some beauty pageant compared to the operational deployment where the requirement on tank and its system are any lesser? And were TRIALS like walk in the park compared to the 'macho' stuff that T-90 does in operational deployment? And has the Arju not done XXX kms outside of trials because it is not capable or because IA top brass is biased in terms of its deployment? Please answer these questions as objectively as possible before give gyaan on any other aspect.soo ARJUN has only run in trials ... thats it... tell me one instance when ARJUN has notched 100+ km outside of TRIALS.. leave 80000 alone
This is like, hain ji? bhat did you say?.......you really crack me up, sir.ARJUN has a seprate Assembly line to T-90. GoI can any day Increase the capacity... they just have to sanction ARJUN assembly expension plan... why are they not doing that?
few weeks back it was 124... now 248... next six months to year it will become 500... dont worry sir.. Things have finally come on Track... can we pls keep T-90 out of it...Marten wrote: Point is no one can afford to upgrade a captive factory without orders or clear intent for the same. Now that the old arguments of inadequacy have been quelled, what keeps the IA from ordering any more? If you read what Negi said, there is something clearly amiss.
Boiling of emotions detract from the subject, but they are due to the reasons we read above. Can you objectively state that no more than 248 Arjuns should be inducted and that we should rather invest in the future orders for the T-90? Point is why is the DGMF projecting that we need more T-90 SKDs rather than augmenting the current manufacturing capacity for the Arjun? Your issue with the numbers will be solved when they place firm orders in larger numbers. If you truly believe 124 more will pay for that scale of production, you are sadly mistaken. The term economies of scale should be familiar, right?
so as of toady number has jumped to 248... waite for more... dont be too greedyMarten wrote:Sir, can you count the number of defects as of 2010 and compare them with the T-90?d_berwal wrote:can u count the number of defects in ARJUN pre 2008...
PS: now that you have Rohitji to interact with, I will get some popcorn and watch your replies with some amount of glee.
I sure hope so !can we pls keep T-90 out of it...
It was lack of domestic production of T-90 because Russia played hard ball on TOT that IA order additional (347) T-90 and not because of lack of domestic production of Arjun. Heck, the AUCRT were done in December 2007-January 2008 and order for additional T-90 went out in 2007. So,please stop alluding the shenanighans of powers-that-be to the Arjun saga.d_berwal wrote: chacko jiiii it was AVDHI whic said ARJUN cannot be made fast enough as per IA demands. That leaded to subsequent orders for T-90
If they would have, it would have been Pants off.d_berwal wrote:Hats off to IA they have stayed with ARJUN and not killed it
chackojoseph wrote:d_berwal ji,
Avadi did not say that they can manufacture T-90's faster. The logic was that T-72 and T-90 had commonalities, hence Avadi can make t-90's faster. It was army which inferred. I remember estimations of rate of Arjuns that could have been made at Avadi. It was in press. But, the new facilities for Arjun had come up by then.
close to six50chackojoseph wrote:If they would have, it would have been Pants off.d_berwal wrote:Hats off to IA they have stayed with ARJUN and not killed it
360Rahul M wrote:
how many T-90's do we have now btw ? have all the 310 from russia been delivered ?
IIRC, it was ten? Or was the first lot consisted of 10 tanks?Thanx.KrishG wrote:~360.Rahul M wrote:
how many T-90's do we have now btw ? have all the 310 from russia been delivered ?
124 full assembled ones from Russia + 186 assemble in Avadi + 50 produced at Avadi last year
I think, you did not get it. I wrote, that Arjun facilities were up and running. It was Army who said all that. Those days T-90 set up was not even avaliable.d_berwal wrote:how is IA responsible for it then.... No one wants to ramp up the production ... plus they give IA an option to buy other equipment also... who is at fault here... not the customer....
310 + 347 + 10(AVDHI)KrishG wrote:360Rahul M wrote:
how many T-90's do we have now btw ? have all the 310 from russia been delivered ?
124 fully assembled ones directly bought from Russia + 186 assembled from kits at Avadi + 50 produced at Avadi last year
chackojoseph wrote:I think, you did not get it. I wrote, that Arjun facilities were up and running. It was Army who said all that. Those days T-90 set up was not even avaliable.d_berwal wrote:how is IA responsible for it then.... No one wants to ramp up the production ... plus they give IA an option to buy other equipment also... who is at fault here... not the customer....
What Army said was that let T-90 roll out and let Arjun come in its own time.
It was purely the user guesstimating. It had nothing to do with the truth.
Sir, the time lines are on internet. Would you mind moving something meaningful after some researching? I will give you time till tomorrow eve. I will see your reply after that time and then post. I thank you in advance for the understanding and gesture.d_berwal wrote:Sir when was ARJUN production line up and running pls...
ur welcome sir... i dont need to.. i dont wanna harp on..chackojoseph wrote:Sir, the time lines are on internet. Would you mind moving something meaningful after some researching? I will give you time till tomorrow eve. I will see your reply after that time and then post. I thank you in advance for the understanding and gesture.d_berwal wrote:Sir when was ARJUN production line up and running pls...
Yes Sir,d_berwal wrote:ur welcome sir... i dont need to.. i dont wanna harp on..
......Self deleted...........chackojoseph wrote:Yes Sir,d_berwal wrote:ur welcome sir... i dont need to.. i dont wanna harp on..
So, by tomorrow evening. i will be looking forward your argument on how Arjun infra was not up and how Avadi guys gave an estimate that Arjuns will not be in production as much as T-90. Also Avadi decided that T-90 could be produced in numbers than Arjun etc.
I will be really looking forward to that sir.
Rahul M wrote:C, it was ten? Or was the
Yes only 10 tanks were rolled out in the first batch but IIRC the target for first stage was 50 in different batches. By 2009-10, the Army was to get 50 tanks from Avadi but problems over ToT from Russia resulted in production starting only in late 2008.rohitvats wrote: IIRC, it was ten? Or was the first lot consisted of 10 tanks?Thanx.
d_berwal, why dont you, for a change, list all those defects in Arjun. Lets all hear from you, your considerate opinion and facts on this.d_berwal wrote:can u count the number of defects in ARJUN pre 2008...
D_berwal,d_berwal wrote: ur welcome sir... i dont need to.. i dont wanna harp on..
For me, this signifies the root of the problem. IA has for long thought of itself as the customer, and DRDO as just another vendor. Sir, IA is a partner of DRDO.d_berwal wrote:who is at fault here... not the customer....
Vivek K wrote:all we would like is a honest, fair chance to the Arjun
Vivek K wrote:I think that your needless political rambling needs to be deleted ankit. That clouds your good points.
Also, the PA is going ahead with Al-Khalid II after using the Mk1. Iterative development of the Al-Khalid will put it ahead of the game if the Pakis have brains.
One useful line in all the rambling that repeats once every month like a dog chasing its tail!! This is the kind of hat we all need to wear at all times.ankit-s wrote: India has 280 billion FOREX, but our external debt is 240 billions and we have fiscal deficit which if plugged with the remaining balance of 40 billions, we are left nowhere, and worse, we R in minus!
India is borrowing beyond means (China has 360 external debt) with Firangi at the helm, Bagwan bachaye India ko. Indian exchequer lost 10 billion dollars as per CAG last year - where is that money, anyone? And here we are discharging unceremoniously our own production of tanks.
Interim is not the appropriate word here, T-90 has become the mainstay of Indian tank and 1000 more would be rolled out in the near future.a_kumar wrote:ankit-s wrote: India has 280 billion FOREX, but our external debt is 240 billions and we have fiscal deficit which if plugged with the remaining balance of 40 billions, we are left nowhere, and worse, we R in minus!
India is borrowing beyond means (China has 360 external debt) with Firangi at the helm, Bagwan bachaye India ko. Indian exchequer lost 10 billion dollars as per CAG last year - where is that money, anyone? And here we are discharging unceremoniously our own production of tanks.The choice may be that of Generals and colonels, but the final endorsement comes from Rakshamantralya babus and other stalwarts who have time n again rocked the Indian boat starting from Morarji Desai of Nishan-e-Pakistan fame, to Inder Kumar Gujaral who dismantled India´s covert capabilities vis a vis Pakistan, then came BOFORS followed by Tehelka.com, which released a secretly filmed documentary apparently showing 31 politicians, bureaucrats, and army officials receiving bribes from undercover journalists posing as arms dealers. The scandal leads to the resignation of Defense Minister Georges Fernandes.IA or forces in general may have a choice today of importing fancy Tanks and Artillery from Russia, Europe and US. But it serves to remember the times when we had to severely curtail our acquisitions couple of decades ago and know that less dependence on Forex reserves is in their long term interest (I am not even touching the sanctions aspect yet).
National security is a bigger envelope which encompasses many more things than Arjuns and Arihants. As a nation we must behave fiscally responsible or else think of those days when India pawned its gold reserves (400 tons airlifted to London via chartered flight) to Bank of England and IMF refused further lending. Many a little make a mickle, mass awakening is need of the hour for the benefit of Indian national security.Not suggesting going on an extreme austerity drive at expense of National Security, but to squeeze every opportunity to save or increase Forex reserves instead of depleting them.
If an Arjun can save or possibly increase our Forex reserves, then put your weight behind it. If IA needs T-90 in interim, so be it, but only as an interim.
There are lots of good reasons why the Arjun project needs to be patronised, but forex and external macroeconomic is certainly not one of them...First, India's fiscal deficit is not 40 billion, its close to a 100 billion this year (about 4 lac crores) - but its funded entirely internally through rupee savings, its got nothing to do with forex reserves...ankit-s wrote:India has 280 billion FOREX, but our external debt is 240 billions and we have fiscal deficit which if plugged with the remaining balance of 40 billions, we are left nowhere, and worse, we R in minus!
India is borrowing beyond means (China has 360 external debt) with Firangi at the helm, Bagwan bachaye India ko. Indian exchequer lost 10 billion dollars as per CAG last year - where is that money, anyone? And here we are discharging unceremoniously our own production of tanks.
As per individuals I have spoken with in the past, Indian Army has a strong reason to induct Arjun Tanks. It is expected Al-Khalid tank is putting on weight, as it adds on new systems in future Mark phases.Vivek K wrote:I think that your needless political rambling needs to be deleted ankit. That clouds your good points.
Also, the PA is going ahead with Al-Khalid II after using the Mk1. Iterative development of the Al-Khalid will put it ahead of the game if the Pakis have brains.
B'coz one of the greatest flummoxes of the MMRCA episode is that the IAF hasnt even specified ( IOW hasnt made up its mind) on whether it wants a single engine or a multi engine fighter, even when the GoI statedly makes its decisions on an L1 basis. Brochuritis is contagious !d_berwal wrote:
so why have Gripen in MMRCA? and F-16 ?
T90 deal under CAG scrutiny
Russia, for instance, has delayed giving `full ToT' for India's plan to indigenously manufacture 1,000 T-90S tanks. This despite India first importing 310 of these tanks for over Rs 3,625 crore in a February 2001 contract, and then signing another Rs 4,900 crore contract in November 2007 to import 347 more tanks.
The auditors, incidentally, are also examining the inordinate delay in development of Arjun tanks when its prototypes were developed as early as 1983 and were also put through some field trials in the next few years.