the one I referred to as golf-cart. (btw, it has 8 wheels

but as vivek says, this can hardly be called armoured.
This is important because the VK-2500 engine, if installed on the Mi-17, dramatically improves the performance at high altitude. Comparatively speaking, the Indian Mi-17s come equipped with the TV3-117BM (Note: BM series is the version for High Altitude Modifications for the IAF, VM series being the standard engine). I have posted the comparison chart below.The improved Mi-17V7 variant features a more powerful VK-2500 engine for full performance in hot and high conditions.
The RISAT was announced & work started even before the Tecsar launch by India was announced And the design of both the satellites are completely differenttanhanwei wrote: Had it been launched yet? No right? That means you haven't made it yet. And a funny thing is after Tec-SAR was launched, India suddenly could launch one too. Coincidence?![]()
By the time you launch one satellite, China will already have a constellation.
The point in time where they show the american/russian spacewalk, you can see a bubble rise...it seems the bubble rises for the americans too....or is space made of water...sunny_s wrote:http://in.youtube.com/watch?v=NVbBFwdmldA
well this is a real catch indeed..this video is revealing a lot about the very AMBITIOUS CHINESE SPACE PROG.....space gurus 2 kindly have a good look at this video..i think the chinese are following the mantra"if u cant make it just fake it"
So, we are presented with two options. Either, China went into space and performed a flawless 15-minute EVA, or the mother of all space hoaxes has just been carried out. So which one do you think it is? I’m betting that China did indeed get into space. The “bubbles” are in fact space debris, the reflection of “studio lights” is in fact a reflection of some equipment on the Shenzhou-7 hull, and everything else is simply hard to believe.
Whether you like it or not, China is indeed the third country in history to carry out a successful space walk…
Rahul M wrote:^^^
the one I referred to as golf-cart. (btw, it has 8 wheels)
but as vivek says, this can hardly be called armoured.
Good observation. It does look like its designed for fast, mobile operations in riverine areas, isn't it? Even so, aside from allowing quick transportation for the heavy machine gun crews, what level of protection does the platform offer the gunner? He is extremely exposed...Raj Malhotra wrote:The ground clearance seems to be very poor, might actually be some sort of hybrid boat/vehicle
The bolded part may not be good for a vehicle which is being projected as "an ICV/fast-attack for mountains" by the chinese photos.Depending on load and terrain the top speed for 8x8 models varies between 18-20 mph and for the 6x6 models between 20-23 mph. In the terrain that the ARGO is designed for, high speed is not an issue.
The web of the tires propel the ARGO at about walking speed or roughly 2 mph. You can use an outboard motor of up to 9.9 hp for extensive water travel or higher speeds.
Check the posts further up the page and on the previous one.vavinash wrote:Are you sure that's the armored vehicle they are talking about? That open box toy won't make it to any frontline.
November 18, 2008
General Hints China’s Navy May Add Carrier
By ANDREW JACOBS
BEIJING — A high-ranking Chinese military official has hinted that China’s fast-growing navy is seeking to acquire an aircraft carrier, a move that would surely stoke tensions with the United States military and its allies in Asia.
In an interview published in The Financial Times of London on Monday, the official, Maj. Gen. Quan Lihua, did not say whether China was building a carrier. But the general, a senior official of the Ministry of National Defense, said having one was the dream of any great military power. He suggested that the United States had nothing to fear should China acquire one for strictly defensive purposes.
“The question is not whether you have an aircraft carrier, but what you do with your aircraft carrier,” he said in the interview. “Even if one day we have an aircraft carrier, unlike another country we will not use it to pursue global deployment or global reach.”
In recent years, Pentagon officials have been following Beijing’s naval buildup. Since 2000, China has constructed at least 60 warships. Its fleet of 860 vessels includes about 60 submarines.
Tensions between China and the United States were heightened last month after the Pentagon announced the sale of $6 billion in advanced weapons to Taiwan. China warned that the move could worsen relations between the countries. The deal includes Apache attack helicopters and an array of missiles, radars and antiaircraft defense systems.
In the interview, the general insisted that China would not deploy a carrier with aggressive intent. “Navies of great powers with more than 10 aircraft carrier battle groups with strategic military objectives have a different purpose from countries with only one or two carriers used for offshore defense,” he said.
Although he did not mention any country by name, his comments were clearly aimed at the United States, which has 11 aircraft carriers, including the George Washington, which was recently deployed to Japan. Of the handful of other nations that have aircraft carriers, including Britain, France, Italy and Russia, none have more than two.
Arent we taking a step back by having joint-ops with these m00ks ? I would rather see IAF spending my hard-earned tax dollars on training hard with US/Oiropean/Israeli forces.IAF-Chinese AF exercises likely
18 Nov 2008, 0345 hrs IST, TNN
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Citi ... 725363.cms
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NAGPUR: Keen to increase co-operation with its Chinese counterpart, the Indian Air Force (IAF) plans to hold joint exercises with the Peoples Liberation Army (PLA) Air Force. The chief of the air staff Air Chief Marshal Fali Major had visited China early this month and held talks with Chinese Air Force officials on various bilateral issues.
Though planned to be held over next couple of years, if the move materialises, this would be the first ever joint manoeuvre by the IAF and the PLA Air Force, Major told reporters at a press conference at the start of a commanders' conference being held at Head Quarters Maintenance Command (HQMC) in Nagpur.
The Indian army had conducted its first joint exercise with PLA in December last year, while the Navy continues to hold basic level joint exercises with China.
"My visit to China was quite successful. I met the chief of the PLA AF and also called on the Chinese defence minister, with whom I had fairly long discussions," he said. There were talks about exchanges between the IAF and the PLA AF. We also explored the plans to hold joint exercises with China, Major added. During his visit to the air show in Zuhi, China, at which the IAF's Surya Kiran aerobatics team performed, the air chief also got an opportunity to study the Chinese technology.
Major said he was highly impressed by the discipline and Chinese way of systematically managing their affairs which, he felt, could be emulated by India. About Chinese military co-operation with Pakistan, he said it did not appear to be a matter of concern for the IAF.
On recent comments of CAG on India having a weak air surveillance system, he admitted that there were gaps indeed and it would take around five years for the IAF to induct an entirely fool-proof system.
The IAF was in the process of buying new radars and other sensing equipment and the ministry of defence was facilitating speedy execution of this project. The air force was set to receive 30 radars from the Bharat Electronics Limited and procurement of much more equipment was in the pipeline. It would still take around 4-5 years for the IAF to have a foolproof air surveillance system, he stressed.
how they operate and the associated chinks(no pun intended) in the armour.Nayak wrote:..............
What are we going to learn from these ugh 'peasants' ?
In late October 2006, the Chinese launched Sinosat-2 with great fanfare. After all, this was the first DFH-4 launch and it was the largest communications satellite that China had ever put in space. Sinosat-2 was planned to greatly expand Chinese domestic TV coverage in advance of the 2008 Olympics, among other things. However, immediately after launch, the satellite's solar panel and antennae deployment was a complete failure, leading to the total loss of the satellite, which had been launched a year behind schedule for various reasons.
But one cannot rule out entirely another troubling dimension of this pair of satellite failures. It raises the question that the Long March 3B rockets used to launch both satellites may provide a shaky ride that is more than the satellites can handle and contributed greatly to the unsuccessful outcome in both cases. There is no firm evidence of this connection, but again, it must be included in the overall assessment.
India, China military drill in December
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Indi ... 729789.cms
19 Nov 2008, 0041 hrs IST, TNN
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NEW DELHI: The Elephant and the Red Dragon will shake hands for the first time on Indian soil next month in a joint counter-terrorism and combat exercise aptly named 'Hand-in-Hand'.
TOI was the first to report last month that the world's largest and third largest militaries — that is the 2.5-million People's Liberation Army and the 1.13-million Indian Army — were all set to hold their first-ever exercise around Belgaum towards mid-December.
The plans have firmed up now, with a 10-member Indian Army delegation led by a brigadier leaving for Beijing on Tuesday to tie up loose ends in the "final planning conference’’ between the two armies for the exercise.
Though 'Hand-in-Hand' exercise will only be at "a company group level", with around 100 to 150 soldiers from each side, supported by some IAF helicopters, it is being seen as yet another military confidence-building measure between the two sides.
"The idea is to build trust in each other. The level and scope of bilateral exercises will be enhanced in subsequent years. This could also lead to a collaborative security mechanism for the region," said a defence ministry official.
The Indian and Chinese armed forces have generally remained suspicious of each other since the bitter 1962 conflict, which left around 3,500 Indian soldiers dead, but have taken some steps in recent years to boost military CBMs with each other.
The two countries have moved towards institutionalizing defence and military exchanges, with an MoU on defence cooperation and exchanges being signed in May 2006 and the first annual defence dialogue kicking off in November 2007.
Its fascinating how the Chinese intelligence get its hands on these guys but our Indian intelligence agencies cant even get hold of their own RAW renegade who's living it up in Jersey. Not to mention, the Indian American scientist from Hawaii who was selling US government secrets to anybody who could pay online except to India.Singha wrote:CNN
Man pleads guilty to aiding Chinese space program
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- A Chinese-born U.S. physicist and businessman pleaded guilty Monday to bribing Chinese space program officials and illegally providing U.S. space launch data to the Beijing government.
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GoddessStan_Savljevic wrote:Is that a coincidence that Chang'e sounds like how Chinese would say Chandra?!"Chang'e" is named after a legendary Chinese moon goddess.
Sorry to go back a bit in this thread but I feel this news warrants more attention than it has received. Please let me know if there is any other thread for more info on this...Dmurphy wrote:China to acquire Su-35 MKKs equipped with cruise missiles and KS-172?What the eff!Present plans of the PLA Air Force call for the acquisition of 38 Su-35MKKs whose primary armaments package will include Novator’s KS-172 long-range air combat missile as well as the Yakhont multi-role supersonic cruise missile from NPO Mashinostroineyie. Interestingly, the Yakhonts will be upgraded will an all-digital navigation-and-guidance system developed by Russia’s JSC Konstern Avionika. Therefore, it is now a distinct possibility that the Yakhont-equipped Su-35MKKs will become operational much earlier than the BrahMos-equipped Su-30MKI. The Yakhonts will also be on board the Su-33MKKs, eight of which are on the verge of being ordered by the PLA Navy.
Mullah Nayakuddin Al Nigereevavinash wrote:http://www.thisdayonline.com/ncomments.php?id=127885
Just look at the comments from ordinary nigerians about china
Mullah Nayakuddin
11.13.2008 13:13
Nigeria should have approached India. ISRO has done a stellar job of helping out other nations launch their satellites and has had 100 % success rate.