all I was initially implying in the other thread, is that you should be able to design and build all your own subs,
Already doing it with SSNs under construction & SSBNs operational.
all I was initially implying in the other thread, is that you should be able to design and build all your own subs,
At a time when only 3 other nations had successfully launched satellites.Correction : It was not satellites, it was one nano-satellite launched in the orbit after four failed attempts.
Last time UK tried, it took 4 attempts to send one 102 KG satellite 500 KM in LEO. So good-luck and see you after 96 launches, if you can reduce the weight of one nav-sat to 102 KG.
Or may be you can ask ISRO to do that for you, they have more experience in setting up a Nav-system and are economical to boot.
If you follow rockets, they always started off small. The technology and know-how is around these days, it's not new anymore, but it's only now that the number of satellite launches required justifies the monetary outlay as part of a private business model. The Iranians are short of money.Highly intelligent...So the Iranians should be launching geostationary satellites by now. New Zealand would soon follow after launching the Electron.
And you don't even have a program to develop even a medium lift launcher. Even on paper.
There is something called the learning curve, and you are somewhere near the origin.
As for the LCA, it belongs to the light category. Not the 'overpriced & unserviceable' category as some European fighters.
So why are you buying foreign subs and jets. The whole ToT thing is a flawed plan. Given the life-cycle timescales on things like subs and fighters, you're always getting 15-20 year-old technology. So whilst you think it's a short-cut to contemporary technology, it's actually only a short-cut to 2 decades ago.Already doing it with SSNs under construction & SSBNs operational.
We would if we felt they were useful in any way but diesel propulsion doesn't fit with their current usage.Does UK or USA build diesel submarines? Same way, even India makes just nuclear submarines and in diesel category it is getting French assistance to complete indigenisation without having to design by itself. I would not mind this as long as India gets the design and eventually makes it fully in India. For now, nuclear submarine manufacturing is enough and is at par with many other countries
Tejas MK1 is similar to Gripen C. They are decent fighter planes but just too small for having larger payload. Current payload of 4ton is insufficient as about half of it will go for 2 WVR and 2 fuel tanks leaving little for other ammunitions.
If you follow rockets, they always started off small.
The technology and know-how is around these days, it's not new anymore
Your first such launcher was Russian, we will build our own after proving the technology with smaller rockets
And it will remain so no matter how much you cry here.JFC, it doesn't take much for you Indians to pretend you're Gods does it?

copy Russian technology, learn from it and expand it a bit, and anyone would think you'd landed on Titan using a spaceship powered by a Schwarzschild Kugelblitz.

Give it a rest, sit back and watch. It'll all be over shortly.


... Lot of hot air blowing from that little island...So why are you buying foreign subs and jets
The LCA belongs to a category that rhymes with 'light'
Recovering from the mess your M****F***** elders made of Indians.And what was India doing in that time period? We'll be launching our own satellites by 2021 anyway.
We'll launch them ourselves in a few years.





The de Havilland Propellers Blue Streak was a British medium-range ballistic missile (MRBM), and later the first stage of the Europa satellite launch vehicle. Blue Streak was cancelled without entering full production. The missile project was cancelled in 1960, with US-led Skybolt the preferred replacement.
Partly to avoid political embarrassment from the cancellation, the UK Government proposed that the rocket be used as the first stage of a civilian satellite launcher called Black Prince. However, the cost was thought to be too great for the UK alone, and international collaboration was sought. This led to the formation of the European Launcher Development Organisation (ELDO), with Blue Streak used as the first stage of a carrier rocket named Europa.
The programme proceeded to perform multiple test launches, however these frequently resulted in partial failures. In addition, Britain decided to pull out of the ELDO organisation, and thus Europa, to instead focus on the rival British Black Arrow launcher instead.




) meanwhile the real space faring nations were having this (Titan II GLV - Wikipedia). Payload to LEO 3000 + KG and man-rated.If wishes were horses...
"It'll all be over shortly"
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UK Space Agency: 2000 satellite launches by 2030
Don't look now but you're still 'recovering', except you have nobody to blame anymore. The rockets are just an elaborate smokescreen to cover up the standard of living issues. More rockets = more smoke generated.Recovering from the mess your M****F***** elders made of Indians.


And it looks like Afghanistan still hasn't recovered from the Guptas and Mughals I see.




No wonder your rockets fail.. You don't have any idea of something called 'Scale' in real world. Try lifting 10 KG, its easy. Try lifting 100 KG with 10 buds, its troublesome but can be done. Try lifting 1000 KG with 100 buds, you will require pullies and all. Try lifting a million KG with 10 thousand people.... Well that has not been tried till date. India is trying to achieve what only one country in the entire history of mankind has done. That country is China and it is still in mid-income group.Don't look now but you're still 'recovering', except you have nobody to blame anymore. The rockets are just an elaborate smokescreen to cover up the standard of living issues. More rockets = more smoke generated.
And poor Singapore is still recovering from the Cholas. Oh no, actually they aren't.![]()



British scientists have been outsourced to foreign rocket programs and well, we just have a top-notch university-level education system.
Only 2 of its 4 flights were successful and it launched a 40kg satellite, and to think you were taking the piss out of Black Arrow launching a 144kg satellite more than a decade earlier.
Yeah, in exactly one field of engineering that we haven't actually tried in so far
Your move to larger launches was taken from a Russian design.
GSLV MkI uses a Russian cryogenic stage. They transferred the technology.

If you are so good at Rocket technology, why oh why does a Brahmos look exactly like a P-800 and a Brahmos II look like a Zircon?
Tall claims and no substance. Do it and then come back. You record isn't exactly... shall we say 'stellar'?UK Space Agency: 2000 satellite launches by 2030
And we won't need any Russian technology and we'll acquire the funds for larger rockets will smaller rocket launches and some government incentives.
Correction, you are not starting from scratch, you are staring from -ve.It only takes decades if you're learning from scratch, which we aren't.

You were a world power back then. Your peer was putting man on the moon when you were trying to get measly 100 KG up 500 KM. And not to mention you always had clandestine support of US and Australia. FYI, there was only one successful launch of Black Arrow. A failed SRBM turned into a failed SLV.Only 2 of its 4 flights were successful and it launched a 40kg satellite, and to think you were taking the piss out of Black Arrow launching a 144kg satellite more than a decade earlier. Your move to larger launches was taken from a Russian design.
UK Space Agency: 2000 satellite launches by 2030
And they are talking about launching microsatellites.And we won't need any Russian technology