Indian Air Force : Updates & Discussions

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With warfare moving beyond visual range, drones taking centre stage and helicopter survivability under scrutiny, the Indian Air Force (IAF) has set in motion ‘Vayu Baan’, its first helicopter-dropped drone project, it is learnt.

Sources in the defence establishment said the homegrown project is being led by the IAF’s Directorate of Aerospace Design (DAD) which
issued a Request for Proposal (RFP) earlier this month, inviting bids from domestic vendors for the system’s design and development.

At its core, Vayu Baan will be a small drone deployed from helicopters to navigate autonomously towards its target. Once airborne, it will transmit real-time video to operators and, if required, carry out a precision strike using a small onboard warhead.

“The aim is to let helicopters engage targets from stand-off ranges while reducing risk to aircrew,” a source said. “It will also support both ground and airborne control for flexible mission execution.”

According to sources, the drone is expected to have a range of over 50 km and an endurance of around 30 minutes. Equipped with electro-optical and infrared sensors, it will be capable of surveillance as well as target identification. Importantly, it will continue to operate even if enemy forces jam or disable GPS signals.

The project is on a fast track, with the IAF hoping to complete development, testing and delivery of an initial batch within a year. This will involve helicopter drop trials, payload integration and high-altitude testing before the system is cleared for operational use.

India, with ‘Vayu Baan’, is set to join a select group of countries working on air-launched unmanned systems, which globally remain largely at the demonstration stage.

China, for instance, has showcased air-deployed drone swarms from platforms such as the Xi’an H-6 bomber, but these are yet to see operational deployment.

Similarly, in the United States, the DARPA-led Gremlins programme has demonstrated the launch and mid-air recovery of drone swarms from transport aircraft, while the U.S. Army’s “air-launched effects” effort is progressing towards integration on platforms like the UH-60 Black Hawk and AH-64 Apache.
 

With warfare moving beyond visual range, drones taking centre stage and helicopter survivability under scrutiny, the Indian Air Force (IAF) has set in motion ‘Vayu Baan’, its first helicopter-dropped drone project, it is learnt.

Sources in the defence establishment said the homegrown project is being led by the IAF’s Directorate of Aerospace Design (DAD) which
issued a Request for Proposal (RFP) earlier this month, inviting bids from domestic vendors for the system’s design and development.

At its core, Vayu Baan will be a small drone deployed from helicopters to navigate autonomously towards its target. Once airborne, it will transmit real-time video to operators and, if required, carry out a precision strike using a small onboard warhead.

“The aim is to let helicopters engage targets from stand-off ranges while reducing risk to aircrew,” a source said. “It will also support both ground and airborne control for flexible mission execution.”

According to sources, the drone is expected to have a range of over 50 km and an endurance of around 30 minutes. Equipped with electro-optical and infrared sensors, it will be capable of surveillance as well as target identification. Importantly, it will continue to operate even if enemy forces jam or disable GPS signals.

The project is on a fast track, with the IAF hoping to complete development, testing and delivery of an initial batch within a year. This will involve helicopter drop trials, payload integration and high-altitude testing before the system is cleared for operational use.

India, with ‘Vayu Baan’, is set to join a select group of countries working on air-launched unmanned systems, which globally remain largely at the demonstration stage.

China, for instance, has showcased air-deployed drone swarms from platforms such as the Xi’an H-6 bomber, but these are yet to see operational deployment.

Similarly, in the United States, the DARPA-led Gremlins programme has demonstrated the launch and mid-air recovery of drone swarms from transport aircraft, while the U.S. Army’s “air-launched effects” effort is progressing towards integration on platforms like the UH-60 Black Hawk and AH-64 Apache.

NRT Alpha S would fit this role quite well, imo. Could even be fired from rotary launchers
 
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NRT Alpha S would fit this role quite well, imo. Could even be fired from rotary launchers

Very Different projects with different requirements. IAF has currently five ongoing programs for weaponized drones :
1. Helicopter launched weaponized drone. Mentoned above.
2. ALFA-S for air/heli launched saturation, ISR, BDA etc.
3. Loitering missile/drone similar to delilah for aircrafts.
4. Smart loitering Beyond Visual Line Of Sight (BVLOS) munitions
5. Collaborative Long Range Target Saturation/ Destruction System.
 
fking hell man the link didnt load for a sec and my heart dropped thinking it was breaking news or smthing

I am really very sorry for that unpleasant experience

This story just made me feel very bad , that how young IAF trainees perished in a training sortie
 

The Defence Acquisition Council (DAC) is likely to give its nod to several major programmes aimed at strengthening the armed forces, including proposals to acquire 60 Medium Transport Aircraft and five more units of the S-400 air defence systems.

The meeting is scheduled to take place on Friday and is also expected to clear a proposal to acquire around four squadrons of the indigenous Remotely Piloted Strike Aircraft, also referred to as unmanned combat jets, for the Indian Air Force.

Sources in the defence establishment told ANI that the Indian Army's plan to acquire a large number of BrahMos supersonic cruise missiles, with a strike range of 800 km, is also likely to come up for approval.

The Defence Ministry is expected to take up the case for the purchase of five more units of the S-400 Sudarshan air defence systems at a time when Indian Air Force teams are in Russia to receive the fourth squadron under the earlier contract for five systems.

The fourth system is likely to arrive between April and May this year, while the fifth squadron is expected to be delivered between November and December.

Under the Medium Transport Aircraft programme, the Indian Air Force is looking to acquire 60 aircraft. Brazilian firm Embraer, American company Lockheed Martin and Russian manufacturer Ilyushin are expected to be the main contenders for the contract.

Meanwhile, the Indian Army's proposal to procure 300 indigenous Dhanush howitzers is also likely to be taken up for clearance at the meeting.
 

1 lakh crore for 60 MTA.
60,000 crore for 5 S-400 systems.
40,000 crore for 4 squadrons of Ghatak.




Upgraded missiles to protect S-400 systems from drones.
 

Modern warfare isn’t just about sophisticated weapons; high-quality communications is an imperative. This is why the Indian Air Force (IAF) will be pushing for SDRs or Software Defined Radios in the next Defence Procurement Board (DPB) meeting next month.

SDRs or loosely, “airborne Internet,” highly placed sources said, is essential for network-centric warfare, which links up different kinds of radars and other sensors, allowing decision makers the opportunity to see the entire battlefield in front of them, interact with others and take the necessary action.

It allows for integration, within a service, between the services and between the armed forces and the political leadership. In the battlefield, the concerned soldier gets precise information allowing for more effective strikes.

Eventually, there will be SDRs with virtually all units of the IAF, including fighter planes, helicopters, transport aircraft and ground control. Each SDR is about Rs 2 crore, and the IAF wants 2,500 of them.

The SDRs will be indigenously made ( both the software and hardware elements, keeping in mind India’s aatmanirbharta or self-reliance plan),
and once cleared by the DPB, which is headed by the Defence Secretary and includes the three vice-chiefs of staff, it will be placed before the Defence Acquisition Council, headed by defence minister Rajnath Singh and including the chief of defence staff and the three service chiefs.

More Astra-1 Missiles​

The deal for 400 Astra-1 air-to-air missiles for the IAF is almost ready. These missiles, which have a range of 100 km, can be fitted onto IAF fighters, particularly the Sukhoi-30 (the IAF has about 270 of them), have been designed by the Defence Research and Development Organisation and will be manufactured by Bharat Dynamics.
 

India is also negotiating a Rs 10,000 crore deal for 280 missiles for the S-400. The 280 will replace the ones utilised during Operation Sindoor. The negotiations are in the RFP or Request for Purchase stage. The missiles could arrive later this year or early next year. Similarly, the IAF has order some Brahmos cruise missiles — an Indo-Russian production. The Brahmos, with a range of at least 300 km, was effective during Operation Sindoor and some are coming as part of the emergency purchases allowed by the defence ministry.

Sukhoi-30 material arrives

A dozen “New material kits” for a dozen Sukhoi-30 fighters have just arrived from Russia. This is the basic material from which Hindustan Aeronautics makes the Sukhoi-30MKI fighter in Nasik which the IAF should get from the year-end. Highly placed government sources said that HAL will supply 13 Sukhoi-MKI fighters to the IAF.
 
We are trying to achieve pan India shield via mission Sudarshan Chakra. It's challenging yet doable.

Lots and lots of money. Manifolds of the current budget allocations. It needs a massive initial funding to gather the momentum too, with phase 1 covering more than just Delhi & Mumbai. So... Maybe half done by 2040-2045 ? India is huuuuge after all ( not including rural, remote, sparsely populated areas)

Along with time, manpower and a seperate command overseeing it. Kind of like SFC-Defense.
 
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