Dhanush, a derivative of the Bofors gun, has cleared the winter trials in Sikkim and is headed for a final round of tests in the Rajasthan deserts this summer.
If it clears the
last round of trials on accuracy, range and rate of fire, it could find
its way into the Indian army by year-end.
Ordnance Factory
Board (OFB) officials said a move was under way to transport the Dhanush
to Rajasthan from Sikkim, where the winter trials ended yesterday.
“We have put
together a special project team to look into different aspects of the
product, including the cradle, barrel and the hydraulic and electrical
systems. Once the last round of trials is complete, we will supply the
guns to the forces by this year-end,” said M.C. Bansal, the chairperson
of the Calcutta-headquartered OFB.
“We have an order to supply 114 such guns to the army.”
For nearly three
decades, the army has not added a big gun to its armoury. The Bofors
guns, bought in 1987, have kept the artillery going.
The Dhanush is
being developed at the Gun Carriage Factory in Jabalpur. It has a 155mm
barrel that is 6.975 metres long. The longer barrel ensures a longer
range, an OFB official said.
Work on version 2
of the Dhanush was also under way, officials said. “The sub-systems for
this product are being developed and once this gun fires successfully,
work on the next-generation Dhanush would gather momentum.”
Other officials
said work to develop better mine-protected vehicles was going on at the
OFB’s research facility in Medak in Andhra Pradesh.
Sources said the
new MPVs would be able to withstand stronger mine blasts and provide “an
improvised seating system to take in greater shock and give better
options for firing back at the enemy”.
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