A Sukhoi (Su-30MKI) fighter will be on chase duties when the
Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) undertakes a
crucial flight trial of the home-grown sub-sonic cruise missile,
Nirbhay.
Top military sources have confirmed to OneIndia on Wednesday that the
third flight trial of Nirbhay will be scheduled on Oct 16 from Launch
Complex-III of Integrated Test Range (ITR) in Chandipur (near Balasore)
off Odisha coast.
"The launch will depend on many factors as usual with weather being
a critical one," a source said.
As this piece goes live, the final Flight Readiness Review (FRR) and
Launch Authorization Board (LAB) meeting is underway.
DRDO has scheduled the launch a day after the 84th birth anniversary
celebrations of its former chief Dr APJ Abdul Kalam.
As reported by OneIndia earlier, Prime Minister Narendra Modi will
unveil a bust of Dr Kalam at DRDO headquarters in Delhi tomorrow while
Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar will be present in Hyderabad for
renaming the Missile Complex after the former President.
oneindia
Low-altitude flight a challenging task
An official said that this time the scientists are preparing the missile
for a low-altitude flight, a challenging task.
"Mostly all the parameters are same as the last flight, barring this
time it will be a low-altitude flight of Nirbhay. The missile will be
likely to be brought down from around 4.8 km to 20 m. The process will
be undertaken step-by step with the missile likely to fly for around 5
minutes in each stage," the official said.
The total duration of the flight is likely to be around 50-minutes to
one hour.
During low-altitude flights, a missile will have to very high
drags, which the scientists are confident of tackling.
Sukhoi's long-endurance to come handy
During the successful second flight trial conducted last year (October
17, 2014), Nirbhay was chased by a Jaguar striker.
"Last time we couldn't get a Sukhoi as the entire fleet was grounded
owing to some technical reason. Generally Jaguars, Mirages and Sukhois
are used for chased duties during the flight trials of fighters and
long-range missiles. This time we are using a Sukhoi as it has
long-endurance and can capture the flight parameters till the end," an
official said.
To capture the video footage of a missile in motion, normally pilots are
given the flight nomenclature in advance. The launch time, duration,
flightpath, speed and way point navigation (in case of Nirbhay) will be
known to the pilots, making their job easier.
[Sky thriller - When fighter plane Jaguar striker chased Nirbhay
missile]
Missile test result crucial for many top DRDO brains
Nirbhay is India's first home-grown subsonic cruise missile and is
developed by Bengaluru-based Aeronautical Development Establishment
(ADE). The missile has an expected strike range of 800-1100 km.
The maiden launch of the missile (March 12, 2013) had to be aborted
mid-way when one of the systems developed snags for 500-600 milli
seconds. This forced DRDO to embed upgraded redundant systems on Nirbhay
during its second trial last year.
The current launch will be crucial for DRDO after the Modi
government brought in changes on the top with a new Director General (Dr
Selvin Christopher) and Scientific Advisor to Defence Minister (Dr G
Satheesh Reddy) taking charge.
The trial will be also a litmus test for ADE's recently-appointed
Director M V K V Prasad.
Interestingly, this will be the first missile test after Dr Christopher,
Dr Reddy and Prasad in their new avatars.
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