Bharat Forge, Tata Power SED speed up DRDO’s towed gun programme.
Engaging the private sector has yielded rich dividends
for State-owned Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO),
which is developing the high-capacity Advanced Towed Artillery Gun
System (ATAGS).
Valued at $4.5 billion, the
production order for the guns, which are currently undergoing intensive
field trials, could be a potential windfall for the two private defence
companies engaged in the project.
As the Army seeks
to fill its requirement of over 1,500 towed guns, the ATAGS is being
developed in a joint project with two private defence firms, Tata Power
SED and Bharat Forge.
Sources said that while Bharat
Forge, a Kalyani Group company, has “developed and provided diverse
inputs in design, manufacture and development”, Tata Power SED (
Strategic Engineering Division) has provided the automotive system,
understructure assembly automation, breech system, recoil system and
fixed firing stand.
The segments provided by Tata Power SED account for approximately 70 per cent of the gun system, the sources said.
Immense accuracy
The
firing of the gun, and “its immense accuracy”, has turned out to be a
fitting example of how the DRDO and the Ordnance Factory Board, along
with the private sector, can compete with global defence giants, said
DRDO sources.
In a test round earlier this week, the
gun fired a round at 48 km, as compared to 40-45 km at Pokhran,
revealing “the scale, depth and accuracy of its range”. Comparably, 155
mm, 52-calibre guns can fire their ammunition to 40-45 km, the sources
added. Senior officials of the DRDO and Armament Research and
Development Establishment were present at the trial.
Typically, only State-owned companies are given such
orders. Roping in the private sector is seen to have helped the
production of the ATAGS. “The system incorporates futuristic
technologies and is slated to have an all-electric drive for ammunition
handling, breach opening and closing, which will provide huge
reliability,” the sources pointed out.
Two prototypes
were developed and tested in Odisha last December, they said, adding
that the 25-litre chamber volume of the ATAGS allows for “higher
propellant charge to fire ammunition at longer range in comparison to
contemporary artillery”. Its autoloader also has a six-round magazine,
which facilitates rapid fire of ammunition, they said, adding that it is
another remarkable feature of the ATAGS.
The
Army needs over 1,500 155 mm, 52-calibre towed howitzer and 800 mounted
gun systems of the same calibre. The sources confirmed that the next
stage of trials with further modifications will be in December.
thehindubusinessline
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