Russian Military News, Reports, Data, etc.

alopes

Junior Member
This news articles talks about India participation int the Russian 5th generation fighter project.

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K. Raghu
Bangalore: India is yet to begin work on a futuristic technology demonstrator plane, a single-seat, fifth-generation fighter it is jointly developing with Russia’s Sukhoi Design Bureau, that will take to the skies for the first time in 2009.
Some analysts are questioning the contribution of Indian aerospace research and development (R&D) engineers to the programme, given that the aircraft’s design specifications have already been decided and the first flight is set for next year.
Futuristic technology:The Sukhoi 30, part of the Indian Air Force fighter jet fleet, on display at the Aero India 2007 air show in Bangalore. India and Russia are working jointly on its advanced variant. (Photo: Abhijit Bhatlekar/Bloomberg)
Futuristic technology:The Sukhoi 30, part of the Indian Air Force fighter jet fleet, on display at the Aero India 2007 air show in Bangalore. India and Russia are working jointly on its advanced variant. (Photo: Abhijit Bhatlekar/Bloomberg)
In October, India and Russia signed an agreement for the joint development and production of the fifth-generation fighter aircraft, or FGFA, making a commitment to sharing resources and work equally. A team of officials from Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd, or HAL, the country’s military plane maker, was in Moscow in late May for discussions on the estimated $4 billion, or Rs17,160 crore, project.
“We are (still) talking about the price and investment costs,” said one person familiar with the development who did not want to be named because of the sensitive nature of the project. “(Also) the more we delay, the less work we will get. That is a fact.”
The fighter plane will havea so-called swept-forward wing—which increases an aircraft’s agility and gives it the stealth feature to reduce risk of detection by radar. The (technology demonstrator) aircraft being built by Sukhoi will use the engines, systems and avionics of the previous generation Su-30 plane.
“If something is going to come in one year, where could we have participation?” asked former air chief marshal S. Krishnaswamy. “That actually has a negative impact onour own R&D people and laboratories.”
Another former Indian Air Force (IAF) official, air marshal B.K. Pandey, said, “If the prototype is already decided, there is nothing original that Indian aerospace industry can contribute to the programme.”
A person familiar with the programme’s development said India would bring in its expertise in carbon-composite technology used in HAL’s Dhruv advanced light helicopter and Tejas light combat aircraft, both of which are homegrown programmes.
Russian, Indian firms will make an equal number of planes during the development phase
Once the technology demonstrator flies next year, Russia will work on developing more than six two-seater prototypes of the stealth fighter. Indian engineers will contribute to the design of the front fuselage, build composites for better stealth features and work on avionics.
“Once the front fuselage undergoes a change (to accommodate two pilots instead of one as in the technology demonstrator), the aircraft lift conditions will change, wings will change. This is where our learning will become useful,” said the person familiar with the development.
The new aircraft would be nearly a third lighter than the Su-30 and be able to fly longer than conventional fighters, besides possessing the stealth features. The aircraft is expected to be ready for induction in the Indian and Russian air forces by 2018.
HAL has in the past produced, under licence, Russian aircraft such as the MiG 21, which forms the bulk of the IAF’s strike fighter fleet. IAF also has in its inventory the Su-30 MkI, the India variant of the fourth-generation Russian fighter with avionics built by an India-led team which HAL will make under licence in the country.
The new Indo-Russian fighter is being designed to carry weapons in its fuselage, making it similar to the Joint Strike Fighter of the US.
While the components and systems would be built equally at the Komsomolsk-na-Amure Aircraft Production Association in Russia and HAL facilities in India, the engines would be made at a factory of NPO Saturn, the Russian engine maker. Both plane makers would build an equal number of aircraft during the development phase.
“Why did Russia want India to join (the programme)? Because they want money, they want (the) market,” said Pandey, a former head of IAF’s training command in Bangalore. “If we can get transfer of technology, HAL (will be) assembling the aircraft, then IAF has to buy the planes. So, they have an assured market”.
A majority of the planes in the IAF’s fleet are of Russian origin, with the rest from the UK and France. Although indigenous military plane programmes have been undertaken by the Defence Research and Development Organisation, or DRDO, and HAL, the Armed Forces remain dependent on imports.
India has floated a global tender to buy 126 multi-role combat aircraft that could cost a minimum of Rs42,000 crore, evoking the interest of aerospace companies such as Lockeed Martin Corp. and Boeing Co. of the US. It also plans to buy nearly 250 light- and medium-weight helicopters.
The Tejas fighter, conceived as a replacement for the ageing Russian-built MiG 21, is at least two years behind certification as it needs to achieve the so-called air staff requirements, or ASR, the standards set by IAF before induction. The military plane unit of Boeing has been asked to assist the Aeronautical Development Agency in certification of the LCA by 2010.
DRDO is now scouting for a foreign partner to build an engine for the Tejas fighter, after its unit Gas Turbine and Research Establishment failed to deliver the Kaveri engine even after nearly two decades of development.
 

sandyj

Junior Member
Russia May Help Britain Scrap Nuclear Submarines

by Staff Writers

St. Petersburg, Russia (RIA Novosti) Jun 18, 2008

Russia's Zvezdochka shipyard in the town of Severodvinsk on the Barents Sea could scrap Britain's decommissioned nuclear submarines, a company official said on Monday.
At present, the U.K. does not have the facilities to reprocess nuclear components left on board at least 11 decommissioned vessels and is forced to store the submarines afloat indefinitely.

The Russian company, which specializes in reprocessing scrapped nuclear components, could help Britain resolve this problem under the Arctic Military Environmental Cooperation program (AMEC).

The program was established in 1996 when the AMEC Declaration was signed by Russia, Norway and the U.S. to collaborate in addressing military-related environmental concerns in the arctic region. Britain joined the program in 2003.

"We could cut the reactor and two adjacent compartments from a sub, seal them hermetically and remove them to a permanent storage facility outside Russia," the source said.

He said that the Zvezdochka shipyard is currently dismantling only Russian submarines at a rate of approximately two vessels per year. However, by 2012-2015 the company may have enough capacity to take foreign orders.

Russia held preliminary talks on the issue with British Royal Navy officials, who recently visited the country.

According to the Zvezdochka spokesman, France has also expressed an interest in cooperation with the company on the dismantling of France's decommissioned submarines.


Source: RIA Novosti
 

sandyj

Junior Member
Russia Starts Equipment Delivery For Kourou Space Center On July 10


soyuz-2-1a-payload-fairing-starsem-processing-facility-baikonur-bg.jpg

The Kourou launch site is intended mainly for the launch of geostationary satellites. Its close proximity to the equator will enable the Soyuz-ST to put into orbit heavier satellites than from Baikonur in Kazakhstan and Plesetsk in northern Russia.

by Staff Writers

Samara, Russia (RIA Novosti) Jun 18, 2008

A Russian rocket and space company has started preparing the equipment to be sent to the Kourou launch site in French Guiana, a spokesman for the Samara-based TsSKB Progress said on Monday.
"The first vessel will set out from Vyborg [near St. Petersburg] with 105 containers of equipment provided by 18 Russian enterprises. All the equipment has been adapted to meet European standards," he said.

He said the vessel is due to leave port on July 10 and arrive by the end of the month.

"Installation work at the Kourou space center will start in August and is to be completed by the end of 2008. The first two Soyuz ST rockets are to be launched in January 2009," he said.

The Kourou launch site is intended mainly for the launch of geostationary satellites. Its close proximity to the equator will enable the Soyuz-ST to put into orbit heavier satellites than from Baikonur in Kazakhstan and Plesetsk in northern Russia.

Under a contract signed last June with the French satellite launch firm Arianespace, the Soyuz will have a separate launch pad near Sinnamari, a village 10 kilometers (six miles) north of the site used for the Ariane-5, the main European-made booster.

Launches of Soyuz spacecraft are the key part of the Russian-French space exploration program.


Source: RIA Novosti
 

crobato

Colonel
VIP Professional
Sevmash in trouble

2008-06-12
The Sevmash shipyard in Severodvinsk, Arkhangelsk Oblast, was on the agenda when the Russian government yesterday discussed the country’s military industrial complex. The yard, one of the biggest in Russia, has proved unable to cope with three major ongoing construction projects.
Sevmash, one of two major shipyards in Russia’s northern engineering capital of Severodvinsk, has become a headache for the Russian government. Not only has the plant ended up in trouble because of its delays and cost overruns with the aircraft carrier “Admiral Gorshkov”, which is to be sold to the Indian Navy. Sevmash is also significantly behind schedules with the nuclear-powered submarine “Yuri Dolgorukii” – the first of Russia’s fourth generation submarines.

In addition, the plant recently also confirmed that it will not manage to complete the construction of the floating nuclear power station – the “Akademik Lomonosov. According to newspaper Vedomosti, the plant is already one year behind schedules with the unique power generating unit.

The Sevmash has also had major problems with completing several civil construction works. As previously reported by BarentsObserver, the Norwegian shipping company Odfjell earlier this year cancelled a big construction order on several chemical tankers, because of numerous delays.

Sources in the Ministry of Defence says to Vedomosti that the shipyard has been in a difficult situation since the early 1990s because of its lack of clever managers.

The Russian government has long put pressure on Sevmash to speed up the construction orders. Last year, the director of the company was dismissed because of the long-dragged projects. New company head Kalistratov is however unlikely to make any quick improvements.

The main problem of Sevmash is most probably a structural one. Russia’s nuclear submarine constructor number one is huge and in major need of modernisation. In order to cope with its many big projects, the plant will have to restructure production processes and apply new technology


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crazyinsane105

Junior Member
VIP Professional
Back in buisness...

Russia building a permanent naval base in Syria

from mosnwes.com

Russia has begun works in the Syrian port of Tartus seeking to built a full-scale naval base for the ships of the Black Sea Fleet, currently based in Ukraine’s Sevastopol, the Kommersant newspaper reported on Friday, quoting unnamed sources in the Defense Ministry and the General Staff of the Russian Navy.

The paper noted that this is the first time Russia is setting up a military base outside the CIS since the fall of the USSR and that the base will allow Moscow to pursue its own line in the Middle East.

Russia has also started work in the port of Latakia in Syria, the newspaper said. The base in Tartus and the new mooring in Latakia will be able to serve the needs of the Black Sea Fleet and possibly the North Sea Fleet as well.

The newspaper quoted its sources as saying that in the nearest future the Russian Navy will form a squadron headed by the Moskva missile cruiser which will permanently operate in the Mediterranean, taking part in joint exercises with NATO forces.

The sources said that the new base would allow Russia to strengthen its positions in the Middle East and also enhance Syrian security.

Russian Defense Ministry and the General Staff of the Russian Navy force have declined to give any official comments on the report.

Just wondering: what's the latest word on this naval base? Ever since this report and a few others, I haven't heard too much else about this going forward...
 

Gollevainen

Colonel
VIP Professional
Registered Member
I haven't heard of it also after that report few years ago. But to build a port is a huge infrastructure and the premilinary work which doesen't reveal any concrete buildingwork to the public eyes takes 2-3 years with projects of this calibre.
 

crazyinsane105

Junior Member
VIP Professional
I haven't heard of it also after that report few years ago. But to build a port is a huge infrastructure and the premilinary work which doesen't reveal any concrete buildingwork to the public eyes takes 2-3 years with projects of this calibre.

That makes sense. Ever since this report has come out, the Syrians have inked several interesting defense deals with the Russians, including purchasing more Kornet-E missiles along with the Pantyr-S1 system.
 

akihh

New Member
Russia rages as US and Poland ink missile defence deal.

Moscow has stated that reponse goes "beyond diplomacy".

Russian nuke forces are in such deep disarray that even miniscule defensive shield becomes major strategic threat as tiny counterstike from surviving assets could be intercepted. At the same time US has constantly improved it's nuclear warfighting capability and is about to reach nuclear primacy. Foreign affairs did an excellent
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on this back in 2006. Read it through!

Say what you want, kreml is about to go ape*hit. Especially right after georgian war with relations already strained.
 

crobato

Colonel
VIP Professional
My view on what to expect.

US missiles in Poland and Czech Republic is going to mean tit for tat, Russian missiles sold or deployed to Iran and Syria, like S-300.
 
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