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This is the era of digital technology. Missile reliability is much higher than 80% nowadays. The precision manufacturing, vacuum seal, chip based guidance etc make things much more robust.That is where Indian members here failed to understand: Indian missile doesn't need to test that many tests because India's adversaries (Pak and China) are much weaker than China's adversaries (Soviet and US). The more test you do, the more reliable your missile will be. During cold war, it was estimated that US missiles had around 16-18% failure due to its own quality issue, the figure of Soviet was around 22%, Chinese was probably around 33%. So, if China shoot 100 missiles to Soviet, there will be only 66-67 missiles getting close to the target. Then considering the level of soviet anti-missile system, let's say 20% of them will be shoot down. Finally, around 53 missiles hit the target.
Now, let's look at India. If we say India's missile reliability is 55% hypothetically, then 55 of 100 missile will launch successfully. But Chinese defense network can't match Soviet, if we say 10% destroy rate, then 50 India missile will finally hit the target. See, with less money, India gets the same achievement.
It gives me great pleasure to wake up fanboys from their dream because I had the same problem when I was young. Now I can turn the favor.
Indian missile tests have never failed when in advanced stage of development or in user trial. The missile failure has happened only in development stage. This is the case for all ballistic missile, cruise missiles and satellite launch vehicles.
The only place where Indian missiles can fail is in the warhead stage as many warheads, especially nuclear ones are not tested in terms of success rates and detonation on re-entry. So, India needs to test more nuclear warheads in re-entry mode.