You can justify all you want but the government's confidence in ISRO to launch humans into space would have fallen considerably.
Provide a source or official document government putting hold on HSP. Government works on qualification, not sentiments. They have seen bigger failures in their times.
Where do you work anyway? Your confidence is like at you're an AM at some department in ISRO or DOS. If you aren't, you are just acting like an idiot.
And this is the stupidest thing I have heard on this forum for a long time:
"Foreign Indian "talent" is not only mostly incompetent in the field but is unwilling to come to India too."
No offense but sometimes it is better to keep your mouth shut than to say something and prove to everyone
you are an idiot.
Chinese are a living example of being able to attract top chinese talent with experience in in overseas space programs and education in top institutions like MIT, Caltech into their organizations. It is another thing that they even attracted foreigners.
IITs are no match for MIT or Caltech. IITs are way behind in R&D programs or technical exposure. At least IISc comes a bit close to top US universities in research. Aeronautical education and exposure is top notch in the top western universities. PhDs from MIT are sought after everywhere. You must be joking if you think that overseas Indians are incompetent.
Here's a few articles about "incompetent" overseas Indians:
Eshani Jha gets the top award; Gopal Goel, Vetri Vel and Alay Shah among winners.
www.americanbazaaronline.com
Here, read about Dr. Swait Mohan
She was calm, composed and in complete control as she spelt out every phase of NASA's Mars 2020 Perseverance Rover landing on the Red planet. Meet Dr Swati Mohan - born in India - now a NASA achiever.
www.timesnownews.com
The Barry Goldwater Scholarship & Excellence in Education Foundation recently announced its 2021 class of Goldwater Scholars, with close to at least three dozen Indian Americans among the group.
www.indiawest.com
A very successful Indian American in NASA:
LOS ANGELES, Calif. – In the midst of a global health crisis, the Maharishi International University opened the Doshi Center for Integrative Medicine here on the morning of May 14.
www.indiawest.com
And read this perspective about how Vikram Sarabhai wooed U.R. Rao who was an overseas Indian talent but now ISRO has gone insular.
A few Takshashila alumni and friends Kunal Singh, Varun Goel & Aravind Ilamaran have started a new opinion-analysis portal called Policy Wonks. I write about how there’s an oversupply of PhDs and…
nationalinterest.in
Is it necessary to act like a PDF retard every time? Why do you even vomit nonsense on topics you don't know about? You have provided no objective argument and will accuse me of suppressing
criticism useless whinning of no use if I delete your posts again. Any post without technical arguments is useless and this is the line what separates DFI from opinion making neighborhood forum.
Do you even realise that any of your talented white masters wouldn't have a role in launch failure if was made chief?
When you start insisting out of your inferiority complex mind that India studied people can't produce good things, why you just don't realise that Indians working in space sector overseas are too low in numbers? Since living in this country without any basic infrastructure, they built a major agency from scratch and could build space probes which found water on the moon.
This particular Indian American is a special case. So was UR Rao. Just as India in overall facing shortage in aerospace sector but ISRO individually is not. How many Indians would you get leaving NASA and visiting India?
Can you provide any data instead of individual cases in news articles?
India is a lower-middle income country and its overall research infrastructure is underfunded while it has invested actually in sectors like space.
In 70s, Indians from institutions like IIT used to leave country after graduating. Then government started focusing on research and brain drain started dropping. Space tech is strategic in nature and is kept classified by countries which have. Most of Indians go for highly paid jobs and not passion. So they don't belong to this sector and don't have competency in it. Space technology only remains with handful of government and no, neither NRI students are exceptionally talented nor most of them have any knowledge of it.
China's case about getting tech is different since US was its sugar daddy rained tech on it during Laurel satellite scam and not Chinese brought everything from US themselves. They didn't have any less failures than India either in 90s.
These are same Indians which go to foreign or work in India. Their abilities are similar. Indians working in NASA don't have specifically high IQ over Indians working within India.
Mistakes can happen, engine didn't start probably because of manufacturing default (a QA issue) which doesn't have a role of a plant head or Indian/foreign engineer but factory supervisor.
These dreams of competing with US and EU in space are recent in India and are a result of rapid progress in last two decades by same people who have now become managers of ISRO, not woke overseas Indians.
As told before, engine has failed and it has a reason;
This is a fault of supply chain and QA department.
Cryo engine did not start. So, either a valve choked, sensor/actuator malfunctioned or shape was deformed.
I am also waiting for another response. After all, you are a field expert, at least looks like from your confidence.
RoaringTigerHiddenDragon said:
But this was supposed to be a routine launch of a medium sized payload on a 'proven' cryogenic engine. In fact the configuration was much simpler than GSLV Mk3.
Explain please. How was it simple?
How CE-7.5 is simpler than CE-20?