Zebra
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Thanks. That cleared up a lot of confusion. Aegis reminds me of the Type 26 project. Any news about that?Destroyers have greater situational awareness. While the Rajput class destroyers are old, their radar height is greater. Obviously not as capable as Shivalike class. Nevertheless, Rajput has BM capability with the Dhanush BM.
Among new generation ships, firepower is greater on the Kolkata class with 16 Brahmos and 64-80 Barak 8 and 32 Barak 1. Comparatively Shivalik has 8 Brahmos/Klub, 24 Shtil-I and possibly 32 Barak 1. For a proper comparison with Kolkata class, we need to compare it with the Project 17A Frigates. P 17A may end up with Aegis.
GCS program is meant for the next decade. P 17A is meant for this decade. There were talks of India being involved, but I doubt that may happen. Type 26 will have a British equivalent of the Barak 8 and Aster 30. It won't have Aegis.Thanks. That cleared up a lot of confusion. Aegis reminds me of the Type 26 project. Any news about that?
Kolkata in September 2012Does anybody know when the first of the Kolkata class destroyers and the Kamorta class corvettes will be commissioning??
http://www.thehindu.com/news/international/article3562912.eceRussia completes India's submarine modernisation programme
The INS Sindhurakshak submarine came off the slips at the Zvezdochka shipyard in Severodvinsk on Saturday, marking the completion of a mid-life refit programme for the Indian Navy's Kilo-class diesel-electric submarines in Russia.
During a two-year in-depth modernisation the torpedo-firing INS Sindhurakshak, built in 1997, has been equipped with the tube-launched Club-S cruise missiles effective against surface vessels and submarines at a range of about 200 km. It has also been provided with some Indian-made systems, including a hydro-acoustic "USHUS" complex, a CCS-MK radio-communication system and Porpoise Electronic Support Measures. After going through sea trials and firing tests the submarine will be handed over to the Indian Navy later this year.
The INS Sindhurakshak is the seventh and the last of the 10 Kilo-class submarines that India bought from Russia between 1986 and 2000 to have undergone mid-term repairs and modernisation in Russia. Of the remaining three submarines one was repaired in India and the two others are currently under repair in India.
Even as Russia prepares to deliver the last retrofitted submarine to India, Russia's top shipbuilding official has come up with the idea of a second mid-life repair of the Indian Navy's Kilo-class submarines.
"A second repair will add another 5 to 7 or even 10 years to the submarines' scheduled 20-year service life," said Andrei Dyachkov, Director General of Sevmash shipyard, who is expected to take over as the head of the United Shipbuilding Corporation, which controls 70 per cent of Russia's s shipbuilding assets, next month. "This will help the Indian Navy maintain its submarine strength in view of delays in the induction of French-built Scorpene subs and in floating a tender for six more diesel-electric submarines," he said.
The Indian Navy issued Request For Information (RFIs) under the P-75 (I) project way back in 2008. However, it is yet to open a global tender for the submarines. Russia is expected to take part in the tender with its new Amur-1650 submarines, along with France's Scorpio, Germany's Type-214 and Spain's S-80 submarines.
Mr. Dyachkov, who also heads the Rubin Naval Design Bureau, which designed the Amur-1650, thinks the Russian submarine stands a good chance of winning the Indian tender.
"We hope for success and are confident of fulfilling all terms of the tender in the required timeframe," he told The Hindu.
The Amur-1650 makes far less noise than the Kilo-class submarines, which the NATO nicknamed "Black Holes" for their stealth qualities.
The shipbuilder denied media reports that said Russia was trying to have the demand for the submarines to have onboard Air Independent Propulsion (AIP) system removed from the tender requirements.
"We have designed and built an advanced and safe AIP that generates hydrogen onboard and enables the submarine to stay underwater for much longer time," Mr. Dyachkov said.
More @ China hackers enter Navy computers, plant bug to extract sensitive data - Indian ExpressHackers have broken into sensitive naval computer systems in and around Visakhapatnam, the headquarters of the Eastern Naval Command, and planted bugs that relayed confidential data to IP addresses in China.India's first nuclear missile submarine, INS Arihant, is currently undergoing trials at the Command. Besides the Arihant trial, several other sensitive projects are being undertaken near Visakhapatnam, including an upcoming underground nuclear submarine base that is expected to house India's strategic assets.
The extent of the loss is still being ascertained, and officials said it was "premature at this stage" to comment on the sensitivity of the compromised data. But the Navy has completed a Board of Inquiry (BoI) which is believed to have indicted at least six mid-level officers for procedural lapses that led to the security breach.The naval computers were found infected with a virus that secretly collected and transmitted confidential files and documents to Chinese IP addresses. Strict disciplinary action against the indicted officers is imminent.
Sources, confirmed that classified data had been leaked, and the breach had possibly occurred because of the use of pen drives that are prohibited in naval offices. The virus was found hidden in the pen drives that were being used to transfer data from standalone computers to othersystems, said a person familiar with the investigation.
The Navy — and the other armed forces — stores sensitive data only in standalone computers that are not connected to the Internet. These computers are not supposed to have ports or access points for pen drives or external storage devices.
The virus apparently created a hidden folder and collected specific files and documents based on certain 'key words' that it has been programmed to identify.The documents remained hidden on the pen drives until they were put in computers that were connected to the Internet, after which the bug quietly sent the files to specific IP addresses.
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