IAF invites bids to procure 10 anti-drone systems from Indian vendors after Jammu blast

After the country’s first drone terror attack on the Jammu Air Force Station on June 27, the Indian Air Force is now looking to acquire ten Unmanned Aircraft Systems (CUAS).

A day after the Jammu attack, the Indian Air Force (IAF) issued a Request for Information (RFI) seeking responses from Indian companies for a counter-drone system called CUAS, which consists of packaged small commercially accessible drones Detected operational deficiencies in handling. with explosives.

“The purpose of CUAS is to detect, track, identify, designate and neutralize hostile UAS. Laser-guided energy weapons (Laser-DEWs) are essentially required as a kill alternative,” the RFI said.

Indian sellers will have to specify the delivery schedule as the formal selection and procurement process begins in the third quarter of this year. The IAF wants to start the delivery of the CUAS as soon as the deal is signed and complete it within a year.

Vendors will also have to state whether the CUAS is designed, manufactured and manufactured in India or whether it will be manufactured through a Technology Transfer Agreement with a foreign company.

CUAS should provide a “multi-sensor, multi-kill solution” to effectively implement no-fly zones for micro and mini drones, while causing “minimal collateral damage” to the environment.

Active phased array radar, RF (radio frequency) sensors, electro-optical and infrared systems with 360-degree coverage and 5-kilometer range should all be incorporated into the sensor.

The Global Navigation Satellite Jamming System (GNSS) must be used to obstruct or impair the GPS, GLONASS, BeiDou and Galileo used by drones in “soft kill” settings. The laser-DEW will then be used to complete the “hard kill”.

“All ten CUAS are required on indigenous vehicles having cross-country capability and in mobile configuration powered by indigenous electrical power supply systems,” the RFI said.

Last week, Air Chief Marshal RKS Bhadauria said that the IAF had a limited number of “soft kill” jammers and “hard kill” counter-drone systems to disrupt the command-and-control links of small drones, but they were was not deployed. Jammu Air Station because it lacked “critical assets” like fighter jets.

The IAF is working closely with DRDO on its anti-drone system, which includes laser-like guided energy weapons, and their trials are nearing completion. “This is a new kind of threat. Many projects have already been started and some systems have already been implemented.”

DRDO has developed two anti-drone DEW systems, one with 10-kW laser for 2-km range engagement and the other with 2-kW laser for 1-km range engagement. But they have not yet been mass-produced, the report said.

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