Nilgiri
INT'L MOD
Your point about HR per se, is it kind of Men out of Men Money Material allocated for any project?
Yes from what I read from the engine threw blades, pointing towards Material science deficiency. Good thing is it did get sorted out, and last year or so the engine passed high altitude test. Wish they could build a test bed here, out of ageing IL 76 that we have.
Its the after burner that now needs work
West is way ahead on so many things, wonder how long we will take it narrow down this gap.
Afterburner is not hard to do tbh....its relative cherry on the cake. It only gets complicated if you want to reduce the thermal signature etc. But basic one is straightforward. i.e In the end it works with and augments what the engine itself provides to it. So if the kaveri engine is actually sorted out, then AB is really not much of an issue. The earlier problem was the AB could not make up for the shortfalls of the engine (dry thrust not being met or reliable in operation long enough) itself....as AB is highly inefficient to begin with.
But yes the men. Corps of Men are what then make the argument on money and material needed from the reality they best know (what are the best sized teams and organisation etc) that influences the higher-ups that are not subject matter experts but do have the purse strings and (hopefully) intuitively get the scarcity of the situation and what are the pressing needs/results of the first high priority.
I work on something very specialised in this (jet engine) realm, but its only possible because there is a large formation of men (and women) tasked with things as best as can be, we inherit lot of things and best practices and the IP database etc from those before us similarly.
Take a selection sampling of us and put us (hypothetical time machine etc) in the 1950s - 1990s India situation (somewhere), and we will have to do a whole different manner of things and at great difficulty given much less of backdrop that can be taken for granted (it needs charting out and experience to develop these shoulders and boulders)....as already scarce situation with most of the best peers being in: nukes, missiles, space and electronics (radars, sensors etc) to some degree, these are all tied together for a reason and have most to show for today for a reason.
My uncle worked in BEL Bangalore for example (now hes long retired). LRDE and BEL produced some very good products taken for granted today, again because a suitable corps of HR was allocated here over the time needed. In early 90s my uncle (and his team) visited Ukraine a number of times for essentially ToT and related cooperation workshops that is now upstream of what India has progressed on....and so somewhat unknown/forgotten about. Again in interests of not having to reinvent the wheel, but the ability to absorb and deploy quickly too.
1990s to today, Indian jet engine story is affected by this. There is immense feedback loop that comes to Western companies in the sector from their commercial side, that is leveraged in military projects too.
There's really only one long term way India catches up. It has to develop and bulk up its economy comprehensively so it gets large legions of people consistently producing demand and supply for what the top quality HR folks (in STEM) are able to do....and also producing the far larger pool of people to extract this "1%" from.
Its why South Korea developed as it did, versus North Korea (though North Korea can indeed at great cost to its people deploy limited HR in concentrated way for say nukes and missiles). South Korea has a much larger buffet of RnD and development for its people comprehensively though, as there was simply greater feedback and utilitarian transparency of what works best to mitigate all costs as far as possible (from all layers involved) rather than an extreme top down totalitarian approach "no matter the cost".




