India develops its own Air-borne warning Radar

India has successfully joined the provileged league of having Air-borne Early Warning RADAR. Developed by Defense Research and Development Organization, it was tested in Brazil recently.

AEW&C is a radar fitted on a plane that provides intelligence on not only enemy aircraft taking off far across the border but also incoming missiles and troop movement on the ground.

The test of the Airborne Early Warning and Control System (AEW&C), developed by India’s Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO), took place at the San Jose dos Campos in Brazil.
An elated DRDO chief V.K. Saraswat said: “Good show, well done and congratulations!”

Saraswat credited team work for the success after the “modified aircraft fitted with the dummy antenna unit performed very well”.

CABS director S. Christopher, who is also the programme director for AEW&C, said the system had been indigenously developed in a consortium mode with the help of DRDO and Indian industrial partners.

DRDO Chief Controller (Avionics) G. Elangovan congratulated the team of Centre for Air Borne Systems (CABS) and associated work centres and also the team at Embraer.

It is a force multiplier in the sense it can enable quicker decision-making by troop commanders for responding to threats before time.

“Maiden flight of the second fully modified aircraft for the indigenously developed AEW&C was held Thursday in Brazil,” the DRDO official said in a statement.

“The necessary mission systems and components, including the dummy AAAU (Active Antenna Array Unit) are successfully fitted on board Embraer EMB 145I aircraft,” he said.

The flight marks an important milestone in the AEW&C programme. The aircraft will be delivered to India in June.

The other mission systems will then be integrated on to the aircraft, and mission system flight trials are likely to commence from November.

CABS, a DRDO lab, is the nodal laboratory entrusted with the task of delivering the AEW&C system.

The external mission systems were developed indigenously and fitted on the aircraft. The rest of the internal systems too will be integrated into the aircraft on arrival to India.