Despite the rapid advances in Unmanned Aerial Vehicle/drone technology, a robust drone regulatory mechanism is still not in place in India. But what about the future? To get beyond catch-up, a new UAV design and integration facility was launched by the National Aerospace Laboratories (NAL) here on Monday.
Formally inaugurated by Union Minister for Science and Technology, Dr Harsh Vardhan, the facility houses design, analysis and related software,
3D printing/rapid prototyping, avionics testing and vehicle integration. As a NAL official explained: “This will enable the design
engineer to go through the complete development cycle,
from concept to product.”
Diversifying deeper into the dynamic UAV world, the NAL has so far developed fixed-wing UAVs with a 2-meter wingspan.
Its focus now is on UAVs that can carry payloads ranging from 5 to 100 kg.
This is expected to provide services to agriculture,
forest, mining and other civil sectors. In the defence sector, surveillance has been a critical role of UAVs.
On Monday, the NAL demonstrated a static model of the Suchan, a 4.5-kg class UAV fitted with interchangeable day and night vision
cameras.
With a range of 10 km, the UAV is capable of reaching an altitude of 11,000 ft, limited only by the camera.
The new facility is expected to give a push to the NAL’s efforts to design and build rotary UAVs, going beyond the fixed-wing mini-drones.
The NAL, along with the DRDO, has already designed and developed an indigenous rotary engine for application in UAVs.