Latest Thread
How many Mig 21's are active in İndian Air Force?Six Mig-21 (T-69) trainer aircraft in close formation.
Somewhere around 110-113, I found from public sources. All of it has to get shelved within 5 years. Well they are already 10 years late.How many Mig 21's are active in İndian Air Force?
Yea, but a separate thread will be better. Lets keep it as an eye candy only. All beautiful good res birds.What we need is a detailed analysis of Indian Air Force and its planes and hi-tec equipment in the first post so we can have a better picture about the capabilities of the İndian Air Force before reading all the replies.
15% stake of HAL is nothing imo unless specific manufacturing/technological units are completely handed over to the private sector. If 15% on a whole, these govt babus wouldn't let the private sector folks take any concrete decisions, would oppose to organizational and operational reforms since that wouldn't allow the PSU schmucks to laze off anymoreA more professional board would make the company run more effective. Government should only have a representation imo.
15% stake of HAL is nothing imo unless specific manufacturing/technological units are completely handed over to the private sector. If 15% on a whole, these govt babus wouldn't let the private sector folks take any concrete decisions, would oppose to organizational and operational reforms since that wouldn't allow the PSU schmucks to laze off anymore
Frankly, Turkey did a great job in terms of developing it's indigenous arms industry. TAI's new office building and composite materials plant show they're able to imbibe corporate culture which should be the way forward. Though there are some struggles, your ground and rotary wing platforms have really done well in recent timesThat’s the same problem Turkey has. But luckily not every where.
An example success is danish energy company DONG.