 The Indian defense ministry’s Center for Airborne Systems (CABS) has  engaged EADS defense unit Cassidian to help with the system integration  and flight testing of India’s Airborne Early Warning & Control  (AEW&C) platform.
The Indian defense ministry’s Center for Airborne Systems (CABS) has  engaged EADS defense unit Cassidian to help with the system integration  and flight testing of India’s Airborne Early Warning & Control  (AEW&C) platform.The AEW&C is scheduled to be integrated on a modified Embraer  EMB-145 aircraft later this year. The Indian air force is set to  commission three AEW&C platforms by 2013, with the first flight  expected this May.
A senior CABS official tells Aviation Week that Cassidian was  brought in as a consultant in January. “Many complex systems will have  integration issues and get bogged down by protracted flight testing and  evaluation,” the official says. “We hope to dovetail the experience of  the Cassidian team into the program so as to compress time schedules.”
The Cassidian team is expected to stay with CABS until the end of  the program. “They are helping us in evolving [the] most optimized ways  of testing the systems,” the official says. “While airborne systems  [must] be flown and tested, a majority of them can also be proven on  [the] ground. The Cassidian team is involved with the [upgrade] of  NATO’s early warning platform and hence comes with rich experience.”
CABS’ parent organization, the Defense Research Development  Organization (DRDO), wants a minimum number of test flights to be  undertaken when the EMB-145 finally arrives in India. “Our interactions  with the Embraer team have increased following the rollout of the first  EMB-145 platform this February. We want to ensure that there won’t be  any more delays,” the official adds.
Cassidian has been working with DRDO since 2006, undertaking  projects for the Defense Avionics Research Establishment and later CABS.  In February, Cassidian inaugurated an engineering center in Bengaluru  employing more than 100 Indian engineers. This was the first  defense-oriented engineering center to be operated by a foreign company  in India.
According to Cassidian, the Indian center will be at the forefront  of engineering and system development, developing its core competencies  in radar, protection systems, avionics, engineering information  technology, 3D visual simulation, aerostructures, and aerospace modeling  and simulation.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
