India Achieves Breakthrough in Hypersonic Missile Development with 1,200-Second Scramjet Test

India has achieved a major breakthrough in hypersonic missile development with a successful 1,200-second scramjet combustor test. The test was conducted at DRDO's SCPT facility in Hyderabad, building on a previous 700-second test. The technology uses indigenously developed liquid hydrocarbon fuel and advanced thermal barrier coatings. Defence Minister Rajnath Singh praised the achievement as a foundation for India's Hypersonic Cruise Missile Development Programme.

Key Points: India's Hypersonic Missile Milestone: 1,200-Second Scramjet Test

  • DRDO tests scramjet combustor for over 1,200 seconds
  • Test conducted at Hyderabad's SCPT facility
  • Indigenously developed liquid hydrocarbon fuel used
  • Positions India at forefront of hypersonic technology
2 min read

DRDO achieves key breakthrough towards hypersonic missile development

India's DRDO successfully tests a scramjet combustor for over 1,200 seconds, advancing hypersonic cruise missile development with indigenous technology.

"The remarkable feat is achieved through cutting-edge supersonic air-breathing engine - Official statement"

New Delhi, May 10

India has achieved a path-breaking milestone in the development of hypersonic missiles by successfully conducting an extensive long-duration test of its Actively Cooled Full Scale Scramjet Combustor.

A run-time of over 1,200 seconds was achieved at the state-of-the-art Scramjet Connect Pipe Test (SCPT) Facility in Hyderabad on Saturday, building upon the earlier successful test of over 700 seconds conducted in January this year, according to the Defence Research and Development Laboratory (DRDL) of DRDO.

Defence Ministry said that the Combustor has been designed and developed by DRDL and realised by industry partners.

Defence Minister Rajnath Singh complimented DRDO, industry partners and academia on the successful ground-test of Full Scale Actively Cooled Long Duration Scramjet Engine.

He described the achievement as a solid foundation for the nation's Hypersonic Cruise Missile Development Programme.

Dr Samir V Kamat, Secretary, Department of Defence R&D and Chairman DRDO, also congratulated the teams associated with the test.

This successful test positions India at the forefront of advanced aerospace capabilities and continuously emerging war technologies.

"The remarkable feat is achieved through cutting-edge supersonic air-breathing engine, which utilises indigenously developed liquid hydrocarbon endothermic fuel, High temperature Thermal Barrier coating and advanced manufacturing processes," according to an official statement.

The ground-tests conducted at the SCPT facility have successfully validated the design of advanced active cooled scramjet Combustor as well as the capabilities of state-of-art test facility.

Last week, Rajnath Singh said the government has placed defence research at the centre of its priorities and the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) has already transferred 2,200 technologies to various industries.

He pointed out that 25 per cent of the defence R&D budget has been allocated to the industry, academia, and start-ups, and to date, these entities have already utilised over Rs 4,500 crore of the budget.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

A
Anushka E
Good to see DRDO making consistent progress, but let's not forget the gap between lab tests and operational deployment. We need parallel investments in production scale-up and integration. Still, this is a solid step forward.
K
Karthik V
The fact that we achieved this using indigenous endothermic fuel and thermal barrier coating shows our self-reliance in critical defence technologies. China and others are already far ahead in hypersonics, but at least we've started the race now.
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Lauren Z
This is impressive engineering! As someone who follows aerospace developments globally, I can say the scramjet combustor test duration is among the best results reported anywhere. Congratulations to the entire DRDO team for this milestone.
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Naveen S
Question is - will this translate to operational missiles in the next 5 years or will it go the way of Kaveri engine? We have a habit of celebrating milestones but actual deployment takes decades. Need a timeline and clear roadmap from DRDO.
D
Deepika L
Great to see DRDO collaborating with industry and academia. 25% R&D budget going to private sector is a smart move - that's how real innovation happens. This hypersonic breakthrough shows what's possible when we combine resources smartly.
M
Michael C
I work in propulsion systems and can tell you that achieving

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