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Centre for Defence Research and Development (Sri Lanka)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Centre for Defence Research and Development
Agency overview
Formed2006; 19 years ago (2006)
TypeResearch and development
HeadquartersPitipana,Homagama
Annual budgetRs. 150 Million (2016)[1]
Agency executive
Parent departmentMinistry of Defence
Websitehttps://crd.lk/

Centre for Defence Research and Development (CDRD) is aSri LankanResearch and Development (R&D) institute under theMinistry of Defence responsible for the development technology for theArmed Forces of Sri Lanka. The CDRD cooperates with various branches of the military as well as other entities and is engaged in the development of both military and civilian technologies.

History

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During the Sri Lankan Civil War the separatist militants of theLiberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam made extensive use ofClaymore mines andimprovised explosive devices which were often detonated wirelessly and the Sri Lankan government was finding it hard to procure enough jammers from international markets. Thus the CDRD was founded in 2006 at thePanagoda cantonment consisting of a group of army personnel working together with engineering faculties of various universities. These allowed to both disrupt the signals as well as detect and detonate mines planted by the LTTE. known as the K3 Jammer the initial manpack version was effective up to a modest 100m and later K3V vehicular version was subsequently used by the army when providing security to VIPs. CDRD later developed mobile phone jammers for prisons as well as GPS jammers and satellite phone jammers.[2][3][4][5]

Projects

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Most of CDRD's early projects involved the modification of the military's existing equipment such as the development of rugged RA 400 Cougar Fist Microphone developed for Cougar Radios by the CDRD and also modified to be used with the PRC 1077 VHF Tactical Radios. However, since then the CDRD has been expanding and has begun new projects and also begun R&D projects involving civilian ordual use technologies.[2][6]

Sri Lanka Air Force and CDRD developed medium range UAVLihiniya MK I

The CDRD has developed a helium balloon-based stationary surveillance platform equipped withpan–tilt–zoom andinfrared cameras, demining machines,voice encryption devices for telephones and radios, high nutrition/ high caloricration packs alongside packaging material and containers, GPS-basedvehicle tracking devices andfleet management Systems, WS30 stabilized weapon system for naval vessels developed in cooperation with EM Digital. The CDRD has also developed numerous simulators for training including realistic flight simulator, flight control simulator, field artillery simulator, simulators for jungle lane firing etc. CDRD also developed civilian use technologies such as a Train Tracking and Operating Information System forSri Lankan Railways,Braille toSinhala converter,bullet proof vest, GPS-enabledquadcopters alongside 3D modeling tools for drone mapping and disaster management as well as a web-based Global Disaster Risk Analysis, Prevention and Mitigation Application.[7][8][9][10]

CDRD andSri Lanka Air Force is currently developingunmanned vehicle systems including a medium rangeunmanned aerial vehicle namedLihiniya MK II after success ofLihiniya MK I as well as anunmanned underwater vehicle for theSri Lanka Navy called Magura.

CDRDMultiple rocket launcher project resulted in a locally developed 122mm MLRS system with rockets including fuel, launcher, hydraulic control unit and digitalfire control system which was displayed on the 71stIndependence Day Parade. CDRD is also developing a naval variant of the MLRS. Further aguided missile is also being developed. The Naval variant of the locally developed guided missile to be soon installed on naval vessels.[11][12][13]

However the CDRD is constrained by the lack of resources including funding, facilities and researchers and as of 2018 only 8 of 15 wings are active and several projects have been suspended due to the lack of resources.[13]

Organization structure

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The Headquarters CDRD acts as the Command and Control arm of the CDRD headed by a Director General equivalent to a Major General and assisted by staff consisting of a Deputy Director General and Staff Officers. The CDRD is organized into four main Divisions with the Technical & Material Division being responsible for conducting research and development. The Technical and Material Division is composed of 15 Wings, each headed by a Chief Coordinator in the rank ofColonel or equivalent, however as of 2018 only 8 Wings are fully operational. The Divisions and fully operational Wings as of 2018 are,[14]

  • Technical & Materials Division
    • Radio and Electronics Wing
    • Combat Engineering Wing
    • Missile Wing
    • Surveillance Wing
    • Explosive/Pyrotechnics Wing
    • IT & GIS Wing
    • Marine Wing
    • Aeronautical Wing
  • Admin & Logistic Division
  • Finance Division
  • Training Division

References

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  1. ^"Military boffins now into R&D to meet peacetime situations | The Sunday Times Sri Lanka". Retrieved2021-10-12.
  2. ^ab"Military boffins now into R&D to meet peacetime situations". Retrieved7 July 2020.
  3. ^"K3 Manpack Bomb Jammer".crd.lk. Archived fromthe original on 2018-01-15. Retrieved2020-07-08.
  4. ^"K3V Jammer Vehicular Version". 2018-01-15. Archived fromthe original on 2018-01-15. Retrieved2020-07-08.
  5. ^"Thuraya/GPS Jammer".crd.lk. Archived fromthe original on 2018-01-15. Retrieved2020-07-08.
  6. ^"Economic/Rugged RA400 Cougar First Handset for PRC1077". 2018-01-15. Archived fromthe original on 2018-01-15. Retrieved2020-07-08.
  7. ^"Projects".crd.lk. 2018-03-19. Archived fromthe original on 2018-03-19. Retrieved2020-07-08.
  8. ^"Impressed Commander Wants CRD to Begin Mass Production for Tri-Services | Sri Lanka Army".www.army.lk. Retrieved2020-07-08.
  9. ^"Drone Mapping". Archived fromthe original on 2018-03-18.
  10. ^"Global Disaster Risk Analysis, Prevention and Mitigation Application". Archived fromthe original on 2018-03-18.
  11. ^"Middle Range UAVs". Archived fromthe original on 2018-01-15.
  12. ^"First locally-made MBRL takes pride of place at parade".
  13. ^ab"Performance Report of the Ministry of Defence for the year 2018"(PDF).
  14. ^"Approved Organization".crd.lk. 2018-03-19. Archived fromthe original on 2018-03-19. Retrieved2020-07-08.
National Security Council
Cabinet-levelMinistry
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Research and development
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