An indigenous variant of the Kamikaze drone, a form of suicide drone, has been created by the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT), Kanpur. A warhead weighing up to 6 kg can be carried by the suicide drone for up to 100 kilometers.
Subramaniam Sadrala, an assistant professor in the IIT Kanpur Aerospace Department, discussed the advancement of the drone and said that it had stalling technology that allows it to avoid radar detection.
Professor Sadrala stated that work on the drone has been ongoing as part of the DRDO's Young Scientist Laboratory (DYSL-CT) initiative since last year.
The drones will go through target destruction testing in the following six months as part of the development process.
The 2-meter-long, folding, fixed-wing Kamikaze drone is a homegrown invention. It can also be fitted with infrared sensors and cameras. A catapult or canister launcher can be used to launch the drones.
With the aid of a visual guidance system provided by artificial intelligence (AI), locally manufactured drones are capable of neutralizing enemy targets even in the absence of GPS support in enemy territory.