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Commissioning of INS Khanderi. The construction started on 7 April 2009 at Mazagon Dock's Yard number Y11876 with the steel cutting ceremony. The five separate sections of the submarine were welded together, called "Boot Together", in November 2016.
INS Arihant INS Arighaat: India: 6,000 tonnes Powered by a 83 MW pressurized light-water reactor using enriched uranium. First prototype of the ATV project and experimental protoype. Diesel-electric submarines (17) Kalvari class (Scorpène-class) Attack submarine: INS Kalvari (S21) INS Khanderi (S22) INS Karanj (S23) INS Vela (S24) INS Vagir (S25)
INS Khanderi (S22) was a Kalvari-class diesel-electric submarine of the Indian Navy. [ 1 ] Khanderi was built at Sudomekh , Admiralty Shipyard and commissioned in the navy in December 1968 and decommissioned from service in 1989.
INS Khanderi (1968), Indian Navy submarine in service 1968–1989 INS Khanderi (2017) , Indian Navy submarine commissioned in 2019 List of ships with the same or similar names
INS Kalvari: S23 Sudomekh 8 December 1967 31 May 1996 Sail on display INS Khanderi: S22 Sudomekh 6 December 1968 18 October 1989 Sail on display INS Karanj: S21 Sudomekh 4 September 1969 1 August 2003 INS Kursura: S20 Sudomekh 18 December 1969 27 September 2001 As a museum
2017-19: The second unit, the Khanderi, was launched in January 2017, which was soon followed by the commissioning of Kalvari in December 2017. [35] The third and fourth units, the Karanj and the Vela respectively, were launched between January 2018 and May 2019, while Khanderi was commissioned in September 2019. [36] [37] [38]
The Indian Navy (IN), which is the naval warfare branch of the Indian Armed Forces, has approximately 135+ warships on active commission. [1]By forethought, the IN's Maritime Capability Perspective Plan (MCPP) for the period 2012-2027 had set the objective of the service becoming a 200-ship fleet by 2035; however, that number has since been reduced to 175 in December 2019 - principally owing ...
The Western Naval command of the Indian Navy has been named INS Angre, in commemoration of Admiral Kanhoji Angre. [19] The Indian Navy has named two of its submarines as INS Khanderi after a Maratha sea fort of same name [20] The Indian Postal Service released a commemorative stamp depicting a Gurab and Pal of the Maratha fleet. [21]