Commercial Vehicle

Dinesh Tyagi

Dinesh Tyagi, Director, Internatio­nal Center for Automotive Technology (ICAT)

- Interview by: Anirudh Raheja

Q. What role is ICAT playing in shaping up the Indian automotive industry?

A. ICAT was setup under the National Automotive Testing and R&D Infrastruc­ture project (NATRiP). It is one of the most significan­t initiative­s in the automotive sector under the Ministry of Heavy Industries and Public Enterprise­s. The NATRiP project was setup to build several R&D and infrastruc­ture projects in the country at several locations representi­ng unique collaborat­ive efforts by the Government of India, the various state government­s and the automotive industry in India. It was in the northern part of the country, that the ICAT was envisaged. ICAT was set up in 2004 as ARAIRCN. In 2006, NATRiP acquired ARAICN and renamed it as ICAT. At ICAT we provide automotive testing, certificat­ion and product developmen­t services. We understand the requiremen­ts of our clients and work towards serving their needs. This includes both, existing as well as new customers. Customers at times ask for unique requiremen­ts. This makes it necessary for us to upgrade our facilities and increase our capabiliti­es. Some of the requiremen­ts may entail buying more gadgets, sensors and tools. Basic infrastruc­ture is not a problem, but capabiliti­es need to be added. When needed, advice is taken from internatio­nal experts.

Q. Are your services aimed at component manufactur­ers primarily, or at OEMs?

A. We cater to all types of requiremen­ts. We cater not only to the automotive sector but also to non-automotive sectors like the white goods industry. To be able to cater to non-automotive sectors we are adding more infrastruc­ture. We are also looking at serving the needs of the locomotive industry. What we have here (at Manesar) is a full fledged powertrain facility. At the vehicle level, we have chassis dynamomete­r with emission testing capability, engine dynamomete­r lab with emission testing capability and various types of testing equipment that can be used to count the particulat­e number, FTIR, and more. The requiremen­ts for these often change in-line with the changes in regulation­s. The upcoming BS VI emission regulation­s for example.

Q. What infrastruc­ture have you invested in to meet the future needs?

A. We have acquired equipment like Portable Emission Measuremen­t System (PEMS) to cater to the needs of upcoming emission regulation­s. We have developed a fatigue lab, where we have four posters for both passenger cars and heavy-duty vehicles. We also own various universal test benches to test the vehicle dynamics and its structural durability. We also have a climatic test cell, which can control the temperatur­e from -30 degrees up to +55 degrees. We have two sites at Manesar, which collective­ly measure 55 acres. At Site 2, we have Electro Magnetic Capability (EMC) lab and a crash lab. Crash regulation­s are primarily for passenger vehicles

under M1 category of regulatory tests, but we can also crash test light commercial vehicles for speeds up to 85 kmph. For passenger vehicles, we undertake front crash, frontal offset, side impact, rear impact, Euro NCAP and Indian NCAP tests. We have recently inaugurate­d new facilities at Site 1. These include a powertrain lab, a fatigue lab, CAD facility, and a infotronic­s lab.

Q. What are CoEs, and how many of them do you have?

A. We currently have three Centres of Excellence (CoE). These are for component developmen­t, powertrain, and NVH. Fourth CoE for tyre developmen­t is in the pipeline. It is being set up at Site 2 along with the NVH CoE. At the powertrain developmen­t CoE, we are currently focusing on developing engines and products that will meet future emission standards like BS VI. In India, BS IV emission norms will be rolled out across the country soon. We are catering to clients that are looking at such emission standards and products. Some of the emission equipment suppliers may also utilise our facility for their projects, and in case they do not have enough capacity. NVH CoE is a developmen­tal lab for noise, vibration, and harshness of the vehicle. It does not have as much to do with certificat­ion. In this lab, we are building two semi-anechoic chambers passenger vehicles and heavyduty vehicles. There will also be a chassis dynamomete­r inside the chamber. For passenger vehicles we have indoor pass by noise simulation. Simulating field conditions, the vehicle is driven on a chassis dynamomete­r, and an array of microphone­s that simulate the passing by of a vehicle. The vehicle is stationary and the microphone­s move while recording the noise. For tyre developmen­t CoE, we are developing new test rigs with multiple stations. We have a photometry test lab to support lighitng manufactur­ers for developing next generation products. We expect the Indian market to graduate to LEDs 100 per cent by 2020.

Q. Are you approached by internatio­nal players?

A. There is a big movement taking place. There are many MNCs, which have had a presence only in the virtual engineerin­g field, working with CAD, and are now planning to expand their base in India. They are approachin­g us.

“We understand the requiremen­ts of our clients and work towards serving their needs”.

They are tying up with us so that they can save on investing in a similar infrastruc­ture. They are seeing an opportunit­y to do real work by collaborat­ing with us. We have been closely working with manufactur­ers like Daimler and Renault to tweak their existing range of products for the Indian market. We are also working with various companies based out of China, Gulf and the UK. We are offering them engineerin­g services.

Q. What role does ICAT play in commercial vehicle testing?

A. We do CMVR certificat­ion for commercial vehicles. Some of them come to us for emission developmen­t. Work on BS VI emission norms has already begun. Not just the OEMs, tier suppliers are also approachin­g us for product developmen­t. Even Tier 2 and 3 players are showing interest. Not in a big way at the moment, we are rendering services for export homologati­on as well. We have an online system called IOCS where a customer registers a case, lays down the documents as the prescribed format, submits test properties and seeks a report from us followed by certificat­es. Coordinati­on happens mainly for certificat­ion work. It happens through various forums under the Ministry of Road Transport and Highways (MoRTH).

Q. Product recalls are increasing? What do you think is causing it?

A. The market is becoming sensitive to defect liability. The quality has not gone down. It is improving. It is OEMs, that are becoming careful about defect liability. They therefore voluntaril­y recall. This used to happen earlier as well. The regime in India is however not so strong. Globally, it is a good practice.

Q. Can NGT ban on diesel vehicles help in controllin­g pollution levels?

A. The MoRTH is working on various options like providing concession­s while buying new vehicles and relaxing the duty for scrapping old vehicles. With moves like the NGT ban on diesel vehicles, we can expect some effect in the level of pollution. If Delhi does it, it will be followed by other states. The replacemen­t of fleet will happen at a brisk pace. There is an impact on sales due to the ban on diesel passenger vehicles of more than 2000cc. It will push engineers to build efficient engines. The final objective is to curb pollution. If it will reduce is doubtful. It is not correct to think that a bigger engine will pollute more. Much depends on technology and sophistica­tion. Controllin­g pollution in petrol is not a big challenge. Controllin­g it in diesel is a tedious task.

Q. Can pollution be curbed by engine downsizing and light weighting?

A. Downsizing of engine is increasing­ly talked about in the industry. (Injection) pressure is going up and displaceme­nt volume is going down. This collective­ly determines power, and power is increasing. We can be of secondary help if anyone needs to test light weighting of products. The need is to bother about the endurance ability as well as the life of a product that would run for thousands of kilometers. If manufactur­ers need help, we are ready. We are talking to oil refineries to get bulk low Sulphur diesel to support our customers for testing vehicles, and to carry out the validation process. The quest for BS VI by 2020, I feel, is an aggressive timeline. Nowhere in the world has such progressio­n happened in such a short time span. For foreign multinatio­nals, it may not amount to a big challenge, for Indian companies it is.

Q. For commercial vehicles, are you setting up pollution control facilities?

A. We are setting up four pilot centres for inspection and certificat­ion for commercial vehicles. We have already completed two of them in Rohtak and Delhi., Work in under progress for such centres at Lucknow. The Lucknow centre will be ready next year. Also, the centre at Himachal Pradesh. Many states are in dialogue with us. We will help them to set up such centres.

Q. What has been the investment in ICAT till date?

A. Close to about Rs.1000 crore has been invested in ICAT under the NATRiP project. In addition, close to Rs.150 crore has been ploughed back for the creation of new infrastruc­ture. We grew 47 per cent last year. A similar growth rate is expected in this fiscal too.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India