Hyderabad: Veera Dynamics Launches Project RAMA to Revolutionize Stealth Capabilities for Indian Navy
Hyderabad-based defense tech firm Veera Dynamics, a futuristic combat technology partner of the Indian Navy, has announced the launch of Project RAMA (Radar Absorption & Multispectral Adaptive) — a breakthrough stealth material engineered to drastically reduce detection across radar and infrared spectrums.
Project RAMA is a modular, platform-agnostic coating that enhances survivability across land, air, and sea by minimizing radar cross-section and thermal signatures. This compression of the adversary’s detect-to-engage window enables near-invisible operations, especially in high-threat zones.
According to the company’s statement released Wednesday, the stealth material can be applied to a wide range of defense platforms, including unmanned drones, naval ships, and manned aircraft, significantly advancing India’s capabilities in low-observability warfare.
Veera Dynamics and Binford Labs Join Forces to Launch Next-Gen Stealth Drones for Indian Armed Forces
Hyderabad-based defense technology company Veera Dynamics has unveiled Project RAMA (Radar Absorption & Multispectral Adaptive), a next-generation stealth material designed to reduce visibility across both radar and infrared spectrums. Described as a “strategic capability for future warfare,” Project RAMA marks a significant leap toward platform-wide invisibility.
“RAMA represents our vision of platform-wide invisibility,” said Sai Teja Peddineni, CEO of Veera Dynamics. “It’s not just a material — it’s a strategic enabler for next-generation combat systems.”
To translate this breakthrough into field-ready assets, Veera Dynamics has partnered with fellow Hyderabad-based defense innovator Binford Research Labs. Specializing in autonomous drones capable of operating in RF- and GPS-denied environments, Binford has earned three IDEX awards from India’s Ministry of Defence and currently supplies drone systems deployed in active military operations across the Army, Navy, and Air Force.
By integrating Project RAMA into Binford’s unmanned aerial platforms, the collaboration aims to create stealth drones capable of conducting covert, high-risk missions in contested zones. The fusion of RAMA’s multispectral stealth coating with Binford’s autonomy stack is expected to deliver a new class of drones optimized for survivability, precision strikes, and dynamic mission profiles.
The joint venture is also focused on scaling production of attritable, dispensable stealth drones — a critical need for India’s evolving defense landscape that demands mass-deployable unmanned systems capable of maintaining operational surprise in high-threat scenarios.







