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Weighing At 8.5 Kg, IIT Madras Launches Lightest Active Wheelchair

YD One will also enable people with disabilities to participate in the Paralympics, the Director of IIT Madras said.

Weighing At 8.5 Kg, IIT Madras Launches Lightest Active Wheelchair
While the current wheelchairs weigh about 17 kgs, YD One, certified by ISO, weighs just 8.5 kgs.
  • YD One is the first indigenously developed monu-tube rigid-frame wheelchair in India, weighing 8.5 kgs
  • The wheelchair costs Rs 75,000, compared to Rs 2,40,000 for a similar imported model
  • YD One enables quick movement and easy handling for people with disabilities
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New Delhi:

The Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Madras on Wednesday launched India's lightest active wheelchair -- YD One -- weighing just 8.5 kgs.

YD One is also the country's first indigenously developed precision-built monu-tube rigid-frame wheelchair destined to match the world's best.

While the current wheelchairs weigh about 17 kgs, YD One, certified by ISO, weighs just 8.5 kgs.

"With YD One, we have achieved 50 per cent weight reduction," Prof. V. Kamakoti, Director IIT Madras, told reporters.

"To reduce the weight, researchers and scholars from mechanical to metallurgy got together and built a very interesting composite of carbon fibre plus aluminum," he added, noting that the product has undergone a lot of modelling and stress tests.

"It will be available in the market from tomorrow, and is priced at Rs 75,000," Kamakoti said. He noted that a similar 8.5 kg-weighing chair, if imported, will cost around Rs 2,40,000.

Importantly, being lightweight, YD One will enable quick movement, quick rotation, and enable people with disabilities to effortlessly lift, handle, and stow in cars, autos, or public transport.

YD One will also enable people with disabilities to participate in the Paralympics, the Director said.

"I think YD One is going to become very important, and being low-cost, it has the potential to reach rural India," he added, noting that the government may also pitch it, paving the way for a wider reach.

Citing the Cabinet's recent fund approved for research, development, and innovation (RDI), Kamakoti stressed the need for supporting startups.

IIT Madras currently has 103 startups, and the institute aspires to launch 100 startups every year.

"By 2032, we'll have 1,000 startups. I think we will be the most important beneficiary of the RDI scheme. I think Viksit Bharat by 2047, as our honourable Prime Minister says, is going to be a product nation. It's going to be a startup nation. We have to prepare ourselves for that and ensure we are in the right direction," Kamakoti said.

(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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