Indian Air Force: News & Discussions

patriots

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IAF SAM contracts in 2019: 1. Contract for 5 Squadrons of Long Range SAM S-400. Induction mid 2020 onwards 2. IAF procuring 18 Squadrons of MRSAM jointly dev by DRDO/IAI. Induction from early 2020 onwards 3. Contract for 7 additional Akash Squadrons. Induction early 2021 onwards



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Definitely this will give iaf..drdo more time. For mk1a. Mwf amca
 

captscooby81

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  • Apache Helicopter: 17 helicopters have already been delivered.
  • Chinook Heavy Lift Helicopter (HLH): The delivery of 15 x Chinook helicopters has started from March 2019 and will be completed by March 2020. Induction of the helicopters has commenced in March 2019. Ten helicopters have been received so far.
  • Additional Su-30 MKI Aircraft: IAF had contracted for 272 Su-30 MKI aircraft under various contracts. Presently deliveries are continuing under block IV contract and are likely to conclude by March 2020. The Su-30 MKI currently is the largest and amongst the most potent fighter fleet in operation with the IAF.
 

captscooby81

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  • Contract for five Squadrons of Long Range Surface-to-Air Missile System i.e. S-400 missile system has been signed with the Russian Government. The equipment of the first Sqn is likely to be inducted in mid 2020.
  • IAF is procuring 18 Squadrons of Medium Range Surface-to-Air Missile System which has been jointly developed by DRDO and IAI. Induction of the Medium Range Surface to Air Missile System will be from early 2020 onwards.
  • Contract has been signed in September 2019 for seven additional indigenous Akash Squadrons and associated specialist infrastructure. Induction would commence from early 2021 onwards
 

Bhurki

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Outdated and missing information. I like it.
Its at least a baseline.. I know a couple squadrons and bases are missing but this is the closest you'll come to a depiction of air force units.
You're welcome to add any info you think is missing or wrong.
 
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Why so serious?

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Eye on China, South gets 1st Sukhoi squad with BrahMos
Rajat Pandit | TNN | Updated: Jan 20, 2020, 08:31 IST
TNN
Image of Sukhoi-30 fighter aircraft used for representational purposes only. (ANI)
NEW DELHI: India now has a new lethal weapons platform to keep a ‘strategic eye’ over the Indian Ocean Region (IOR), especially the Bay of Bengal, as well as carry out ‘long-range precision strikes’ against hostile aircraft carriers or other high-value targets by day and night in all-weather conditions in the region.


The IAF will commission a squadron of Sukhoi-30MKI fighter jets, especially modified to carry the 2.5-tonne air-launched supersonic

BrahMos
cruise missiles, at its Thanjavur airbase in Tamil Nadu on Monday. Primarily tasked with a maritime strike role, these Sukhois will be “a huge addition to IAF’s operational capabilities”, Air Chief Marshal

Rakesh Kumar Singh Bhadauria
said.






BrahMos director-general Sudhir Mishra told TOI, “It’s the realisation of our dream to provide IAF with a formidable and much-desired capability to strike from long standoff distances on any target at sea or on land with pinpoint accuracy.”


The new Sukhoi squadron, nicknamed ‘Tiger Sharks’, will be commissioned with four to six fighters at Thanjavur on Monday, and will induct its full complement of 18 fighters by the end of the year. With a combat radius of almost 1,500 km without mid-air refuelling, the Sukhoi will combine with the 290-km range BrahMos missile to constitute a formidable weapons package.


Tiger Sharks is the 12th squadron of the fourth-generation ‘air dominance’ Sukhois but the first one to be based in south India after the first 11 were deployed on the western and eastern fronts, from Halwara, Pune, Jodhpur and Sirsa to

Bareilly
, Tezpur and Chabua, to cater for

Pakistan
and China.


The deployment at Thanjavur is clearly in response to China’s fast-expanding strategic footprint in the IOR, with Beijing now also looking to establish additional logistics facilities in the IOR after setting up its first overseas military base in Djibouti on the Horn of Africa in August 2017, while also using Karachi as a regular naval turnaround facility.



Just last month, Navy chief Admiral Karambir Singh had confirmed that

Indian warships recently drove away a Chinese oceanic research vessel
, Shi Yan-1, after it was found acting suspiciously near the strategically-located Andaman and Nicobar archipelago. There are seven to eight Chinese warships, including submarines, present in the IOR at any given time, he said.


The Navy already operates its Poseidon-8I long-range maritime patrol aircraft, which are packed with sensors and weapons to detect, track and destroy enemy submarines, from its INS Rajali base at Arakkonam in Tamil Nadu.


Armed with the BrahMos missiles, which fly almost three times the speed of sound at Mach 2.8, the Sukhois will further add to this deterrence over the high seas right up to the Malacca Strait. “The capability of the missile, coupled with the high performance of the Sukhois, will give IAF strategic reach and allow it to dominate over land and sea. The Sukhoi-BrahMos package can also be used in surgical strikes to destroy terror camps across the Line of Control with Pakistan,” said an official.


With IAF having inducted 260 of the 272 twin-seat Sukhois contracted from

Russia
for around $15 billion, 42 of the fighters are to be eventually armed with BrahMos missiles. With India joining the 34-nation Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR) in June 2016, which “removed the caps” on the range of the missile developed jointly with Russia, plans are also afoot to develop an extended range BrahMos with a 450-500 km range. The MTCR basically prevents the proliferation of missiles and drones over the range of 300 km.


The IAF also plans to upgrade its entire Sukhoi fleet with more advanced avionics, radars and weapons to further bolster their combat capabilities. Detailed talks are currently underway with Russia and HAL for the mega project, as was earlier reported by TOI.
 

Akula

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Was there anytime, when IAF squadron strength was higher than the required 42 squadrons?
 

Prashant12

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IAF gears up to send Mi-26 fleet to Russia for overhaul

The Indian Air Force is preparing to ferry its Mi-26 heavy-lift helicopters to Russia for major overhaul and life extension, following which its vertical heavy-lift capability will get a substantial boost.

The resurrected Soviet-origin helicopters will operate along with the IAF’s new American CH-47 Chinooks that are also employed in the heavy-lift logistics role for airlifting men and equipment.

At present, the IAF has three Mi-26s, the world’s largest and heaviest helicopters. These are based at Chandigarh with the 126 Helicopter Unit, also called Featherweights. The same unit also operates the Chinooks. In service since 1985, the first Mi-26 was grounded in 2013, followed by the other two in 2014 and 2017 on the expiry of their stipulated technical life. Although the IAF set into motion the process to give fresh lease of life to these grounded flying machines around four years ago, the plans remained mired in bureaucratic machinery.

“The files were finally cleared by the Ministry of Defence late last year and we are now finalising the modalities to ferry the machines to Russia. Since two of the Mi-26s are not in fly-worthy condition at all, they will have to be partially disassembled and shipped,” said a senior IAF officer. “A decision on the third chopper, which though non-operational but still fly-worthy, will be taken by Air Headquarters on whether to ship it or fly it to Russia after considering the costs, international air routing and other technicalities involved,” he added. The IAF expects that each helicopter will take 10-12 months to be back in fly-worthy state.

https://www.tribuneindia.com/news/iaf-gears-up-to-send-mi-26-fleet-to-russia-for-overhaul-29336
 

captscooby81

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Don't think so its written Dummy Missile for training here on this one . Looks same is what strapped below the belly of Su30MKI

Brahmos Air.jpg


I think that yellow band means active operational warhead missile but I'm not sure. As per reports Brahmos A will be operational next year
 

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