shuvo@y2k10
New Member
- Joined
- Apr 4, 2010
- Messages
- 2,653
- Likes
- 6,710
i think the armed,heavily armoured version of hjt-36 would be the ideal choice for cas operations for both iaf and ia aviation corps.
Your Knowledge is little..Good choices.However, if wishes were horses - blah, blah and blah!Pray would the Army go in for its own air fields,training ,etc?See the cost it entails and the duplicity.Agreed the Armyrequires dedicated CAS assets.Would it be better that the Army pays for the aircraft and let the airforce fly them like they do with the mi-17 and recently c-130.
It was a brutal test of helicopter and pilot. As the Dhruv Advanced Light Helicopter (ALH) shuddered towards the icy helipad on a 21,000-foot ledge overlooking the Siachen Glacier, the pilots could see wreckage from earlier helicopter crashes dotting the base of the vertical ice walls on either side. Ahead lay the Indian Army's infamous Sonam Post, the highest inhabited spot on earth, and an extreme example of why the military so urgently wants the Dhruv, which has been customised by Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd (HAL) for high altitude operations.
Very quickly, the Dhruv demonstrated its superiority over the military's tiny, single-engine Cheetah helicopters, which can barely lift 20 kilos of payload to Sonam. Touching down on a tiny H-shape formed on the snow with perforated iron sheets, the Dhruv's pilots signalled to one of the soldiers on Sonam to climb aboard. Effortlessly, the Dhruv took off, circled the post and landed again. Another soldier clambered onto the helicopter and the process was repeated, then with a third, and then a fourth soldier. Even with all Sonam's defenders on board, the twin-engine Dhruv — painted incongruously in the peacock regalia of the IAF's aerobatics team, Sarang — lifted off and landed back safely.''
"This helicopter is simply unmatched at high altitudes," says Group Captain Unni Nair, HAL's chief helicopter test pilot, who flew the Dhruv that August morning during "hot-and-high" trials at Sonam. That term means flying at extreme altitudes in summer, when the heat-swollen oxygen is even thinner than usual. "The army wanted the Dhruv to lift 200 kilos to Sonam; we managed to carry 600 kilos."
Powering that world-beating performance is a new helicopter engine, called the Shakti, which HAL commissioned French engine-maker, Turbomeca, to design for operations along India's high-altitude borders. It is this engine that makes the new Dhruv Mark III — the first five of which were delivered to the army this month — far superior to the Mark I and Mark II Dhruvs, which were built with a less versatile engine. The Shakti, which will start being built under licence at HAL soon, will now power an entire family of HAL-built helicopters: an armed version of the Dhruv; the Light Combat Helicopter (LCH); and the single-engine Light Utility Helicopter that is still on the drawing board.
The Shakti-powered Dhruv Mark III is changing the operational dynamics on India's high-altitude Himalayan defences. The capability to airlift soldiers will allow far-flung posts to be manned with fewer soldiers. In a crisis, jawans can be airlifted quickly from lower altitudes to threatened areas, and casualties can be evacuated.
HAL Bangalore has already begun handing over Dhruv Mark IIIs to the Leh-based 205 Aviation Squadron for operations in Siachen. With the military demanding 159 Dhruvs in quick time, HAL can hardly build these helicopters fast enough. This year's production rate of 25 Dhruvs will be accelerated from 2012 to 36 helicopters annually. The current order includes 54 weaponised Dhruvs — termed Advanced Light Helicopter — Weapons Systems Integrated, or ALH-WSI — armed with anti-aircraft and anti-tank missiles, rockets and a 20-millimetre turret gun. The ALH-WSI is scheduled to begin weapons trials in Orissa in April.
The success of the ALH programme, heralded by the Dhruv Mark III, comes after years of struggle and criticism. Last August, the Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) noted, "Ninety per cent of the value of material used in each ALH is still imported from foreign suppliers."
But HAL chief Ashok Nayak and his helicopter chief, Soundara Rajan, point out that indigenisation does not mean building every component of an aircraft. Citing the example of the Dhruv's HAL-built mission computer, Rajan asks whether the imported microchips inside make the mission computer any less indigenous. He sums up HAL's helicopter strategy as follows: "We will design our helicopters; develop the critical technologies of helicopter transmissions; manufacture composites; and integrate and assemble the helicopter. We will outsource the manufacture of sub-assemblies and components and structures to any vendor on the globe that offers us cost-effective solutions."
http://www.bharatrakshak.com/NEWS/newsrf.php?newsid=14492
A very nice article posted in a different thread:
What Rude? Its not me who see it that wayDont be rude! You would be surprised at my knowledge!Ask RAY.
IA & IAF helo operate from same bases, Now it a Army Infrastructure or IAF, Ever saw real Army Helipads or IAF`s over Opsec?IA helicopters do not operate from IAF bases. They have their own heliports if you can call it that.Iaf instructors only for basics at AFA/Bidar/QFI SCHOOL.Army runs it own training set up at Nasik.a heleport can be accomadated in a much smaller place than a full fledged airfield which will run into hundreds of acres!
Coz it have Some thing Important to do with my Identity..By the way why that Punjab Regt badge?
This might seem a naive question, can you please identify the different helos in this picture? I never can make out the one on ground.
Flying: HAL built Cheetah; clone of the French Aérospatiale Alouette II.This might seem a naive question, can you please identify the different helos in this picture? I never can make out the one on ground.
ALH is a transport so not related to LCH, But technically LCH is ALH modification..So how does the ALH, LCH and the Hind compare?
kunal sir can u please clarify your point....apart from comparatively better fuel efficieny and high verical range it can climb, what are
the other good aspects of our dhruv as compared to mi35? Iam agreeing that both of these are fine qualities as MI35s were useless in kargil war where it had to climb very high altitudes.....in these regions DHRUV would be a hit..but in plains and and NE areas if we have to mount an helibourne operation then MI35 would beat dhruv in such scenarios due to its high power ,speed and huge stock pile of arms and ammo plus the ability to carry SF personnel if necessary...
A good example how IA helo operation works..
Golden Pic: IAF-MI-25 Escorting MI-8 over Srilanka..
I also see that the LCH has longer range and does not carry air to air missiles. Maybe those allow the LCH to operate in CAS.@Alby,
ALH is a transport as i mentioned above, Its LCH which is better than MI-35, LCH light weight helps it to operate over high altitude places like Kargil and more, LCH is same as MI-35 regarding firepower, But LCH is more maneuverable at low altitude and hard to hit by AAA fire where MI-35 is big and not so maneuverable over low altitude, Yes indeed It can dispatch SF but not more than 8 personal, IA SF works in large, IA use Gunship specifically for surveillance and attack where transport use for troop transportation, While unloading troops by transporter, Gunship keep a close watch over the ongoing operation..