Indian Naval Aviation

ace009

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What naval aircraft are the IAC2 and IAC3 going to carry? What are the current and future plans for IN's Aircraft carrier program? Do they have any specs for IAC4 and later ones? Are those going to be nuclear powered? What will be their size? What platform will they use? CATOBAR? Anyone has any news?
 

Crusader53

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What naval aircraft are the IAC2 and IAC3 going to carry? What are the current and future plans for IN's Aircraft carrier program? Do they have any specs for IAC4 and later ones? Are those going to be nuclear powered? What will be their size? What platform will they use? CATOBAR? Anyone has any news?
That's very much up in the air. As the final design of the IAC-2 and IAC-3 are not complete. That said, in the short term we can count on the Mig-29K and N-LCA.....



On a side note it will be interesting to see what China counters with???
 

Kunal Biswas

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That's very much up in the air. As the final design of the IAC-2 and IAC-3 are not complete. That said, in the short term we can count on the Mig-29K and N-LCA.....

On a side note it will be interesting to see what China counters with???
IAC-3`s deign will be during the construction of IAC-2`s..

For Now, IAC-3`s some general Ideas are out..

MIG-29K & NLCA are present solution near future solution will be from MRCA contenders, In future NFGFA & NAMCA will be in IN..



As fr PLAN J-15 are main fighters for its carriers in future J-20..
 
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p2prada

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The Navy will be super stretched on logistics by 2030 when it comes to aircraft.

Mig-29k, N-LCA, MRCA, N-AMCA, N-FGFA. Wow. By 2025-30, IN will possibly be operating 5 different aircraft.

I guess in the long term they will mostly standardize on N-AMCA rather than the other 4 aircraft. N-FGFA may not even be in contention.
 

Crusader53

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The Navy will be super stretched on logistics by 2030 when it comes to aircraft.

Mig-29k, N-LCA, MRCA, N-AMCA, N-FGFA. Wow. By 2025-30, IN will possibly be operating 5 different aircraft.

I guess in the long term they will mostly standardize on N-AMCA rather than the other 4 aircraft. N-FGFA may not even be in contention.
My guess is India will consolidate the number of types in both the Air Force and Navy after 2020. With Aircraft Carriers operating just two Fighter type. (i.e 1-Strike Fighter & 1-Advance Trainer)
 

Zebra

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Good Day,
IAF- MRCA and Navy MRCA will be the same a/c .
If IAF go for F 18 SH . Navy have to go for F 18 SH , OR they can go for some thing different as per their choice ?
 

Kunal Biswas

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good day,
iaf- mrca and navy mrca will be the same a/c .
If iaf go for f 18 sh . Navy have to go for f 18 sh , or they can go for some thing different as per their choice ?



rafale m ........


..............
 
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Rahul92

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i' think FGFA the latest MMRCA Winner & HAL LCH would create good package
 

nrj

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Good Day,
IAF- MRCA and Navy MRCA will be the same a/c .
If IAF go for F 18 SH . Navy have to go for F 18 SH , OR they can go for some thing different as per their choice ?
Yes they can go for different aircraft.

Both the contracts are independent.

However, selecting same fighter can make it easier for MoD to negotiate costs & eventually production, logistics will be comfortable .
 

Zebra

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MRCA for indian Navy.

Please guide me ,
Howmany aircraft Indian Navy wants as MRCA for Navy ?
 
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nrj

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126 fighters are entirely for IAF.

IN has not specified required numbers yet AFAIK.
 

nitesh

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this is excellent development

http://www.aviationweek.com/aw/gene... 100 Seaplanes In Next 10 Years&channel=busav

India wants to introduce 100 seaplanes into service in the next 10 years to support tourism and essential services to its coastal and island territories.

The federal government has allowed 100% foreign direct investment in the seaplane sector and has urged foreign operators to take advantage of the offer. India looks at more foreign direct investment in this sector so seaplanes can be introduced on a large scale not only for tourism, but also to provide essential services and medical aid during floods and other emergencies.
 

Patriot

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Coming soon, LCA's naval variant




Bangalore: The maiden flight of the naval variant of the Light Combat Aircraft (LCA) will take to the skies in July, exactly a year after it rolled out from the Hindustan Aeronautics Limited's (HAL's) Aircraft Research and Design Centre hangar in Bangalore.

"We would be conducting the first flight of the LCA Naval Prototype-1 (NP1) – a trainer aircraft -- in July. The aircraft is currently undergoing a series of ground tests, and preparations are on for the flight certification which is mandatory before the first flight," said Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) chief controller R&D (Aeronautics and Service Interaction), Prahlada.

He said all agencies involved in the programme, like the Aeronautical Development Agency (ADA), HAL and the certifying agencies including Center for Military Airworthiness & Certification (CEMILAC) and Director General of Aeronautical Quality Assurance (DGAQA), are extremely cautious about ensuring that the first flight is carried out without any hassles.

"Being the first flight of the LCA naval programme we are extremely careful. We want to ensure that everything is put in place before the first flight and that the programme is as successful as the Indian Air Force (IAF) version which has had no accidents since it started flight tests on January 4, 2001," he said.

The LCA's IAF version has an impeccable record of completing over 1,600 flights without any incidents. The LCA NP-1 is different from its IAF counterpart. It has a new, stronger and longer landing gear, an arrester hook for ship deck landing, front fuselage droop for better over-the-nose vision to facilitate landing on aircraft carriers, an additional control surface to reduce carrier landing speed and consequential changes in various systems.

The LCA NP1 will fly with a GE-F404-IN20 engine and is specifically designed for ski jump take off and arrested landing, with high landing loads compared to its IAF counterpart.

The Navy has placed an order for six LCA Navy aircraft and is expected to replace the depleting Sea Harrier squadron. The LCA Naval variants will operate alongside the MiG-29Ks by 2014.
 

mki

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can anybody tell me our Mig29k and N-LCA (future) how much it is comparable to other naval forces of different country? I mean is it really in comparable with fa18sh and Rafale-m?

if it is we are in head to head to the other advance navy........
 

Crusader53

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can anybody tell me our Mig29k and N-LCA (future) how much it is comparable to other naval forces of different country? I mean is it really in comparable with fa18sh and Rafale-m?

if it is we are in head to head to the other advance navy........
I would say the Mig-29K/N-LCA are closer to an upgarded F/A-18C Hornet than either the Super Hornet or Rafale.
 

JAISWAL

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:: Bharat-Rakshak.com - Indian Military News Headlines ::-
.
.
.
Indian Navy's
airborne tacticians complete training

.
Nine Officers including four women Officers, two Coast Guard Officers and one Officer from Sri Lankan Navy graduated as Observers from the portals of Observer School, at Naval Base Kochi. Amongst the Passing Out courses, the short service commission officers' course this time was an all wome course, a first in the Navy. The young Observers were awarded'Wings' at an impressive Passing Out written Parade by Commodore MR Ajay Kumar VSM, Naval Officer-in Charge, Kerala and a veteran observer himself. Wings are worn by Naval aviators on the chest as part of their uniform.
In an inspiring address to the Passing Out course, Commodore
Ajay Kumar said that Observers are the long arm and the eyes and ears of the fleet at sea.
Exhorting them to be conscious of this onerous responsibility, the Commodore also asked them to imbibe professionalism and technology to master their craft.
During the course, the Indian officers were trained in Tactics employed in Air Warfare, Anti-Submarine Warfare and the exploitation of electronic intelligence systems in addition to the basic training in Air-Navigation and flying procedures. These officers would now join Maritime Reconnaissance and Anti-submarine warfare aircraft of the Navy. The officers were trained at Observer School, commanded by Commander PVGK Nambiar. Lieutenant B Pradhan was awarded the Flag Officer Commanding-in-Chief, Eastern Naval Command rolling trophy for standing first in Flying, Sub Lt RV Kunte Memorial book prize for being adjudged best in ground subjects and Uttar Pradesh Trophy for first in overall order of merit and best all round trainee respectively.
Sub-Lieutenant Priya Jeyakumar
from the Short Service
Commission Officers Observer
Course was adjudged best in
ground subjects, Sub Lieutenant
Santosh Kumari as best in flying
and Sub Lieutenant Swetha was
adjudged first in overall order of
merit. The officers were awarded
certificates and book prizes.
The Parade witnessed by the
families of the graduating officers
and a host of dignitaries was
conducted by Captain Himanshu
S Sapre, Commanding Officer,
INS Garuda.
.
 
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bhramos

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India's naval modernization program


The extensive modernization of India's navy represents its desire to become not only a major regional player, but a major global one as well. Throughout most of the 20` century, India's naval priorities were essentially focused on containing Pakistan and securing the maritime approaches to Indian territorial waters.

This kept India's naval outlook confined to its own waters. The expansion of India's economy since the late-1990s, along with its growing domestic interests and desire to be a regional power has, however, led it to expand its outlook to the wider Indian Ocean region.

Since 2002, India has undertaken a major naval modernization program, with the overall aim of upgrading its military in a 15-year timeframe. The US$40 billion that the Indian Government plans to spend between 2008 and 2013 forms part of this modernization program.

Numerically, the plan intends to make the Indian Navy the third-largest fleet in the world. It currently stands as the fifth-largest, with 171 vessels and around 250 aircraft. In January 2011, India's Defense Ministry released the Defense Procurement Procedure 2011 (DPP-2011), which contains separate guidelines for government-owned and privately-owned shipyards to promote competition and increase the efficiency of indigenously-built ships.

The centerpiece of the Indian Navy's modernization scheme revolves around the acquisition of aircraft carriers and nuclear-powered submarines. Presently, India has allocated funds for the acquisition of three aircraft carriers. The first, INS Vikramaditya (formerly the Russian Navy's Admiral Gorshkov), has been in the process of retrofitting in Russia since 2008.

After considerable delays, it is expected to be delivered in 2012. The Vikramaditya will carry 16 MiG-29K aircraft. India's other two aircraft carriers are locally built — the first, INS Vikrant, is due to enter service by 2014 and the second carrier is due in 2017 and is expected to carry 29 MiG-29K aircraft. These aircraft carriers would essentially make India a true blue-water navy and consolidate its force projection capability over a far greater portion of the Indian Ocean.

In 2009 India launched the INS Arihant; its first indigenously-built nuclear submarine, with the intention of commissioning it in late-2011. This will give India a nuclear triad (land and sea-based ballistic missiles and bombers carrying nuclear-tipped bombs/missiles), a capability currently only possessed by the United States, China and Russia.

The Arihant will carry Shaurya missiles, which are capable of carrying a 1-tone nuclear warhead with a range of 750 kilometers and designed specifically for submarines. The vessel will also contain 12 Sagirika missiles, which have a range of up to 1,900 kilometers. Five indigenously-built nuclear-powered submarines are planned for the next decade at a total cost of $2.9 billion. The allocation of $11 billion for six diesel-electric submarines featuring improved land-attack capabilities has also recently been approved.

While aircraft carriers and submarines dominate the naval modernization program, there are other elements. In 2010 India signed a contract with the Pipavav Shipyard to build five patrol vessels. It has also built three multi-role, stealth-featured Shivalik-class frigates, with the first of these, INS Shivalik, being commissioned in April 2010.

Three Russian-built Talwar-class frigates have also been acquired, with the first, INS Teg, to be commissioned later in 2011 and the remainder due to start service in 2012. These will double the number of Talwar-class frigates, with the INS Talwar, Trishul and Tabar having already been commissioned in the last decade.

In addition to such measures, which are consistent with India's expanding Indian Ocean profile, India has sought to establish either bases or listening stations in many of the Indian Ocean islands.

Among the most significant of these was the establishment of a listening post in northern Madagascar in 2007, giving India a naval position near southern Africa and the sea lines of communication from that area. India has also sent a naval patrol vessel, along with a Dornier-228 maritime reconnaissance aircraft to the Seychelles, reportedly to control piracy in the region.

The Indian Navy has also regularly assisted Mauritius in conducting hydrographic surveys, thus ensuring a near-constant naval presence in that country. India has acquired berthing rights in Oman, following joint military exercises in 2006 and a subsequent defense agreement between the two countries. Such initiatives have allowed India to obtain a naval influence in the western Indian Ocean from the Middle East to south-eastern Africa.

India's naval modernization program (Part 1 of 2) | The Jakarta Post
 

ace009

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Does IN have any land-based (naval) airbase? I know of INS Hansa, but that's for training. Airbases in the Andamans and the Lakshadeeps would be really a good deal. The recon planes like P 8Is, the UAVs and even naval fighters can operate from these bases.
 

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