(Photo credit: Rana, Aeronautical Development Agency)
By Ajai Shukla
Business Standard, 17th Jun 16
Emphatically underlining its capability to design and fly
aircraft, Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd (HAL) staged the “inaugural” flight of its
Hindustan Turbo Trainer – 40 (HTT-40) before Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar
on Friday.
In doing so, HAL has conclusively made its point against a
skeptical Indian Air Force (IAF), which opposed the HTT-40 project, blocked
funding, and imported an expensive Swiss trainer, the Pilatus PC-7 Mark II, rather
than backing the indigenous HTT-40.
“There is no need for [the HTT-40 trainer]”, IAF boss, Air
Chief Marshal NAK Browne, said dismissively at the Aero India show in February
2013. “We have the Pilatus PC-7. It’s a proven aircraft. The project HAL plans
is from scratch. Our indications are that the cost will be too high. There is
no need for all this.”
HAL came back punching. Former chairman, RK Tyagi, and the
current boss, T Suvarna Raju, threw their weight behind the trainer project and
committed Rs 350 crore of internal HAL funds to the development project. A team
of young, talented HAL designers worked without IAF assistance to bring the
aircraft to flight.
On Friday, as Parrikar watched the HTT-40 smoothly take off
and circle the HAL airfield in Bengaluru, his own support to the indigenous
project, and that of his predecessor, AK Antony, were vindicated.
Congratulated the HAL designers, Parrikar said: “The young
team has taken a calculated risk and they have flown the aircraft within one
year and kept their assurance. The indigenous content on HTT-40 is close to 80
per cent. Almost 50 per cent of the components on HTT-40 are manufactured by
private players of the Indian aerospace ecosystem. Here, the role of private
players and MSMEs has been significant in the production of parts. The IAF is
positive in all these developments”.
Preceding this “inaugural flight”, the HTT-40 had already
made its first flight on May 31. Since then, test pilots have expanded its
flight envelope, to clear it for flying at 300 kilometres per hour and for 4-G
turns. It has validated its glide tests (flying without engines), instrument
landing, and demonstrated its ability to land in heavy rain.
Said HAL chairman, Suvarna Raju today: “The project will now
go in full throttle as we aim to get the aircraft certified in 2018. Towards
this, HAL will be manufacturing three prototypes and two static test
specimens”. It is remarkable feat that the aircraft in its inaugural flight
carried out low speed pass, a series of turns, high speed pass and
short-landing using reverse thrust which is a unique feature available on this
engine-propeller combination.”
The HTT-40
is a propeller-driven, turbo-prop aircraft for “Stage-1” training of rookie
pilots, learning to fly their first aircraft. After 80 hours of basic training
on the HTT-40, pilots move on to “Stage-2” training on the HAL-built Kiran Mark
II jet trainer. Those selected to fly fighter aircraft move on to “Stage-3”
training on the Hawk advanced jet trainer (AJT), after which they graduate to
frontline fighters in the IAF’s combat squadrons.
The IAF has
calculated it needs 181 basic trainer aircraft. It has already bought 75
Pilatus PC-7 Mark II trainers and the purchase of another 38 is being
processed. That leaves space for 68 HTT-40s in IAF training schools.
For HAL, the challenge now is to certify the
trainer by 2018, putting it through a challenging regimen of stall and spin
tests.
After that, HAL projects it will build the first
two HTT-40 trainers in 2018, eight in 2019, and reach its capacity of 20 per
year from 2020 onwards.
The
advanced systems in the HTT-40 include a pressurised cockpit (which allows
flight at high altitudes), “zero-zero” ejection seats (which allow ejection
even from a static aircraft), and a state-of-the-art cockpit display with
“in-flight simulation” that permits flight instructors to electronically
simulate various system failures, allowing the rookie pilot to handle the
“emergency”.
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