selvan33
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IAF needs more than the Pilatus to plug gaps in its flying training
IAF rookies will start learning their first flying lessons on the brand new Pilatus PC-7, a Swiss basic trainer aircraft, from July onwards, but the training troubles at the Air Force Academy, Dundigul, are not getting over anytime soon.
The local aircraft-maker Hindustan Aeronautics Limited is yet to sort out critical design issues related to the development of the Intermediate Jet Trainer (IJT) a simple jet meant for the second stage of the flying syllabus leading to concerns about the project on which the pilot training programme is heavily dependent.
The Indian Air Force (IAF) desperately needs IJTs by 2014 by when the existing ageing fleet of Kiran Mk I and Mk II jets currently being used for the second stage training will begin to be phased out.
Normally, flying is taught in stages with cadets beginning on basic aircraft, graduating to a jet, and then moving on to more advanced versions of the flying machines
But for the last few years, IAF cadets have been flying Kiran jets right from the word go, an arrangement which is unadvisable. The IJT was first flown in 2003, four years after it was conceived in 1999. But it has been a struggle since then.
The design problems pertaining to the stall and spin characteristics of the aircraft became so complicated to address that HAL was forced to appoint a consultant in 2012.
IAF needs more than the Pilatus to plug gaps in its flying training | idrw.org
IAF rookies will start learning their first flying lessons on the brand new Pilatus PC-7, a Swiss basic trainer aircraft, from July onwards, but the training troubles at the Air Force Academy, Dundigul, are not getting over anytime soon.
The local aircraft-maker Hindustan Aeronautics Limited is yet to sort out critical design issues related to the development of the Intermediate Jet Trainer (IJT) a simple jet meant for the second stage of the flying syllabus leading to concerns about the project on which the pilot training programme is heavily dependent.
The Indian Air Force (IAF) desperately needs IJTs by 2014 by when the existing ageing fleet of Kiran Mk I and Mk II jets currently being used for the second stage training will begin to be phased out.
Normally, flying is taught in stages with cadets beginning on basic aircraft, graduating to a jet, and then moving on to more advanced versions of the flying machines
But for the last few years, IAF cadets have been flying Kiran jets right from the word go, an arrangement which is unadvisable. The IJT was first flown in 2003, four years after it was conceived in 1999. But it has been a struggle since then.
The design problems pertaining to the stall and spin characteristics of the aircraft became so complicated to address that HAL was forced to appoint a consultant in 2012.
IAF needs more than the Pilatus to plug gaps in its flying training | idrw.org