Adm Arun Prakash

A NAVAL AVIATOR’S TRIBUTE TO ASTE

Admiral Arun Prakash grew up in the Kashmir Valley, where his father rose to be a District Commissioner of Leh. His two elder brothers served in the army. The eldest was a Gunner and retired as a Maj Gen. The middle brother served in Int Corps and retired as a Brig.

The Admiral had a long and distinguished career both in naval aviation and on surface ships.  He is a graduate of all the prestigious courses. He has served on and commanded several ships, including the aircraft carrier Viraat.

In the 1971 Indo-Pakistan War, he flew Hunter aircraft with 20 Squadron IAF. For his gallantry in the Western sector he was awarded the Vir Chakra. Admiral Arun Prakash was the first naval aviator to attend a course at IAF TPS.  Thanks to flying the HS748 and Canberra he was then among the few naval aviators qualified on multi engined aircraft.  He was, therefore, posted to the newly formed MR squadron INAS 312 equipped with Super Constellations. Later, he was the first CO of a Harrier squadron.  (See INS Viraat and Harriers )

The Admiral has been Commandant of NDA. In October 2001, he became the first C-in-C of the newly established Andaman and Nicobar Command. He served as CNS from 2004 to 2006.  He now lives in Goa and writes on maritime matters.  Here are his recollections of his second stint with the air force and its aftermath.

*

A Naval Aviator Aground

Having earned a naval-aviator’s wings in 1968, a year later, I achieved my life’s ambition, by acquiring the ‘deck-landing qualification’, on board INS Vikrant, in a Sea Hawk jet fighter. But before I could reach a respectable figure of 100 deck-landings, I was packed-off for a two-year exchange posting with the IAF.

Vikrant 1984

INS Vikrant circa 1984 carrying a unique complement of Sea Harriers, Sea Hawks, Allouette & Sea King helicopters and Alize ASW

Having returned to the carrier after a longish break, I was looking forward to reaching the 200 deck-landing mark, when I received some alarming news at sea. I had been ‘nominated,’ for the Production Test Pilots (PTP) course in the IAF Aircraft & Systems Testing Establishment (ASTE) Bangalore. My ‘selection,’ however, was contingent on passing a ‘screening’ test. The ship’s Captain decided that I would be disembarked by helicopter, so that I could catch a train to Goa and prepare for the screening. My plea that (a) I was just settling down on the ship and (b) I was not interested in the course, were summarily rejected and I was told to go and pack.

Since no one seemed to have a clue about the content of the PTP course or the screening process, I rushed to the ship’s library, and grabbed whatever books, I could find, on arcane subjects like calculus, aerodynamics, and aero-engines etc. In those, pre-Google days, I spent a hellish week, struggling to make sense of these long-forgotten topics, before heading for Bangalore. 

INS Vikrant

INS Viraat which the author commanded later

http://indiannavy.nic.in/about-indian-navy/about-us, GODL-India <https://data.gov.in/sites/default/files/Gazette_Notification_OGDL.pdf>, via Wikimedia Common

  

The Perils of ASTE

The screening consisted of a written test, and a ‘cockpit assessment’ of an HS-748, followed by a sortie in an HF-24 Marut trainer for a ‘preview’ (evaluation) of the aircraft. These exercises called for ‘mock’ assessments to be rendered, in writing. Of the 12 odd candidates, six (including two helicopter pilots) were selected. As the sole nominee of the navy, I found myself amongst the selectees for No. 5 PTP Course, that commenced in Oct 1975.

HF 24 Marut

HF-24 Marut which the author flew for pre-course screening

Indian Air Force (GODL-India), GODL-India <https://data.gov.in/sites/default/files/Gazette_Notification_OGDL.pdf>, via Wikimedia Commons

 

Having served with an IAF squadron, earlier, I was quite at home amongst my ‘khaki’ (the uniform they wore those days) colleagues, but ASTE was something different altogether! Initially created as a ‘trial and testing’ unit, it was tasked, in the early 1970s, to conduct preparatory courses for officers likely to be deputed for Experimental Test Pilots’ (ETP) courses abroad. Accordingly, a Test Pilots’ School (TPS) was established, with a skeleton staff, to run a Flight Inspectors’ Course, which later mutated into the PTP course.

In this context, Wg Cdr Joseph Thomas, the first Officer Commanding of TPS, mentioned to me, recently, Since we ran the PTP course as a precursor to the ETP course, the ground subjects covered a substantial portion of the ETP syllabus as also, quite a few of the flight test techniques.  We were blissfully unaware of this, but any illusions we may have had about the PTP course being a relaxed, six-month sojourn in the ‘garden city,’ were rudely shattered, within days.

 

Thrown in the Deep End

In the classroom, we were thrown headlong into the turbid depths of aerodynamics, thermodynamics, propulsion, system-engineering, flight-testing and data recording techniques etc. Flying was a parallel, but far more pleasurable aspect, especially since we were rapidly converted to the HJT-16 Kiran, HS-748, the HF-24 Marut, and the Canberra T-4.

 Canbera T4

Canberra T-4

SAC A K Benson, OGL v1.0OGL v1.0, via Wikimedia Commons

 

The flying exercises included empirical investigation of ‘aircraft performance’ as well as ‘stability & control,’ on these unfamiliar aircraft and we undertook flight-tests to assess climb, cruise, asymmetric handling, stalling and spinning characteristics. Each exercise required detailed pre-flight planning, flying precise profiles and accurate recording of data. Data recording was done manually since aircraft were not instrumented. 

Once on the ground, the recorded data had to be reduced to specified atmospheric conditions and converted into graphic presentations. And therein lay our biggest headache. The figures, often running to two decimal points, had to be multiplied, divided, squared or rooted – an impossible task manually. Hand-held digital calculators, being still a decade away, we were issued logarithmic tables (not seen since school), and slide rules (never held before)! Later, we received a single, Texas Instruments electronic table-top calculating machine, for which we often had to queue up till late at night or over week-ends.

 test pilots 

5  Production Test Pilots Course,  TPS, ASTE
Sitting (L to R)  Flt Lt NK Kohli, Sqn Ldr SC Mittal, Sqn Ldr J  Thomas,
Wg Cdr PM Ramachandra SC, Air Cmde RD Sahni,
Sqn Ldr HK Khanna, Sqn Ldr BS Chhoker, Sqn Ldr Sridhar
Standing (L to R) Flt Lt  VP Mathur, Flt Lt PM Velankar, Flt Lt Nanku Pandey, Lt Cdr Arun Prakash, VrC, Fg Offr TR Kishore, Flt Lt AK Nagalia, Flt Lt Banerjee

 

Even as we experienced the joys and agonies of the hectic ASTE schedule, for student test pilots, the wives and children were left to fend for themselves, in happiness and in adversity. But these gallant wives of “Flying Scholars” received due acknowledgment, for their fortitude, in the form of a ‘Diploma’ signed by the Commandant!

 Dunlop Trophy

Author awarded the Dunlop Trophy on graduation

 

A Memorable Experience

Even though, I did not undergo the ETP course, ASTE was an eye-opening experience that vastly broadened my horizons, and taught me to question and analyse everything one encountered in aviation. While classroom instruction and report-writing strengthened one’s theoretical base, the airborne exercises helped refine and sharpen ones flying skills. I will recount just one memorable experience, in this context. 

This was to be a ‘demonstration’ of asymmetric flying in the Canberra T MK.4, in which the student was to determine the minimum control speed (VMC), below which lateral control of the aircraft could no longer be maintained, after failure of one engine. Also, to be estimated, was the leg force required to maintain direction, through rudder-deflection. My instructor was the OC FTS, Sqn Ldr Thomas, a distinguished graduate of the USAF TPS.

The exercise started with him shutting off the critical engine, but as I reached for the rudder-trimmer, to relieve leg force, I was reminded that use of trimmers was ‘taboo.’ For the first two engine shut-downs, I managed to hold direction. But after the 4th or 5th iteration, it became increasingly difficult to sustain, a boot-full of the Canberra’s large (manual) rudder. It was only after landing, as I tumbled out of the Canberra’s hatch, that I realized: my knees had turned to jelly!

However, Sqn Ldr Thomas was not done yet. The following day, when I met him with my draft report, we had a disagreement about calculations involving rudder angle required to counter side-slip. When I indignantly showed him a US Navy text book on aerodynamics, to support my stand, he quietly, took the book, made a correction in red ink and initialled it! All told, I learnt a lot from this exercise – including the need for physical fitness in test flying!

aerodynamics

 

 

Aftermath

The question whether my PTP qualification was of use to the navy, has only a qualified answer.

While I undertook production testing of overhauled aircraft at the Naval Aircraft Repair Yard in Cochin, for a year, the occasions to evaluate aircraft were few and far between. In 1976, I undertook proforma ‘evaluation’ of the Britten Norman BN-2 Islander in the UK; after 12 of them had already been ordered! My twin-engine experience also saw me figuring amongst the crew designated to take over L-1049 Super Constellations from No. 6 Squadron IAF. In 1980, I evaluated the HPT-32 and the ‘Coastguarder’ version of the HS-748 for the IN; and rejected both.

It was more than two decades after the PTP course that I had the opportunity to fly the Mig-29(M2), MiG-29(K), Sukhoi-27(KUB), in Russia, and the Rafale-M, in France, with company test pilots.

  Rafale M

Rafale – M

Newresid by stephanelhernault@yahoo.fr, CC BY-SA 3.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

 

Although, these flights did not constitute a full-fledged ‘evaluation,’ I did draw on my PTP background and experience to write objective reports which helped steer NHQ’s decision-making. At the risk of boring the reader, I attach an excerpt of an article I had written on this topic many years ago.

 Rafale

MiG-29M-2

Alex Beltyukov, CC BY-SA 3.0 GFDL 1.2, via Wikimedia Commons

 


Su-33 Vs MiG-29

During evaluation of the MiG-29(KUB) prototype, that I flew in September 1999 at the MiG flight test centre in Zhukovsky, I found it to be an agile aircraft with excellent handling qualities, demonstrating good manoeuvrability and high turn rates in the horizontal/vertical planes. During a number of simulated carrier circuits and overshoots, the aircraft showed good engine and control response, and had good forward visibility on carrier approach.

Parked in the hangar was the MiG-29(K) prototype which had participated in the certification trials, with its folding wings, a tail hook, a refuelling probe and extra dorsal fuel tanks. It was, however, not available for flying, so I flew the MiG-29 (M2) which was under development as the land variant of MiG-29K with which it shared avionic and other components. The design team, headed by the chain-smoking Valery Buntin, appeared sanguine about optimizing the aircraft and radar to IN requirements and putting it into production in 36-48 months. 

 MIG29

Indian Navy MiG-29KUB carrier-based multirole fighter

http://www.indiannavy.nic.in/about-indian-navy/about-us, GODL-India, via Wikimedia Commons

 MIG 29 Landing

MiG-29K performs a touch and go landing on INS Vikramaditya

Indian Navy, GODL-India <https://data.gov.in/sites/default/files/Gazette_Notification_OGDL.pdf>, via Wikimedia Commons

  

To fly the Su-27, I had to visit NITKA (the Soviet owned Aviation Research and Training Complex) located in a Ukrainian Navy aviation base near Sevastopol. The base was an eye opener: the Russians had re-created all the ingredients of an aircraft carrier ashore, in order to impart STOBAR training to their pilots.  One short runway had a concrete ski-jump for launch, and another was equipped with an electro-optical landing sight, and a sophisticated hydraulic arrester gear for arrested recovery. (NITKA has been replicated in the IN/DRDO ‘Shore-Based Test-Facility’ in Goa). 

I flew in a Su-27 (KUB) trainer, with the famous Viktor Pugachev, of ‘Cobra manoeuver’ fame on controls. The aircraft exited the ski-jump with ease and a healthy rate of climb. After a few Cobra manoeuvres, we got down to some serious flying and simulated carrier circuits, at 500 ft. The Luna landing-sight was a very good aid, and brought us down to almost exactly the same touch-down spot in successive circuits. Finally, we lowered the hook and the huge fighter was smoothly ‘arrested’ in about 100 feet! This was my first ‘arrested’ landing after 24 years. 

 SU 27K

Su-27K  (Also called Su-33)

Dmitry Terekhov, CC BY-SA 2.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

The Sukhoi-27 was, no doubt, an excellent aircraft, and ahead of the MiG-29 in many parameters.  Later re-designated Su-33, it is deemed to be the progenitor of the Chinese J-15.  About 30%-40% bigger and heavier than the MiG-29(K), it was, however, dimensionally incompatible with the Gorshkov.  The tail was 1.5 meters too high to fit in the ship’s hangar, and during the take-off run, the right wing-tip clearance from the ship’s superstructure would have been of the order of only 3-4 metres. 

Since the Russian Navy, was already operating the Su-33, from the much bigger Kuznetsov, our preference for the MiG-29(K) over the Su-33, seemed to upset them. So, it was not surprising that during my farewell call on Admiral Vladimir Kuroyedov, the Russian Navy Chief appeared visibly upset. He offered to have the Gorshkovs hangar modified to accept the Su-33!  In hindsight, it was just as well that we stuck to our guns: the modification would have added a few hundred million USD to the cost and many months to the delivery schedule.

 

Conclusion

All said and done, the six months that I spent in ASTE were well worth the sweat and toil, and provided valuable experience that stood me in good stead – in the air and at sea. On the golden jubilee of the TPS, I join the other graduates in offering warm greetings and grateful thanks to this great institution.

 

 

  1. colonel vrk prasad says:

    wonderful write up which should make a great case study for all senior officers of the armed forces during their courses particularly to aviators and for others it’s a vast body of essential military knowledge. Thanks a lot Sir.

  2. Maj Gen Surjit Singh says:

    Our Hindi teacher used to tell us about the word “Gurudakshina”. In my view, Admiral Arun Prakash has done that to his Air Force ‘gurus’.
    Surjit

  3. A Koruth says:

    I am impressed with Arun Prakash’s writing that you corrected a textbook and initialled it!
    I wonder if all teachers will know every sentence in textbooks! So hats off to you. And yes the training helped him resist Soviet pressure!
    Teachers’ voices keep ringing in students’ ears! And their actions are not forgotten either
    Very well done!
    Hope those under AP learnt from him too.
    Hope the good training passes down through each successive batch of trainees.

    • J Thomas says:

      That book “Aerodynamics for Naval Aviators” was written by HH Hunt Jr.   He was a ground instructor at the US Naval Test Pilots School.  It is an excellent book and is still in use.  It is just that one particular point was in error.  Don’t know if he has corrected it.

      Not only did Adm Arun Prakash resist Russian Navy pressure, the latter eventually followed  what he chose.  They replaced the Su-27K / Su-33  with the Mig-29K.   See  ”Why Russia’s Sukhoi Su-33 Fighter Was a Failure” https://nationalinterest.org/blog/buzz/why-russias-sukhoi-su-33-fighter-was-failure-171911

  4. Col ABS Sidhu says:

    ABS Sidhu
    2:19 PM (3 hours ago)
    to me

    Thanks for sharing very informative article
    by Admiral Arun Parkash.

    ABS Sidhu

  5. Col DS Madan says:

    D.S Madan
    10:57 AM (2 hours ago)
    to me, himlynx

    Hi 1997,

    Read through the article by Adm Arun Prakash. Impressed thoroughly by the grand career details . He stood out and excelled in whatever he did.

    It was nice seeing Thomas in a picture . Remember him . Another brilliant person.

    Regards,

    3000

  6. Maj Gen Surjit Singh says:

    Hi Thomas,
    If your students were to write all your ACRs, the government would be forced to make you a “Marshal of the Air Force”.
    Surjit

  7. Wg Cdr J Thomas says:

    Joseph Thomas
    9:52 AM (3 hours ago)
    to me

    Air Cmde Kannan is from the Adm branch and has served in ASTE.
    His father has written a book on English grammar.
    Recently, we have been studying Kannada together.

    3007

  8. Air Cmdre K Kannan says:

    KRISHNA KANNAN
    9:09 AM (4 hours ago)
    to me, himlynx@gmail.com

    Dear General Surjit,

    Thank you for the very interesting article by Adm Arun Prakash! Yes, he does have a remarkable memory recalling events that happened half a century ago! It is an admirable articulation of conveying his ‘Thank you to the ASTE. May the ASTE continue to do well!

    Yes, again, the article is also a tribute to Wing Commander JT whon I first met in his avatar as an instructor at the Staff College and an excellent one at that. His act of nonchalantly modifying the US Navy textbook on Aerodynamics is typical of the man exhibiting his highly justifiable confidence in himself. Over the years, I have learnt that questioning that seasoned professional in various disciplines can be done only at one’s own risk!

    Best regards,

    Air Cmde M V Kannan (Retd)

  9. Dave Sood says:

    ASTE is a great asset for our services.

    Proud to know that it was established by Joe; one of our NDA coursemate.

    Well done Joe. A remarkable achievement.

  10. Col NN Bhatia (Retd) says:

    I ws delighted to read highly technical aviation related article. More than that, I recaptulated his late brother Brig Prakash from Int Corps who was my GSO! (Int) in MI Dte (MI-23) while I was the GSO2 (Int) around 1979-80. He was qualified Chinese interpretor and went as MA in Bejing. What a GREAT human being, senior officer and a friend he was! His untimely death to me, was a tragic shock of the highest order. I recollect having settled in Bangalore after retirement but sadly, I have no contacts with the family.

  11. PR Ganapathy says:

    Nice to read this article about those early days of Test Pilot training in India. A bonus was finding an old picture with my father in it that I hadn’t seen before!

  12. J Thomas says:

    We in the Test Pilots School were fortunate to have an outstanding student officer in then Lt Cdr Arun Prakash. As readers can see, he was one of the trophy winners.

    Extremely glad to hear that “ASTE was an eye-opening experience that vastly broadened my horizons, and taught me to question and analyse everything one encountered in aviation.” That was the very purpose of the course.

    Equally glad that the author got an opportunity to evaluate several aircraft for the Navy. These are tasks which decide about projects that affect operational preparedness and involve expenditures of thousands of crores. The author is extremely modest but readers will note that the Russian Navy eventually went by his recommendations and replaced the Su-27K with the Mig-29K.

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