When IPKF war started, I was floating
around in ASTE, doing this and that, nothing of any serious consequence.
At the height of the IPKF war, out of
the blue, Maj Gen Atma Singh came to call on me unannounced, just like that. He
was then DG Army Aviation.
I fell down. I never had such senior
officers call on me before. Usually I was marched up to them and the bugle was
blown.
'Our convoys and road opening parties
get ambushed if they don't have air cover', he told me without preamble. 'If
the Mi-25s are overhead, no convoy is ever ambushed', he paused for a deep
breath. 'There are only few Mi-25s, just two or three of them left, and so they
refuse to do convoy escort'. He looked at me, one of those looks that
penetrates the heart and soul. I shook my head like a Japanese doll and kept
shaking it. It was neither the time nor occasion to discuss potential or
limitations of air power with him. And in any case, I didn't have anything new
to tell him, he knew it all, more than I.
'We approached HAL (Hel Div, B'lore).
They have built two swivelling trusses on our Cheetah, to take on two of our MMGs,
but the ruddy thing doesn't fire and we are we are in a fix'. He told me. 'I
want you fix them immediately and send them into combat'. All this was said in
half Punjabi, with profusion of the nuances of that colourful language.
General Atma Singh Sir said
'immediate'.
So I immediately took him to
see my boss Philip Sir, then CTP, who had few days earlier marched me into his
office to reminded me that the E in ASTE stood for Establishment and not
Experimental. He had blown the bugle and stopped me from my daily
endeavour to do stupid experimental things. That was to appease the then
STE who had complained against me for fooling around on my own experimenting
with thermal imaging systems. The kill joy STE was not around and Atma
Singh was at his convincing best. And if you mentioned war, Philip Sir was the
kind who would jump up from his ejection seat like chair, to stamp the sky with
glory. In short, he gave a tacit nod to me to go solve Atma Singh's problem,
even if the E in ASTE wasn't anything Experimental. At that time I had neither
herd of my predecessor venerable KL Narayanan in 65 war, nor exploits of Kilo
Flight in 71 war, who armed helicopters. I was just a clue less idiot with a
silly undeserved ETP tag, trying to be socially useful and productive.
I put Gen Atma Singh behind my Bajaj
scooter, cut across the runway like a bat out of hell, and we went to take a look
at what was bothering the Indian Army. Immediately I was pounced on by
venerable Col PVK Choudhary, my venerable 'Dorm Com'
from 'Ranjit' Section in Rimc, two and half decades earlier. Atma Singh
vanished like a bad dream. PVKC in Rimc had punched me in the tummy to
inculcate soldierly behaviour. Now he was the mighty CO of 31 Air Op Flt,
itching to go to war, like all Rimcolians / ex NDAs. I was quite sure that if I
didn't measure up to him, he would punch me again.
'Bugger, I want you to sort out the
problem immediately', he told me in the same Dorm Com fashion even before I
could cock an eye at what ailed them.
Everyone in the army said
'immediate', and that was not an order to be disobeyed. There was a war going
on, though not in Bangalore.
There were about 40 odd
personnel from HAL (HC Div) milling about an armed Cheetah without its side
doors. It had sideward firing MMGs, one on either side, on swivelling truss
(standard MMG tripod swivelling truss modified a bit) and mounted on the floor
board of the Cheetah. The HAL crowd were scratching several body parts
including their heads, with no idea what to do. It didn't need experimental
design engineers to have done what they did; and in any case HAL too
didn't have an E in their charter which said experimental.
PVKC explained their moral dilemma in
clipped military parlance. Firstly the ammo belt had to be fed manually
into the MMG in the air, by the same man who was also supposed to aim, trigger
and control the fire, a task usually done by an assistant when this gun is
fired by infantry on ground.
Secondly, when butt tested (fired into sand bags) on ground, the
super-heated spent shells and links were being ejected and falling all over the
place due to slip stream; some on the pilot, some on the man who was
firing, and the rest headed straight for the tail rotor, all of which was
giving PVKC and his team heebies and the jeebies.
'Start up the a/c, let us take it to
ASTE' I suggested. HAL didn't march up or measure up ; reason why the Army came to me. 'Daud Ke Chal', I comanded myself, like the Roman 'Centurian Pontius Phokusall' in Asterix comic. It was obvious to me that some
modifications were required, which I was sure that the very energetic CRPO in ASTE would
approve faster than design engineers of HAL, even if HAL or ASTE didn't have an
E that said Experimental !!
So PVKC and I hover taxied across the
runway and brought the Cheetah, minus side doors, but with two burley infantry
soldiers manning the MMGs from both sides, sitting on the rear seats. After
we landed in the safe sanctuary of my domain in ASTE, I went and tried to
swing the guns to and fro, and upwards/downwards. There was excessive and
dangerous freedom of swivel that would permit inadvertent firing through the
rotors if the helicopter was in a turn and more silly freedom backwards than
firing forwards. So I got the guns and trusses dismantled, sketched three basic
modifications. One to the truss to limit its freedom to fire upwards in turns
but fire down wards (- 120 / + 90 deg along longitudinal axis), give more
freedom to fire forward and restrict freedom too much backwards (+ 15 /-
45 deg along lateral axis) by simple mechanically welded butting on the swivel.
The second was to modify truss with two simple slides to take a standard
ammo belt metal box, that would be mounted on the gun truss itself, which would then feed the gun belt automatically. A slip on, slip off, arrangement which could
be done by the gunner in the air, if he carried spare belted ammo boxes.
The third was a canvass (actually thick double layered car seat) chute like a windsock, attached to the guns, that would collect the
spent shells and links, send them down wards instead of all over the
place. The CRPO approved my design modifications 'immediately'
because the mods were on the army MMG and not on the helicopter. I told you
that he was a zestful maverick, unlike the STE with non-combatant DNA, who
didn't like an extra E in ASTE.
The simple mods on the truss and railing for ammo
boxes were done overnight at the local EME workshop, the canvass chutes were made
by a 'Mochi' in Dumlur, the one who usually repaired my wife's shoes in war and
peace. Next day we tried it out, with PVKC flying and I pretending to be the
infantry operating the MMG. It seemed fine, the CRPO too said it was fine. I went
back to Philip Sir to get his permission lest he blew the bugle and asked what that E
in ASTE meant. As everyone knows, he is a through professional, not a 'jugad'
man like me.
Air OP was asked to deploy to
Kolligal jungles south of B'lore, for simulated jungle warfare, for
airborne assault on simulated LTTE . 31 Air OP was a nuisance, the entire lot
with their CO turned up at my home in Dumlur on two successive nights to show
their Rimcolian camaraderie and closed my bar book and ate up all my grub. We
watched Vietnam war on my VCR and that helped formulate tact and tactics.
Early next morning PVKC Sir and I we
flew to Kolligal. Air OP was already practising jungle warfare adjacent
to a river, by grilling a wild boar in an open pit with a tomato in
its mouth and a rod up you know where. We landed with the tail sticking out
into the river, ate barbeque, loaded the guns and took off again. We chose two
side by side black rocks, in the middle of the jungle, that looked like LTTE
supremo Prabhakaran's gonads. I didn't notice that there was a pair
of elephants mating in the jungle behind the rock. I devised air to
ground firing doctrines, 'Teri Pen Di' for opening fire, and 'Todde Ma Di' to
stop firing, language easily understood by Sikh Li infantry, Arty and Air OP. I think Armoured
Kaurs likes similar operational orders, but in English.
To cut a long story short, when the
guns were fired at the rocks for the first time, at max rounds per minute
(about 1000 rpm), there was resonance, the engine governor
malfunctioned, and I had to autorotate and force land on a small patch of jungle next to the
black rock behind which the elephants were mating. The bull elephant charged at
the helicopter with his manhood pointing like the Pitot tube on the Mig 21 and
tail held very high indicating his anger at coitus interruptus. I had to take
out the red coloured engine exhaust blanking and do a 'Dhawa, Halla Bol'
bayonet charge NDA style, back at the elephant. Luckily it decided that
discretion is better part of valour and ran away. There was nothing I could do
with the engine governor, without any tools and E of ASTE. So I attacked the
guns and reduced the rate of fire to about 650 - 700 rounds per minute, by
twirling the fire control knob. After that there wasn't any glitch, except that
the Cheetah shook like Bond's martini when the guns were fired. Shaken but not
stirred, though the sex life of elephants in Kolligal was ruined. They stopped
mating, while all the shaking and rattling improved our zest and night fighting
skill !!!
31 Air OP 'shooted and scooted' next
day to Vavunia without saying good bye.
Rest of their Cheetas I think they
armed them in Vavunia themselves, based on a certificate which they made me
sign, after they made me drink a few extra from my own bottle. As per Bharat
Sir in his IPKF book I am told that they did a fantastic job, shooting at
the black rocks of Prabhakaran and his mates, even females wielding RPGs. The
animal rights NGOs didn't complain either in India or Sri Lanka and Philip Sir
didn't blow the bugle. All is well that begins and ends well.
The irony of the this story is why
the armed Cheetah was named 'Ranjit'.
Both Col PVKC Sir and I are from
Ranjit Section in Rimc. As PVKC says, the zestful arming, operational clearance
of the Cheetah, and its deployment in war in less than 72 hrs was a complete
Ranjit Section in-house affair, a show of Rimcoliian camaraderie. So it was
befitting to name the armed Chetak 'Ranjit' !! This is my personal belief.
I meet illustrious PVKC often now a
days at Hyd, very retired old friends.
He doesn't talk about war, I think he
got a bellyful in S' Lanka. He pours the drink, but refuses to even write
a 'good show' autograph for me on toilet paper. His NGO like grouse is that I
ruined the sex life of elephants in Kolligal !!!.
Cheers
cycclic
PS:
On page 175 of Bharat Sir's book on
IPKF, there is photograph of a Cheetah with a massive gondola leading a
formation of Ranjits. That is another modification done by me at Palam on
the quiet, Rimcolian influence by Lt Gen Chatterjee (who was my bench mate as a
Capt when I was a cadet at Bidar).
The gondola housed a gimbal mounted gyro stabilized long rage telescoping TV camera that could be pointed to look deep inside enemy territory, live digital recordings, that could also be telecast live real time to command and control centres. Applying rudder is a major issue with all h/c pilots, except when flying with the gondola. The cheetah flew better with the gondola, no matter what I did with it, I didn't have to apply rudder !!
Since I am at it, let me also narrate
another untold story of a/c modification, about my ops / technical SoC with
engineering details, to arm the Mi-25/35 with SA-9 Igla for self-protection.
The file went to then ACAS Ops in which
he wrote that I had a 'cavalier attitude' to shoot at fighter a/c in TBA, and
so I should be interred permanently in the islands of Elba or St Helena. I
still can't figure out what objection he had, if I wanted to shoot at
Paki a/c - I thought that was the raison d'etre of IAF !!!!