The Iskra Phasing out
Ceremony
Jagan
Pillarisetti
The Phase out ceremony
The aircraft was officially phased out on December 16, 2004 at
Hakimpet at a solemn ceremony conducted in the afternoon. The Air Officer Commanding, AFS
Hakimpet, Air Commodore Rakesh Kacker VM received the Chief Guest for the event, Air
Marshal B N Gokhale AVSM VM, Senior Air Staff Officer, Training Command.
 |
The final flypast by three Iskras escorted by two Kiran Mk
IIs |
| As the Iskras approached the dias, the Kirans pulled up and away as
the Iskras carried on. |
 |
There were five Iskras put up as a static display at the venue.
Three Iskras were earmarked for a flypast and two more were on standby. A simple flypast
of three Iskras escorted by two Kiran Mk IIs was done after which, the Iskras carried out
a head on 'Trishul' (Trident) pass over the dais.
 |
 |
| The Iskras pulled away seperately and then
approached the saluting stand in a Head on "Trishul" pass followed
by a peel off. They then finally came in to land. |
The Iskras were flown by the three senior most instructors, led
by the Chief Instructor (Iskras) Wg Cdr Dabral. Also flying with the three instructors
were three Flying Officers of the 173 Pilots Course, which is the last Iskra batch to
finish training. After the flypast, all the aircraft landed back and the three aircraft
taxied right upto the dais. The Instructors and the pupils got out of the aircraft and
then were inspected by the Air Marshal Gokhale. Thus ended the last official 'training'
sorties in which Instructors and Pupils flew together in the Iskras.
 |
 |
 |
 |
| TS-11 Iskra W-1760 flown by Wg Cdr SK Dabral, Chief
Instructor (Iskras) and a Trainee pilot taxies in before the Dias. The crew members then
got out for the inspection of the aircraft by the Chief Guest. |
Present during the occasion were many ex-Station Commanders who
had worked with the Iskra. As the strains of 'Abide by me' were played out by the Army
band in the sunset, there were many who felt emotional at the end of an era for the Iskra.
All the future training requirements at Stage IIa will now be
done on the Kiran Mk1A aircraft, a predecessor of the Mk II, but flying with a Viper
Turbojet engine instead of the Orpheus in the Mk II. All the Iskra QFIs were slated to be
either posted out, or due to get converted on the Kiran. All this is an interim measure.
The arrival of the Bae Systems Hawk trainer in a few years will set the stage for the
Stage IIa training, while the HAL built HJT-36 is all slated to take over the Advanced
Flying training at Stage II at Dundigal and Bidar.
 |
 |
| Iskra W-1741 is one of the three in the flypast. This
aircraft stopped by the left of W-1760 for inspection by the Chief guest. |
At the time of this correspondents visit to Hakimpet, atleast
20 of the Iskras were in storage, having been withdrawn from use. Another 14 of the Iskras
were deemed operational, even though only ten had the engine hours to fly. For the whole
fleet, it was estimated there was only about 30 hours left to utilise. And within this 30
hours, the demands of the rest of the course syllabi, the requirement to do a dress
rehearsal for the phasing out ceremony as well as the Combined Graduation Day Parade at
neighbouring Dundigal two days later had to be met.
| Air Marshal BN Gokhale AVSM VM, SASO Training Command,
escorted by Wg Cdr Dabral inspects the parade. |
 |
 |
Air Marshal Gokhale and Air Commodore Rakesh Kacker, AOC AFS Hakimpet
field answers to reporters questions after the inspection and final phasing out. |
| One for Posterity: Trainee pilots of 173 Pilots Course who finished
their curriculum on the Iskras along with their instructors, AOC and the Chief Guest. |
 |
While these were certainly the last 'Instructor-Pupil' training
sorties, The Iskras still had some more flying to do. For the Combined Graduation Parade
(CGP) at Dundigal which took place two days later on December 18, 2004, , three Iskras led
by Wg Cdr Dabral carried out a flypast with split precision, an one of the three Iskras
peeled off and landed at Dundigal at the end of the parade, to be permanently consigned
for display at the Academy. (The aircraft is W-1741, a 1996 replacement airframe from
Poland).
 |
The Iskras followed up with another flypast on two days
later on December 18th at the Air Force Academy, Dundigal. |
Atleast 27 of the 34 Iskra airframes have been allocated either
for preservation or for Ground Instructional duties at various institutions in Training
Command. Apart from the aircraft given to the AFA Dundigal, Iskras earmarked for
preservations are slated to be sent to the IAF Museum, Palam, HQ Training Command in
Bangalore, Station Museum Hakimpet and Flying Instructor School at Tambaram . The last
remaining airworthy Iskras would be flown to their final destinations - the serviceable
ones going for a Instructional Air Frame duty, the others to be road shipped. Where
possible after the Iskras are flown out, a maintenance team will retrieve the engines back
to Hakimpet where they shall be re-installed into other serviceable airframes to enable
them to do their final flights.
Additional Reading:
» Spotters Report
for the Phasing out ceremony

|