Introductions:
The HAL HF-24 Marut ("Spirit of the Tempest") was an Indian fighter-bomber aircraft of the 1960s. Developed by Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL), with Kurt Tank as lead designer. The Project Engineer from HAL was George William Benjamin. It is the first Indian-developed jet aircraft, and the first Asian jet fighter (outside Russia/Soviet Union) to go beyond the test phase and into successful production and active service. On 17 June 1961, the type conducted its maiden flight; on 1 April 1967, the first production Marut was officially delivered to the IAF.
While the Marut had been envisioned as a supersonic-capable combat aircraft, it would never manage to exceed Mach 1. This limitation was principally due to the engines used, which in turn had been limited by various political and economic factors; multiple attempts to develop improved engines or to source alternative powerplants were fruitless. The Marut's cost and lack of capability in comparison to contemporary aircraft were often criticised.
A total of 147 Maruts were manufactured, the majority for the Indian Air Force (IAF). While initially envisioned as a capable interceptor aircraft, it was primarily used for ground attack missions. In this role, the Marut saw combat during the Indo-Pakistani War of 1971, notably participating in the Battle of Longewala. By 1982, the Marut was increasingly obsolescent, and was gradually phased out during the late 1980s.
Instructions:
AG1: Detach fuel tank
AG2: Weapons arming
AG3: Detach missile
phir milenge!
Specifications
General Characteristics
- Created On iOS
- Wingspan 24.4ft (7.4m)
- Length 42.7ft (13.0m)
- Height 11.2ft (3.4m)
- Empty Weight 6,122lbs (2,776kg)
- Loaded Weight 7,804lbs (3,540kg)
Performance
- Power/Weight Ratio 5.182
- Wing Loading 34.5lbs/ft2 (168.3kg/m2)
- Wing Area 226.4ft2 (21.0m2)
- Drag Points 3442
Parts
- Number of Parts 100
- Control Surfaces 7
- Performance Cost 416
I remember reading about this plane and loving it very interesting aircraft, very nice
As an indian man, i love this
Yes, but some were licensed production at before, now it has some self build airplanes (although most parts still needed to buy from other countries)
@DOYOUMIND
India makes airplanes?