INS Vikramaditya – Game
changer for Indian Navy to be Commissioned by Defence Minister AK Antony
At the time of attaining our Independence our visionary leaders saw the
centrality of a powerful Navy and set us on the right course by envisaging an
Indian Navy centred on aircraft carriers for sea control in our expansive areas
of maritime interest. INS Vikrant, India ’s
first aircraft carrier was acquired from Great Britain and commissioned on
04 Mar 1961. INS Vikrant was a Majestic class CATOBAR (Catapult Assisted Take
Off but Arrested Recovery) carrier and operated Sea Hawk fighters, Alize
(Anti-Submarine Warfare) aircraft and Seaking helicopters. Consistent with its
vision, India
next acquired HMS Hermes, a Centaur class STOVL carrier and a veteran of the Falkland
War. INS Viraat was commissioned on 12 May 1987 as India ’s
second aircraft carrier and India ’s
first STOVL carrier operating the Sea Harrier aircraft. Soon after the
acquisition of INS Viraat, INS Vikrant was also converted from a CATOBAR
carrier to a STOVL (Short Take-off and Vertical Landing) carrier. INS Vikrant
was decommissioned on 31 Jan 1997, after 36 years of glorious service under the
Indian ensign. For almost a decade India had two aircraft carriers and
the Indian Navy was fully cognisant of the criticality of having an aircraft
carrier available for deployment on each seaboard to fulfil the Navy’s assigned
tasks. In recognition of the importance of aircraft carriers, the Indian Navy
had already started exploring the possibility of indigenously designing and
constructing an Aircraft Carrier, this project took off in right earnest in the
late 90s as the Air Defence Ship was conceived. However, given the long
gestation period of such projects, the search for a replacement for INS Vikrant
gained momentum as its decommissioning drew closer.
It was at this juncture that Russia offered
Admiral Gorshkov to the Indian Navy. Negotiations over acquiring the 44,500 ton
Admiral Gorshkov started in 1994. Various high level delegations who had
assessed the ship had independently concluded that the ship’s hull was in good
material state and would be worth considering for exploitation in the Indian
Navy with a suitable mix of aircraft.
Signing of the Contract
After detailed negotiations the two countries signed a
memorandum of understanding in Dec 1998 during a visit by Russian PM Yevgeny
Primakov. The Inter-Governmental Agreement which included acquisition of
Project 11430 (Admiral Gorshkov) was signed between the Federation of Russia
and the Union Government of India on 04 Oct 2000. After a Detailed Project
Development Review, contractual negotiations and thereafter price negotiations,
Government approved the acquisition on 17 Jan 04 at a cost of Rs 4881.67 Cr for
the complete package of R&R of the ship, spares, infrastructure
augmentation and documentation. The deal was signed on 20 Jan 04 and the
effective date of the contract was established as 24 Feb 04. The R&R of the
ship commenced from 09 Apr 04.
The repair and refit was being undertaken by FSUE
Sevmash, the state owned shipyard at Severodvinsk ,
Russia . The
R&R was scheduled to have been completed within 52 months. Though the
refurbishment process was started in right earnest, soon it was realized that
the work and equipment requiring replacement was significantly higher than
originally estimated. Entire length of cable, large portions of steel hull,
motors, turbines and boilers, etc. would have to be completely replaced with
resulting in cost escalation and time slippage.
A protracted renegotiation for arriving at a mutually
acceptable price for refurbishment was held in the ensuing months. Finally, in
Dec 2009, the Indian and the Russian sides arrived at an agreement on the final
price of delivery of this ship. More significantly, it was agreed that the delivery
of the ship would take place only in the year 2012. Though the re-negotiated
price was significantly higher than what was originally agreed upon, the fillip
that the addition of Gorshkov would give to the Blue water requirements of
Indian Navy compensated the greater price.
The Journey of Admiral Gorshkov (nee Baku )
The journey of ‘Vikramaditya’ began as the Kiev class aircraft carrying cruiser ‘Baku ’. Developed from the Moskva class
helicopter carrying guided missile cruisers the Kiev class was a pioneering Soviet era
design, featuring a flight deck arrangement capable of operating fixed wing
VTOL fighters for the first time in the Soviet Navy. Baku
was constructed by Chernomorsky Ship Building Enterprise, Nikolayev
(now in Ukraine [1]).
About 400 enterprises and nearly 1,500 - 2,000 workers from different republics
of USSR
took part in building of the ship. The ship was commissioned on 20 Dec 1987.
Conceived as an armed cruiser, Baku
was heavily armed with twelve Anti-Ship Missile launchers, ten gun mounts of
differing calibre and rocket launchers and depth charges. The air element
comprised Yak-38 aircraft.
‘Baku ’ was envisioned
to be a full-fledged aircraft carrier by Admiral SG Gorshkov, however, due to
conflicting dynamics at that time, the ship turned out as the last ‘compromise’
ship of the Kiev
series. After her development and construction, it became clear to the Soviet
leadership that the vision of Admiral Gorshkov of a classical aircraft carrier
with ship borne aircraft as the primary weapons was indeed the most logical way
ahead to develop the surface forces. On 07 Nov 1990, the ship was named after
Admiral Sergey Georgiyevich Gorshkov.
Baku/Admiral Gorshkov began its active operational
service with the Northern Fleet and was deployed in the Mediterranean
Sea and remained in active service till 1992 and thereafter
continued in service albeit with limited operational deployments. The ship was
finally decommissioned in 1996.
The Transformation Project 11430
Admiral Gorshkov was put in hibernation after her last
sailing in 1995. With most of her equipment lying un-utilised since then, the
task of breathing life and converting her from a VTOL (Vertical Takeoff and
Landing) missile cruiser carrier to a STOBAR aircraft carrier involved
substantial degutting, equipment removal, refit and re-equipping. The major
works envisaged were modification of flight deck to include ski-jump and
arrester gear; modification of bulbous bow, aft aircraft lift & ammunition
lifts; modification of 1750 out of 2500 compartments; installation of new main
boilers; installation of new and additional Diesel Generators; replacement of
existing distilling plants; fitment of Reverse Osmosis plants, new AC plants
and Refrigeration plants and installation of new sensors and equipment. In
2007, as the refit and repair of the ship was in progress, the yard realized
that the scope of work was much larger than initially estimated and so a revised
timeline for completion of the task of modernization was agreed upon by both
Russian and Indian sides. With a revised timeline the delivery of ship was
expected by end 2012.
Creation of Ski Jump
Creation of the flight deck with structural
modification to convert the VTOL carrier to a STOBAR carrier was the most
intricate and arduous. The task involved installation of Sponsons to increase
the breadth at the Flight Deck and a fitment of a new 14 degree Ski jump,
strengthening of arresting gear area, strengthening of run way area and
elongation of the aft end to generate the required length of landing strip aft
of the arresting gear. In all 234 new hull sections were installed to achieve
the desired shape. Total steel work for carrying out structural modification on
flight deck amounted to 2500T.
Modification of Super structure
The superstructure was modified to accommodate a host
of sensors and equipment such as radars, Electronic Warfare suite and Action
Information Organisation system and other systems to suit the requirements of
ship borne fighters and rotors. A very unique structural modification that was
carried out on board the ship was the installation of the aft mast for
accommodating various communication antennae.
Machinery Modification
Vikramaditya in its older avatar was powered by
boilers fuelled by heavy oil, FFO[2].
The re-equipping included replacement of these old boilers with state of the
art boilers utilizing LSHSD and providing a steam capacity of 100 Tonnes per
Hour each.
Electrical re-cabling
The initial estimate included replacement of only 1400
kms of old cable with new cables. However, as degutting progressed and confined
spaces were accessed it was realised that an additional 900 kms of cable will
need to be replaced. Finally the mammoth task involved replacing 2300 kms of
cable, which is a little short of half of the entire coastline of India .
Outfitting
The modification plan of Vikramaditya was not
restricted to the gears and sparks alone. The change also necessitated revamp
of the living spaces and galleys to cater to the needs of the Indian men in
uniform. Of 2500 a total of 1750 compartments were completely re-fabricated. A
host of new galley equipment suited for preparation of Indian food like dosas
and chapatis was also installed.
Arrestor and Restraining Gears
The conversion of VTOL carrier to STOBAR involved
fitment of three 30m wide arrester gears and three restraining gears. Installation
of these equipment not only involved modification and strengthening of the
flight deck but also changes to internal layout of compartments.
To sum it up, a total of 234 new hull sections were
fabricated using 2500 tonnes of steel which is almost equivalent to the
standard displacement of a mid-size frigate. Repair and re-equipping of
Vikramaditya to give a new lease of life as a full- fledged carrier was no mean
task and was probably as demanding a task as constructing a similar tonnage
ship from the drawing board. The task was enabled by the expertise and
experience of the Russian designers and yard workers working hand in glove with
Indian experts. The extreme cold weather conditions of winter only made the
work environment harder. At the end of this refit, spanning a little short of a
decade, Vikramaditya has metamorphosed into a fully capable and potent
platform.
Rise of the Phoenix …
Vikramaditya sailed for the first time under own power
at 1200 hrs on 10 Jun 12, after a gap of about 17 years.
The New Avtar ‘Vikramaditya’
An aircraft carrier carrying potent long range
multi-role fighters is a platform inherently deigned for power projection. In
as much as ‘Gorshkov’ was transformed to create ‘Vikramaditya’, so also
Vikramaditya will transform the face of the Fleet Air Arm of the Indian Navy.
Vikramaditya, the
floating airfield has an overall length of about 284 meters and a maximum beam
of about 60 meters, stretching as much as three football fields put together.
Standing about 20 storeys tall from keel to the highest point, the sheer sight
of this 44,500 tonnes mega structure of steel is awe inspiring. The ship has a
total of 22 decks.
With over 1,600 personnel on board, Vikramaditya is
literally a ‘Floating
City ’. Associated with
this large population is a mammoth logistics requirement - nearly a lakh of
eggs, 20,000 litres of milk and 16 tonnes of rice per month. With her complete
stock of provisions, she is capable of sustaining herself at sea for a period
of about 45 days. With a capacity of over 8,000 tonnes of LSHSD, she is capable
of operations up to a range of over 7,000 nautical miles or 13000 kms.
To enable this 44,500 tonnes floating steel city to
cut through the choppy seas with speeds of up to 30 knots, she is powered by 08
new generation boilers of steam capacity of 100 TPH at a very high pressure of
64 bars, generating a total output power of 180,000 SHP. Vikramaditya heralds
in a new generation of boiler technology with a very high level of automation.
These high pressure and highly efficient boilers power four enormous
propellers, each greater in diameter than twice the height of an average male.
Such a four propeller - four shaft configuration is another first in the Indian
Navy.
The 06 turbo alternators and 06 diesel alternators onboard
generate a total electricity of 18 megawatts to power various equipment of the
ship, enough to cater to the lighting requirement of a mini city. The ship also
houses 02 Reverse Osmosis plants providing an uninterrupted supply of 400 Tons
per day of fresh water.
An extensive revamp of sensors including fitment of
Long range Air Surveillance Radars, Advanced Electronic Warfare Suite makes the
ship capable of maintaining a surveillance bubble of over 500 kms around the
ship.
The ship has the ability to carry over 30 aircraft
comprising an assortment of MiG 29K/Sea Harrier, Kamov 31, Kamov 28, Sea King,
ALH-Dhruv and Chetak helicopters. The MiG 29K swing role fighter is the main
offensive platform and provides a quantum jump for the Indian Navy’s maritime
strike capability. These fourth generation air superiority fighters provide a
significant fillip for the Indian Navy with a range of over 700 nm (extendable
to over 1,900 nm with inflight refueling) and an array of weapons including
anti-ship missiles, Beyond
Visual Range
air-to-air missiles, guided bombs and rockets.
The ship is equipped with state of the art launch and
recovery systems along with aids to enable smooth and efficient operation of
ship borne aircraft. Major systems include the LUNA Landing system for MiGs,
DAPS Landing system for Sea Harriers and Flight deck lighting systems.
The heart of the operational network that infuses life
into the combat systems onboard the ship is the Computer aided Action
Information Organisation (CAIO) system, LESORUB-E. LESORUB has the capability
to gather data from ship’s sensors and data links and to process, collate and
assemble comprehensive tactical pictures. This state of the art system has been
specifically designed keeping in mind the essential requirement on the carrier
for fighter control and direction.
One of the most prominent equipment fitted on the
super structure is the Resistor-E radar complex. Resistor-E is the automated
system designed for providing air traffic control, approach/landing and short
range navigation for ship borne aircraft. This complex along with its various
sub-systems provides navigation and flight data to ship borne aircraft
operating at extended ranges from the mother ship. The precision approach
guidance system aids the fighters on approach to be directed down to a distance
of 30 meters short of flight deck. Vikramaditya also boasts of a very modern
communication complex, CCS MK II, to meet her external communication
requirement. Installation of Link II tactical data system allows her to be
fully integrated with the Indian Navy’s network centric operations.
Once integrated, INS Vikramaditya will bring
transformational capabilities to the Indian Navy and will be a ‘game changer’.
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