INAS Garuda, Cochin
- Details
- Cochin ::
- Published: Monday, 24 November 2008 21:04
- Garuda
INAS Garuda, Cochin
Cochin was taken over by the Indian Navy again in 1953, with the formation of the INAS Garuda, and the Fleet Requirement Unit (Later INAS 550)flying the Short Sealand aircraft for the Navy. From then till the shifting of the Naval Aviation centre to Dabolim in Goa, several aircraft like the Firefly, HT-2 , Vampires, Kirans, Islanders etc were used from this airfield.
When the Navy acquired the INS Vikrant and the Sea Hawk aircraft, Cochin provided the land base whenever the Vikrant was not at sea. Sea Hawks were based here at one point of the other throughout their career with the Indian Navy. One Mi-4 gifted by the Soviet Union for surveillance duties of Thumba was operated by the Naval pilots from Cochin. This aircraft was withdrawn from use after it became obsolete due to lack of spares. For sometime the IAF had based No.1 Target Towing Unit at Cochin which operated the Dakota aircraft. Several aircraft including some Sea Hawks and the Thumba Mi-4 were observed in Cochin airbase.
The first aircraft one runs into at Goa is a beautifully maintained Alize at the main gate. IN-204 looks good and is chained off. But nothing more is known as to when it was put up for display here. Inside the airfield there are a number of derelict and withdrawn from use airframes lying around. There is a Seahawk which is in a derelict state whose future outlook doesnot look promising.
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| This unidentified Sea Hawk is in a derelict condition at the airbase. Minus its cockpit Canopy and with a highly corroded fuselage, its future seems bleak. Pic by: Kapil Chandni | |
There are two more helicopters that were seen around in Cochin. One is a Seaking IN-509, one of the first batch of Seakings inducted in the Navy way back in 1971. This batch has run out of its flying hours and many of them have found thier ways to museums like the INS Vikrant, Goa Museum and the HAL Bangalore Museum. This is the fifth aircraft that is known to have survived.
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| Another short life airframe is this dilapidated Chetak fuselage minus its engine, rotors and doors. No clue as its actual identity. Pic by: Kapil Chandni (Left) & Sanjay Simha (Right) | |
There is a derelict Chetak airframe without any visible serial number. All usable parts seems to have been removed from the helicopter. The engines, the main and tail rotors and the doors.
The saddest part of the trip is that no one in INAS Garuda seems to have a clue on the Corsair wreckage that was fished out of the sea some time back. Enquiries by this correspondent to find out about it had bought up blank responses.
[Report by Kapil Chandni]







