Warbird (Re)
Discovery of the Year 2005
De Havilland Vampire F.3 HB-546 /
VT-CXJ
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| De Havilland
Vampire F.3 VT-CXJ/HB-546 in the unique 'Chakra' markings with the Battle
Axe emblem on the nose (left), and how it was before when it sported the anonymous 'T-27'
serial. |
Eds Note: Since this is the last update
of the year, we have gone thru all our entries and decided our 'WDY 2005'
For over four decades the Vampire airframe
in the college was doing duty under a pseudonym T-27 . No one knew where the aircraft came
from and no one knew about its past history. The aircraft had for a couple of decades done
duty as the Gate Guardian at main guard room. All the years in the open has not done
it much good. The aircraft's forward fuselage was disintegrating after exposure to years
of sun and rain.
A couple of years ago, the aircraft was
moved to the Parade Ground of the college. And it had been lying there since. A small
cradle like support tray was built for the forward fuselage to give it some semblance of
support.
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For a long time, the Vampire
was displayed at the main guard room, as seen here when the 'air nuts' group visited AFTC
in 2003. |
| T-27 seen at the Parade Ground,
after being moved from the main guard room. |
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From as far as public memory goes, the
aircraft was marked 'T-27'. The actual identity of the Vampire was unknown.... till early
2005 when WarbirdsofIndia.com helped unveil its actual identity and its place in
history.
At the begining of 2005, in preparation for
the sound and light show at Jalahalli, the Vampire was being prepared for the display.
Efforts were made to try and find out when and where the aircraft came from. But the
records at AFTC revealed nothing. No documentation or records existed as to when the
Vampire was taken on charge or from where it came. Its original serial number had
been lost over the years under layers and layers of silver paint and the ubiquotous
training number 'T-27'.
The crew at AFTC then decided to
dissassemble all the loose panels and search for any dataplates or stenciled markings.
While no dataplates were found, one of the engine panels did turn up the numbers 'VV211'
painted on the inside. This was the clue that helped unveil the aircraft's amazing
history. Without doubt, VV211 was the RAF Serial of the Vampire. The aircraft was probably
one of the original RAF delivery aircraft. But which one?
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Another view of the Vampire
shows the damage to the forward fuselage, caused by the deterioration of the balsa wood
structure exposed to the elements. |
So one fine evening we receive the email
from AFTC asking us to find out about VV211. The moment we saw the serial number as VV211,
we knew. We knew this was no ordinary FB52. This was a historic airframe. VV211 was
nothing but the one of the first three Vampire F.3s in the IAF service. Hell, VV211 was
one of the first ever Jet fighters flown by any Asian Air Arm!
When the Indian Air Force decided to induct
the De Haviland Vampire Mk 5s into service in 1948, it was decided to send three Vampire
F.Mk.3 fighters to the newly formed Aircraft Testing Unit at Kanpur. In November
1948, three Vampire F3s were flown by British Test Pilots to New Delhi's Safdarjung Air
Field, and received by the Air Force CinC Air Marshal T W Elmhirst and the then prime
minister Shri Jawarharlal Nehru himself. The three Vampires were marked in an unusual
marking, all three carried a Civilian VT registration, Chakra markings and the newly
allocated IAF Serials. Thus the aircraft were:
1. VV209 - VT-CXH - HB544
2. VV210 - VT-CXI - HB545
3. VV211 - VT-CXJ - HB546
The aircraft were flown extensively by the
ATU, under the command of Sqn Ldr D Subia VrC. Flying with him were Flt Lt Micky Blake, Fg
Offr Nobby Clark and Fg Offr G V Kuriyan. After an year or so of testing and flying across
the whole of the country and showing the flag, the ATU was merged into No.7 Squadron
'Battle Axes', then flying Spitfire XVIIIs. In early 1951, the Vampires F3s were replaced
by the FB52s freshly arriving from the UK. No one knew about the fate of the three F3s.
Atleast until now.
Refering to David Watkins excellent history
of the Vampire, We at Warbirdsofindia deduced that the panels were definitely from HB546.
But is the aircraft itself the F3 that we wanted it to be? Because there is always the
possibility that the panels were changed with an FB52 at some point of time.
We were assured by many that interchanging
of panels was not that easy, and that the panels in most cases did not fit on other
aircraft. That can only be confirmed if the aircraft sported rounded wingtips of the Mk3
instead of the straight clipped wingtips of the FB52. An email and 24 hours later,
photographs of the Vampire arrived - that showed the rounded wingtips! Time for
celebration!
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| The photos that
said it all - Rounded wingtips! These photos proved that we had a F.3 on hand - and a
historic airframe at that! |
Once the identity of VV211 was established
and confirmed by AFTC, the college lost no time in repainting the aircraft in its original
VT-CXJ - Chakra - HB546 markings, and adorned the forward fuselage with the Battle Axe
emblem. Thus this aircraft is the only current warbird in India to sport the Chakra
markings. However the aircraft features the standard Tri Color roundels on the wings,
perhaps an oversight by the painters, or a reminder of its original anonymous scheme.
The F3 is currently displayed on the right
end of the AFTC Parade ground. Some minor repairs have been carried out on the aircraft,
like removing the dents in the tail boom etc. But the forward fuselage is too badly
deteriorated to be repaired sucessfully. So the aircraft currently sports a cradle like
structure supporting the area.
The emergence of one of the first ever
Vampires from the cold and the interest in preserving its history and identity definitely
proves that the Indian Air Force is one of the leading players in the Vintage Aircraft
History movement in India.
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| Two views of HB546
show the unique markings as painted on the outside of the twin booms. |

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