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Thirty-six years after the Light Combat Aircraft (Tejas) programme was conceived, the indigenous fighter plane is combat-ready. On 20 February, on the inaugural day of the Aero India 2019, DRDO chief G Sateesh Reddy handed over the release of service certificate to Indian Air Force Chief BS Dhanoa.
Air Chief Marshal BS Dhanoa said the FOC was a major milestone.
Air Chief Marshal Dhanoa added that the Request for Proposal for the production of 83 LCA MKI A will be issued soon. He added that six squadrons of Mark II version of the aircraft will replace aging Jaguars, Mirage 2000s and MIG 29 fleets. “If you have seen how the LCA performed in Pokran – bombing accuracy, air-to-air firing, firing accuracy – it was already ready. Pilots are very happy,” added the Air Force chief.
The Indian Air Force inducted the Initial Operational Clearance (IOC) version of the Tejas in July 2015 into the 45 Squadron of the IAF based in Sulur. Since its initial flight, the Tejas has clocked over 1,500 hours of flying.
Some of the key improvement from the IOC version of the aircraft to the FOC version have been air-to-air beyond visual range missile firing, air-to-air refuelling capability and air-to-ground bombing. The service ceiling has been increased as well.
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