Tejas Fleet Set to Resume Flights Next Week After Grounding, Says HAL Chief

The Light Combat Aircraft Tejas fleet is expected to resume flying by next Wednesday after being grounded. The grounding followed a crash linked to issues with the aircraft's braking system. Hindustan Aeronautics Limited Chairman Dr DK Sunil stated the clearance process is underway and specific one-time checks must be completed. The Indian Air Force currently operates 34 Tejas aircraft, comprising 32 fighters and 4 trainers.

Key Points: Tejas Aircraft to Resume Flying by Next Week, HAL Confirms

  • Fleet clearance expected by Wednesday
  • Grounding followed crash linked to braking system
  • 34 aircraft currently in operational fleet
  • One-time checks issued before return to service
  • Includes 32 fighter and 4 trainer variants
2 min read

LCA Tejas fleet likely to resume flying by next week, says HAL Chairman

HAL Chairman says LCA Tejas fleet, grounded after a crash, is expected to resume operations by Wednesday following clearance and one-time checks.

"The good news is that for the Tejas fleet, the LMC is done... we expect this clearance by Wednesday, the fleet will start flying. - Dr DK Sunil"

New Delhi, April 2

The Light Combat Aircraft Tejas fleet is expected to resume flying by Wednesday after being grounded for some time following a crash linked to issues in the braking system, Hindustan Aeronautics Limited Chairman and Managing Director Dr DK Sunil said in New Delhi on Thursday.

Sunil said the required clearance process is underway and the fleet could soon return to operations once certain checks are completed.

"The good news is that for the Tejas fleet, the LMC is done, there is a local modification committee civil action there, which looks at this, so we expect this clearance by Wednesday, the fleet will start flying," Sunil said.

He added that specific one-time checks have been issued for the aircraft before they return to service.

"Some one-time checks have been issued, which they will have to carry out and they can start flying," he said.

Providing details about the number of aircraft in the fleet, Sunil said the Indian Air Force operates 36 Tejas aircraft.

"There are 36... Out of 36, 2 have gone... so 34 are remaining," he said, referring to two aircraft that are no longer part of the operational fleet.

He further clarified that the fleet includes both fighter and trainer variants.

"32 are fighters and 4 were trainers," Sunil said.

The Tejas fleet had been temporarily grounded following a crash earlier, after which checks related to the braking system and other safety aspects were undertaken before allowing the aircraft to resume operations.

Tejas is a single-engine, multi-role light combat aircraft built to operate in high-threat environments, with capabilities that include air defence, maritime reconnaissance and strike missions.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
While I'm glad they are being cautious, grounding the entire fleet for one incident seems like an overreaction. It affects our operational readiness. Hope the checks are swift and the root cause is properly addressed.
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Vikram M
Only 34 operational aircraft? That's a very small number for a frontline fighter. We need to ramp up production at HAL significantly. Atmanirbhar Bharat needs more than just words, it needs speed and scale.
S
Sarah B
The transparency from the HAL Chairman is appreciated. Clearly stating the issue (braking system), the process (LMC, checks), and the timeline builds public trust. More of this please from our defense PSUs.
R
Rohit P
Every aircraft type has teething issues. What matters is how we respond. Grounding, investigating, and fixing shows a mature safety culture. Our IAF pilots deserve the safest machines. Get well soon, Tejas!
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Karthik V
The focus should be on the Mk1A and the TEDBF now. Learn from these incidents, improve the design, and make the future variants even more robust. This is how indigenous defense evolves. 💪

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