Anchit Gupta Profile picture
Mar 8 27 tweets 10 min read
MiG-21 (Fishbed, Vikram, Trishul, Bison, Mongol) and the innumerable variants in @IAF_MCC 's long service history have consistently been a conundrum for enthusiasts. This thread attempts an (over)simplified evolution of the MiG-21 types in IAF service. #IAFHistory #MiG21 (1/27) A unique formation flight of all MiG-21 variants in service
MiG-21F-13 Type-74 Fishbed-C was the first in IAF. 6 of these were acquired in Mar 1963 & served till 1968. F= Forsirovannyy ("Uprated") and 13 denotes the K-13 Air-to-Air Missiles it carried. They carried the serial numbers BC-816 to BC-821. (2/27)
Powered by the R-11 engine, pitot tube was below the engine intake,unlike subsequent types, where it was on top.The armament was the K-13 missile & one 30mm cannon. Designed for intercepts, its short endurance, lack of radar & poor single shot kill probability was a problem(3/27)
In March 65, IAF got the PF variant. Perekhvatchik ("Interceptor"), F = Forsirovannyy ("Uprated"), Type 76, Fished – D. 6 of these were acquired with serial numbers from BC-822 to BC-827. It had a R-11F2-300 engine for better endurance & R1L Search Radar (First ever) (4/27) MiG-21PF (Type 76) serial BC822 can be termed the 7th MiG-21
These changes came with a flaw – it had to give up its cannons & rely only on missiles. Blooded during the 1965 war, the lack of a cannon would bite. Read this story of a missed Sabre kill - tinyurl.com/5ckwb2hj .The first time a MiG-21 had fired a missile in anger(5/27) Line up of MiG-21PF (Type 76), a batch of which were receive
Few T-76 were upgraded with R2L radar & R-11F2S-300 engine. This was to bring them in line with T-77 that was to become the main variant in service. Ac kept their original serials but the prefix 'BC' was changed to 'C'.28 & 29 Sqn were the only ones to operate T-74 & T-76.(6/27)
Lack of an integral cannon was in synch with the gun vs missile debate of the times. Variants of the F-4 indicate the progress. Suffices to say that the gun continues to feature in all modern fighter ac. (7/27)
In 1966, IAF took the first big step when it contracted for the MiG-21 FL, Type -77 variant. FL denoting forsazh-lokator meaning Afterburner & Radar. 38 a/c manufactured in the USSR and another 197 were manufactured by HAL between 1966-73. (8/27) First HAL Manufactured FL
Type 77 improved on the Type 76 - a new R2L Radar, IFF antenna, Radar warning & larger fuel capacity. An attachable gunpack GP-9 consisting of a twin barrel 23 mm GSh gun on the center point. Type-77 was the first usable variant for IAF and boy did the IAF use it!(9/27)
Type 77 had a Pitot tube dead center, big antenna on the dorsal spine & spine thins off in the middle to tail. Early examples carried the fuselage roundel aft of the wing - on the rear fuselage. Later it was moved to the front fuselage just below the cockpit. (10/27)
Type-77 also heralded the era of using the MiG-21 for Air-to-Ground role. 500 kg Bombs were delivered at Tilpat range in 1967. For the bombing role in 1971 war, they earned the nickname “RUNWAY BUSTERS”. (11/27) The runways at Kurmitola showing bomb damage after the "
The canopy up until the Type-77 opens on a hinge on the front of the canopy. When ejecting, the seat connects with the canopy making a capsule to enclose the pilot and protect him from the airflow, after which it would separate, and the pilot would parachute down. (12/27)
Type-77 initially had 2 hardpoints under the wing for AAMs and 1 centerline for the drop tank/GP-9 gunpod. Sometime in 80s, it was modified to have 4 wing hardpoints for AAMs/Bombs. This greatly enhanced usability. (13/27)
Type-77 would serve the IAF for 47 years across 11 combat Sqns, the longest of any variants, ruling the eastern skies & was extensively used in type trg post 1986. It was also the first instance of mass production by HAL. (14/27)
High-altitude combats were rare & mid/low altitude capability was critical. The MiG-21M/MF (Modernizirovannyy ("Modernised" F = Forsirovannyy ("Uprated")) Type-96 Fishbed-J was IAF’s latest addition in 1973. Some directly purchased and rest HAL Mfged, in all 198.(15/27) The first MiG-21M (C1532) was handed over to the IAF on 14 F
36 examples made in USSR came with the R-13 engine & had a built-in GSh-23L cannon instead of a cannon pod freeing up the centre pylon for a droptank. However, the HAL Mfged T-96s had the modified R-11 (from the T-77). Overall -more fuel, better performance and avionics. (16/27)
Type-96 was also called Type-88 in HAL lingo. It had a zero-speed, zero-altitude ejection seat(old capsule canopy was gone), Gyro gunsight & 4 wing pylons that could carry droptanks (with better engine). It would serve 45+ years & also be used in Fighter-Recce/ EW role (17/27)
Visually T-96 had sideways opening clamshell canopy & Pitot tube on right side of the nose. Dorsal spine had short distinct line at base of tail & drop tanks on the wing pylons. AoA vane on left side of nose as another visual indicator though later retrofitted to T77 also.(18/27)
A saddle tank spoilt the beautiful area ruling & the T-96 could not match the supersonic perf of T-77. In 2001, HAL mfgd T-96 were retrofitted with R-13 engines(ex-Romania), significantly improving life/ efficiency & enabling the T-96 to continue with type trg for longer.(19/27)
In 1975, IAF acquired the MiG-21bis, Type -75, Fishbed-N variant. Key improvement was the R-25 engine, better avionics, gun-sight & blind flying instrumentation. 70 acquired in flyaway condition and 220 were produced by HAL between 78-85. The last MiG-21 mfged by HAL (20/27)
Visually to differentiate a T-96 from a Type-75 – Fatter spine ending further aft for T-75. A subtle difference between the bis and Type-96 is the larger air intake lip on the former while it is slightly more tapered in the latter. (21/27)
Lastly in 2001, IAF upgraded the bis to bison (not a new a/c purchase) for BVR missiles, KAB-500 TV bombs, ECM, RWR, cleaner and larger view cockpit & Helmet Mounted Sighting System. The aircraft carried serial numbers “CU” in place of “C”. (22/27)
bison vs T-75 visual diff includes bulged canopy & single piece windshield, no vanes on pitot, RWR and ILS antennae on vertical fin, grey radome vs green on all previous variants, and wing root fairings for CMDS and avionics. (23/27)
Every fleet needs a trainer. The MiG-21U/UM/US Mongol (Type 66-400 /66-600/ 68 / 69) is a two seat trainer version with cockpits arranged in tandem. Over a 100 were acquired from USSR and Eastern European countries, none were mfged by HAL. (24/27) Mongol Formation
Trainer has larger main wheels, no cannon armament. Has a broader-chord vertical tail surfaces with a deeper dorsal spine and no dorsal fin fillet. It also sports an IAF roundel both fore and aft of the wing. Trainers are a thread in themselves given the variations!(25/27)
With nearly 850 a/c operated by IAF across 4.5 generations and multitude of variants, you are not alone in being confused with the variants. Attached image is a simple guide to be able to visually identify the type when you see an Indian Fishbed! (26/27)
Disclaimer: This is not intended to be ultra-granular. Additional details always welcome. If by the end of the thread, you know the chronology of the variants and can identify the types visually – mission was a success! (27/27)

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More from @AnchitGupta9

Mar 7
Mystery Trivia: The @IAF_MCC Service numbers for officers were put in place only in Oct 1942 (10+ years after formation) and unlike RAF/RFC that started with the number 1, IAF started with the service number 1551. Why 1551 remains a mystery (and an itch)? #IAFHistory (1/5)
Prior to Oct 1942, the Air Force Lists only carried the names, organized in seniority with no reference to any service number. Possibly, the small size of the IAF did not require an elaborate numbering system. (2/5)
Via an Air Force order, all officers appearing in the Air Force List of Oct 1942 were given a service number starting from 1551, in descending order of seniority. Implicitly, officers that died or left prior to Oct 42, never had a service number. We counted 93 such officers!(3/5)
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Mar 5
Air Mshl Minoo Merwan Engineer - the most decorated & battle-hardened @IAF_MCC officer who participated in all campaigns from WWII to the 1971 war and yet, remains much less spoken compared to his contemporaries. This is his service story. #IAFHistory (1/17)
Born in 1921 at Karachi in a Zoroastrian family where his father was the Div Eng for the Northwestern Railway. The sixth of the siblings & third brother to join the IAF, Minoo was low down in the sibling ‘food-chain’. He had a tough time keeping up with his brothers. (2/17) Minoo, Aspy and Ronnie Engineer, all awarded the D F C. Jang
Minoo had a jovial self & went to Elphinstone College, Bombay. He was commissioned with the 4 PC, a lot of 72, with many illustrious names. After training, he was posted to 2 CDF at Juhu flying Wapitis & in 1943 to 6 Sqn under Mehar Singh on the Hurricane IIB. (3/17)
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Feb 27
"THE RESERVE AND AUXILIARY AIR FORCES ACT, 1952", asked civil volunteers to be called up as pilots/ technicians in case of trg, aid of civil power, or @IAF_MCC service. 7 Aux AF sqns were formed between 1955-67. 220 officers commissioned. This is their story. #IAFHistory (1/16)
First to be formed - 51 (Delhi) Aux Sqn in Nov 55 at the Safdarjung-based Delhi Flying Club. Originally on the HT-2 & Harvard, they converted to Vampire Mk52 in 1959. It was commanded by BK Stidston - Flying instructor from CFS, UK & at FIS, Chief flying instructor at AFA. (2/16)
Just Like Stidston, a number of regular IAF officers commanded various sqn's (The CO and instructors in AAF sqn were always regular IAF officers). Eg. BS Sikand (of Boyra battle fame), Alfred Anthony (4 Sqn, Burma), Chatrath (First CO 221 Sqn, VrC).(3/16)
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Feb 24
On 5 Sep 60, @DefenceMinIndia VKK Menon made a lengthy stmt in Parliament. A Dakota ac of @IAF_MCC was shot down over Purr vill in Nagaland on 26 Aug. While the wreckage was located, the crew was missing. This is the story of the crew, released 21 months later. #IAFHistory (1/16) Pic's Courtesy: Gavin Young...
On 14 Aug 1960,Naga hostiles attacked the Assam Rifles post at Thuda(Phor/Purr vill). The monsoon was at its height & rivers were in full spate. The attack was launched after destroying bridges on all the rivers. As the attk contd, the AR's supplies & ammo began running out(2/16)
Two Dakotas, ex-Jorhat, likely 49 Sqn were assigned the task of dropping supplies at the post. Ac had to fly low, amidst small arms fire at them. One ac was able to drop water but neither was successful in helping replenish the post. Both had bullets holes (3/16) Image
Read 16 tweets
Feb 22
Air Mshl Douglas George King-Lee, AVSM PVSM is the oldest surviving Air Mshl of the @IAF_MCC . He was commissioned in 1944 & served in WWII. This thread lives through his exciting career that culminated with a tenure as AOC-in-C of Eastern Air Command in 1983. #IAFHistory (1/12)
Born and raised in Nagpur, he was selected for the 27th Pilot Course & reported to Initial Training Wing Poona in 1943. He did his basic training at EFTS, Jodhpur on the Tigermoth, and was commissioned in Nov 44. He earned his wings at 1 SFTS Ambala flying the Harvard. (2/12)
In Sep 45, he was thrown at the deep end with his first posting to 8 Sqn, flying the Spitfire at Mingaladon, Burma. He remained with sqn for a year & on return was based at Trichinopoly and Kolar where he experienced an accident on take-off (3/12)
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Feb 21
#OTD in 1930, Air Mshl S Raghvendran was born in the village of Perinkolam but spent his early years in Ooty. He went to RIMC, Dehradun in 1942 and was selected for @IAF_MCC in 1947. "Rags" retired as Vice Chief in 1988 after serving for 41 years. He passed away in 2020. (1/7) Image
Rags had an illustrious career - He commissioned with the 51st Course. He was a flying instructor soon after and spent tenures in AFA & Iraq. Apart from a/c in IAF, he flew the Yak-18 & Hunting Jet Provost. He served as Flt Cdr with 5 Sqns- 2 Vampire, 2 Toofani,and a Hunter (2/7) Image
1n 1958, he was sent to Fighter Combat leaders Course (Equivalent of Top Gun school) in UK and scored an astonishing 74% in air-to-air firing (25% was considered enough). He put this learning to great use for the IAF and penned his thoughts here - bharat-rakshak.com/IAF/History/19… (3/7)
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