Before JRD Tata, there was a legendary aviator and his name was Sri Rama Venkata Subba Setty.
Know more about Bharat’s Modern Day Aviator forgotten by Left’s Distronics.
S.V. Setty, was born on Dec 28, 1879 into a family of meagre resources. After his early
education in Mysore, he graduated from Madras University.
Later, at Thomson College of Eng, Roorkee, he distinguished himself taking first place. He joined Mysore State service in 1906 as Assistant Engineer. In 1909, he won a scholarship for an electrical engineering diploma
from Faraday House, England, where he later gained practical experience through stints in engineering companies.
Setty was determined not to return to India without learning aeronautics. However, he was financially insecure since the Mysore government refused to extend his
deputation (though he was granted leave without pay). There was also strong opposition from his family. Undeterred, he joined A.V. Roe and Company (Avro)—the only British company specialising in building aircraft—in May 1911 and plunged into aircraft designing. With financial
support from a well-wisher, he also enrolled to learn flying at the Avro School.
The first reference to S.V. Setti in Flight, the official organ of the Aero Club of the UK that started publication in January 1909, is in the issue dated June 24, 1911 where he is referred to as a
new pupil at Brooklands Aerodrome. Over the next 8 months it makes around 10 references to Setty flying various exercises in the Avro biplane or the Green-engined Avro, usually solo, at times carrying out circuits, at times doing some rolling practice.
The last reference in
in the issue of March 2, 1912 says he placed the Avro on its head. The report mentions that the pilot was unharmed, but this was probably Setty’s final flight. Notably, aviation at the time was dominated by accidents—minor & major that did not necessarily reflect on the calibre
of the pilot.
But Setty had joined Avro to be an aircraft designer. While testing an Avro D prototype, he crashed but managed to escape unhurt. Determined to improve the machine, he studied its flaws and soon came up with a new design. Avro allowed him to implement his design,
which he did.
They asked him to fly it—once again he obliged and landed safely. Famous Australian aviator John Duigan, who witnessed the flight, purchased the biplane on the spot. The aircraft that Setty built for Duigan is considered the prototype of Avro’s later E type.
The D and E types were the models for the Avro 500. The Avro 500 was itself the inspiration for the Avro 504—the first and one of the most widely operated early trainer aircraft—that first flew in September 1913.
In a certificate dated March 12, 1912 Avro recommended Setty with
the words : He has had considerable experience in the Flying School and has become very efficient in the tuning up of aeroplanes and engines. He has the makings of a very good pilot. He has also worked in the Drawing Office on some new types of machines, and we now consider him
to have had sufficient experience to be left in entire charge of the erection of a machine of any type. Setty left England on June 30, 1912 with a gold medal from A.V. Roe for General Proficiency in Aeronautics. Inscribed on it was an Avro E.
S. V. Setty after returning from UK
joined the services, but he didn't
get immediate posting to commensurate with his qualification.
Sir M Visvesvaraya, the then, Dewan of Mysore, with an eye to impart quality & practical technical education to the enthusiasts in the state, had started 2 technical institutions.
The one at Bangalore was handed over by Sir MV to Mr. S V Setty & he took charge as the Superintendent of that in May, 1913. This was associated with the School of Mechanical Engineering and further went onto become, one of the best technical institutes across the country.
He along with Sir M V was responsible for laying the foundation for the technical education in our state and a gifted college for our country. Mr. S V Setty, set a firm base for the institution since he was with it since its inception and saw it grew from the scratch, realising
the dreams of various young & able minds of Mysore State. He must be credited for having infused strong roots to an institution, whose engineers have played pivotal role across all departments & wings of India. He was in a way, the architect of engineering education in our state
Mr. S V Setty stirred the school very ably, with equipment covering subjects like Mechanical, electrical and automobile. This paved the way for the first Engineering College in Karnataka at Bangalore in 1917, which was attached to the school of Mechanical engineering during the
initial stage.
He was given additional responsibility as a Professor to manage it. This institution since then has churned out thousands of great engineers, visionaries, thinkers who have built the nation India, into one of the biggest and most successful democracies
across the world. The India today is a result of innovations, thinking and hard work of great personalities such as Mr. S V Setty. The legacy of such innovators will live for hundreds of years influencing and inspiring minds to think big and work hard.
His greatness which was
gleaming like an ever flowering garden came to a sudden halt, when he became the victim of influenza epidemic at an early age of 39 as also that of his wife and one of their four daughters. He breathed his last on October 12, 1918.
Thus with his death, his greatness which
should have been destined to find important pages in the history, lost out to the redux of First World War and further in 1959, when the records at AVRO were destroyed in a fire accident.
The Scientist Who Dreamt Of #Atmanirbharata In Space Research.
On his Punyasmaran Divas let us know how he achieved something unimaginable.
It was late 1960s, the European Union’s Satellites failed one after another in
Austalia’s launch station and they decided to stop further launches.
To avoid losses they decided to sell unused “Satellite Telemetry and Tracking” devices and placed ad in prominent journals and magazines.
Vikram Sarabhai read this advertisement and called up Arvamudan,
a scientist who working at Tumba and called him to Bombay.
In Bombay, Sarabhai met Aravamudan and another scientist H G S Murthy asked them to proceed to Australia.
The 2 scientists went to RBI and asked for Blank DD, the RBI officer got angry & sent these 2 scientists out,
The self-styled social justice intellectuals and parties do not want an India without castes, they want castes without Dharma. This may be profitable to some in the short run but it is suicidal for all in the long run. – #RamSwarup.
Ram Swarup (12 Oct 1920 - 26 Dec 1998)
was a Sankhya philosopher, yogi & Guru of historian Sita Ram Goel. Together they established the #VoiceOfIndia in New Delhi, to give Hindu intellectuals a voice when the mainstream media refused to give them any time or space.
To know what kind of Intellectual Giant he was,
I’m rewriting what he wrote to The Indian Express, on 13 September 1996. Please do read.
Today casteism is rampant. It is a new phenomenon. Old India had castes but no casteism. In its present form, casteism is a construct of colonial period, a product of imperial policies and
In 1922, Dr Bhim Rao Ambedkar famously called Swami Shraddhanand “the greatest and most sincere champion of the Untouchables”.
In Indian history, this honorific title Great Soul (Mahatma) is bestowed
upon Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi as ‘Mahatma’ Gandhi. Most historical texts characterize him as an angelic, saintly statesman who could do no wrong.
But, in reality, there was one Mahatma whose name has all but been erased in Indian history textbooks. He was ‘Mahatma Munshiram’
more famously known as Swami Shraddhanand. For long, the Swami has been portrayed by historians as just a ‘Hindu’ revivalist. But if one goes through the story of his life one will find him to be a living portrait of bravery and sacrifice.
Swami Shraddhanand’s Shuddhi mission
ಮೇದು ಮನೆಗೈದಿ ನಾನಮೃತವೀವೆ
ಅದನುಂಡು ನನಗೆರಡ ಬಗೆವ ಮಾನವ ಹೇಳು
ನೀನಾರಿಗಾದೆಯೋ ಎಲೆ ಮಾನವಾ..
ಈ ಪದ್ಯವನ್ನು ಯಾರೂ ಮರೆತಿರಲಾರರು. ನಾವು ಹಿರಿಯರನ್ನು ನೆನೆಯುವಾಗ ಅವರು ಉಳಿಸಿಹೋದ ಮುದಭಾವಗಳಿಂದ ನೆನೆಯಬೇಕು. ಮೇಲಿನ ಪದ್ಯ ನೀಡಿದವರು ಎಸ್. ಜಿ. ನರಸಿಂಹಾಚಾರ್ಯರು. ಇಂದು ಅವರ ಪುಣ್ಯಸ್ಮರಣೆ.
His Jayanti is celebrated as National Mathematics Day.
His Notebooks are still being analysed more than 100 years after his death. His mentor Prof. G. H. Hardy said: “My personal ratings of contemporary mathematicians on the basis of pure talent,
on a scale from 0 to 100: G. H. Hardy – 25; John Littlewood 30; David Hilbert 80; Srinivasa Ramanujan 100.”
Did you know that math wizard knew how to solve a problem in 100 different ways?
As he worked on his theorems, Ramanujan couldn't use paper as it was quite expensive.
He worked on his derivations on slate, choosing to note down only the important results and summaries in his notebooks. Despite his unemployment and abject poverty, he had filled an entire notebook by the age of 23.
When Hardy invited him for Cambridge, Ramanujan considered