Back to me hole I scamper back to

Yes. Even I am confused sometimes by the whole hierarchy thing. Thank you in advance rohit ji!rohitvats wrote:That page is relevant to Indian Army as well. Just ignore the Cavalry and Regiment definitions and their associated organization. IA does not have equivalent of the same. In IA Regiment has different conotation and is administrative, rather than, operational concept. Also, IA does not have "Army" designation/formation. Our equivalent of same will be various Command formations like Northern Command, Western Command etc.AdityaM wrote:I am reading "Param Vir" by MajGen Ian Cardozo.
However i feel i would appreciate the tales of valour better if i could understand what is a Company, brigade, regiment, platoon, division etc.
I know i have asked this once earlier, but unable to get any search results here on it.
So can anyone point me to the BR page on 'Company, brigade...' definitions.
And if it doesnot exist, then can the knowledgeable please construct one.
Not sure if this is relevant to Indian context - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_organization
Give me some time, I'll post a quick reference of hierarchy of formations.
Not a knowledgeable one but as per my understanding....AdityaM wrote:I am reading "Param Vir" by MajGen Ian Cardozo.
However i feel i would appreciate the tales of valour better if i could understand what is a Company, brigade, regiment, platoon, division etc.
I know i have asked this once earlier, but unable to get any search results here on it.
My madarssa calculus failed me at that pointBATTALION -- 4 INF COMPANY -- 1000 SOLDIERS -- COLONEL.
INF COMPANY -- 3 INF PLATOONS -- 120 SOLDIERS -- MAJOR .
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Classified_informationHiten wrote:In DRDO's parlance, how important would documents be if they have been marked Restricted on every page?
TIA
Code: Select all
(State) Top Secret Secret Confidential Restricted
India परम गुप्त (Param Gupt) गुप्त (Gupt) गोपनीय (Gopniya) प्रतिबंधित/सीमित (Pratibandhit/seemit)
In other words, do not post it in BR and it is better not to talk about it publicly.Restricted
Such material would cause "undesirable effects" if publicly available. Some countries do not have such a classification.
vasu_ray you need to buy and Read "The Tejas Story" by Air Marshal Rajkumar. Kapil (of BR) may stil have a few copies leftvasu_ray wrote:when the first crash of MKI happened, it was the failure of FBW and the aircraft couldn't be controlled by manual piloting
yet for Tejas the manual controls exist in addition to the FBW, will the pilot be able to save the plane if the FBW were to fail?
Thanks Shiv, will read that, better if it is a e-bookshiv wrote:vasu_ray you need to buy and Read "The Tejas Story" by Air Marshal Rajkumar. Kapil (of BR) may stil have a few copies left
The Cochin shipyard could build 80KT-displacement ships way back in the 1980s, hey (I seem to remember that one of the wimmens where I studied was referred to as 80KT, actually a very nice and decent person).Given that we seem to be lacking in naval heavy hardware suppose GoI decides to build a shipyard today. How many years would it take to build one to get it ready to start building ships?
If a Company is led by a Major, shouldn't a Platoon and Section be led by a Captain and a Lieutenant respectively??sumeet_s wrote:
Not a knowledgeable one but as per my understanding....
BODY -- STRUCTURE -- TROOPS -- LED BY
ARMY HQ -- 6+1 COMMAND -- blank -- GENERAL (COAS).
COMMAND -- 2/+ CORPS -- blank --LT.GEN (G-O-C in C).
CORPS -- 2/+ DIVISIONS -- blank --LT.GEN (G-O-C).
DIVISION -- 3-4 INF BRGD -- 15500 SOLDIERS -- MAJOR GENERAL.
INF BRIGADE -- 3-4 BATTALIONS -- 3500 SOLDIERS -- BRIGADIER.
BATTALION -- 4 INF COMPANY -- 1000 SOLDIERS -- COLONEL.
INF COMPANY -- 3 INF PLATOONS -- 120 SOLDIERS -- MAJOR .
INF PLATOON -- 3 SECTIONS -- 33-36 SOLDIERS -- SUBEDAR (JCO).
SECTION -- blank -- 11 SOLDIERS -- HAVILDAR (NCO).
I hope this is what u asked...
PS: This needs a verification by Rohitvats...
Hmmm. So if I understand it right, a thorough a$$-whupping to the various shipyards in our country to deliver on time is enough for our purposes? If only..enqyoob wrote:The Cochin shipyard could build 80KT-displacement ships way back in the 1980s, hey (I seem to remember that one of the wimmens where I studied was referred to as 80KT, actually a very nice and decent person).Given that we seem to be lacking in naval heavy hardware suppose GoI decides to build a shipyard today. How many years would it take to build one to get it ready to start building ships?
An good-sized aircraft carrier is only 75KT or so, upwards. So what's the big deal?
IOW, the long-lead-time infrastructure is there. The urgency is not there. Since WW-2, India has not really faced any REAL "war-phooting ephort". If it HAS to be done, and can be done before the facilities get bombed out, I would say 2 years flat to launch heavy aircraft carriers.
Ok..I get it now. JCO's and Havildars have a lot more experience. This actually puts another question in my mind. Since the Army is facing a shortage of officers, wouldn't it be prudent to pick out good JCO's and provide them with sort of a shortened Ofiicer training in the IMA so that they can be commissioned as full-fledged officers? (shortened since they have already received weapons and physical training). With their experience they would have a really good potential to become first class officers.RayC wrote:Nachiket,
Section is of 10 soldiers.
The Engineers have 11.
An Inf Battalion is around 800 and it depends on the Mod they are on.
Coy 2IC is a Captain. Lts are too raw to actually have independent command compared to the JCOs and Havs.
There are avenues where PBOR can aspire to become officers.nachiket wrote:Ok..I get it now. JCO's and Havildars have a lot more experience. This actually puts another question in my mind. Since the Army is facing a shortage of officers, wouldn't it be prudent to pick out good JCO's and provide them with sort of a shortened Ofiicer training in the IMA so that they can be commissioned as full-fledged officers? (shortened since they have already received weapons and physical training). With their experience they would have a really good potential to become first class officers.RayC wrote:Nachiket,
Section is of 10 soldiers.
The Engineers have 11.
An Inf Battalion is around 800 and it depends on the Mod they are on.
Coy 2IC is a Captain. Lts are too raw to actually have independent command compared to the JCOs and Havs.
Are call signs allocated based on the names of the pilots? Atleast in Civil Aviation that is not the case, as they are identified with the flights they are commandingRahul M wrote:I figure those are only for pilots. my guess would be those are call-signs.
Let us await for a better worded message from RayCatreya wrote:JCO-lieutenant relationship is like that of young Akbar-Bairam Khan
The relationship here seems to be an exact analogy of my own experience as a young surgical specialist taking charge of an existing surgical ward. The running of the ward was essentially taught to me by the senior nurse in charge even as my own training and experience allowed me to stand above everyone else when it came to handling surgical problems. The same relationship is echoed in an operating theater with an old hand surgeon and his favorite old nursing assistant to whom he can say irritably "Don't give me the instrument I asked for. Give me what I need" and get exactly that.RayC wrote:JCO does not command an officer.
Yet the Lt is an understudy and has to undergo the Training Cycle training where Havildars are instructors and who have to be obeyed. When the Lt is at the squad post, he is just another student as the sepoy next sitting or practising as him.
An example -
When I had just joined the unit, my Coy Cdr was the Offg 2IC and so I was the defacto Coy Cdr.
Yet, I knew nothing what to do when an OR was being marched up to me for a disciplinary case. My Senior JCO advised me as to the procedure, what questions to ask and what should be the punishment.
So I was commanding as an officer, but actually I was being taught the ropes by the JCO.
Akbar and Birbal would another analogy.atreya wrote:RayC sir....forgive me for my analogy, but for the sake of understanding, JCO-lieutenant relationship is like that of young Akbar-Bairam Khan, right?
Eg: Narayan "Nana" Menon, where Narayan is the first name, "Nana" is the nick name, and Menon is actually the surname. Good to see that Army also has some what similar system. But in the Army way of notation, the original first name (from which the nick-name may have originated) is ignored.RayC wrote:Could not get the nickname last name bit.