Wings of fire - Sir APJ ABDUL KALAM Wings of fire | Page 30
time to review the progress of our project. His confidence in
our ability ignited our enthusiasm. I would enter the
assembly shop leaving my other problems outside, just as
my father used to enter the mosque for prayer, leaving his
shoes outside.
But not everyone accepted Krishna Menon’s opinion
about GEM. Our experiments with the available parts and
components did not exactly delight my senior colleagues.
Many even called us a group of eccentric inventors in
pursuit of an impossible dream. I, being the leader of the
“navvies”, was a particularly inviting target. I was regarded
as yet another country bumpkin who believed that riding the
air was his domain. The weight of opinion against us
buttressed my ever-optimistic mind. The comments of
some of the senior scientists at ADE made me recall John
Trowbridge’s famous satirical poem on the Wright
Brothers, published in 1896:
. . . . with thimble and thread
And wax and hammer, and buckles and screws,
And all such things as geniuses use; —
Two bats for patterns, curious fellows!
A charcoal-pot and a pair of bellows.
When the project was about a year old, Defence
Minister Krishna Menon made one of his routine visits to
ADE. I escorted him into our assembly shop. Inside, on a
table lay the GEM model broken down into sub-
assemblies. The model represented the culmination of one
year’s untiring efforts to develop a practical hovercraft for
battlefield applications. The minister fired one question
after another at me, determined to ensure that the prototype
would go into test flight within the coming year. He told Dr
Mediratta, “GEM flight is possible with the gadgets Kalam
now possesses”.
The hovercraft was christened Nandi, after the bull
ridden by Lord Shiva. For a prototype, its form, fit and finish
was beyond our expectation, given the rudimentary
infrastructure we possessed. I told my colleagues, “Here is
a flying machine, not constructed by a bunch of cranks but
by engineers of ability. Don’t look at it—it is not made to
look at, but to fly with.”
Defence Minister Krishna Menon flew in the Nandi,
overruling the accompanying officials’ concern for his
safety. A Group Captain in the minister’s troupe, who had
logged in many thousands of flying hours, even offered to fly
the machine to save the minister from the potential danger
of flying with an inexperienced civilian pilot like myself and
gestured to me to come out of the machine. I was sure
about my competence in flying the machine I had made,
and therefore shook my head in negation. Observing this
wordless communication, Krishna Menon dismissed the
insulting suggestion of the Group Captain with a laugh and
signalled to me to start the machine. He was very happy.
“You have demonstrated that the basic problems of
hovercraft development are solved. Go for a more powerful
prime mover and call me for a second ride,” Krishna Menon
told me. The skeptical Group Captain (now Air Marshal)
Golay, later became a good friend of mine.
We completed the project ahead of schedule. We had a
working hovercraft with us, moving on an air cushion of
about 40mm with a load of 550kg, including the tare weight.
Dr Mediratta was visibly pleased with the achievement. But
by this time, Krishna Menon was out of office and could not
take his promised second ride. In the new order, not many
people shared his dream with regard to military
applications of an indigenous hovercraft. In fact, even