View Full Version : Experimental Aircraft.
Panzerknacker
07-11-2008, 11:13 AM
With my usual accuracy and knowlegde I will deal this time with the projects and prototipes of the CCCP.
http://rwebs.net/avhistory/images/Mystery2.jpg
Panzerknacker
07-13-2008, 10:36 AM
Bereznyak-Isayev BI
Purpose: Experimental rocket-engined
interceptor-fighter.
Design Bureau: Designers Aleksandr
Yakovlevich Bereznyak and Aleksei
Mikhailovich Isayev, working at OKB of
Bolkhovitinov, later managed by CAHI
(TsAGI)
In 1939 Bereznyak was an observer at the static tests of the first reliable rocket engine developed by Leonid Stepanovich Dushkin.
In early 1940 he watched flight tests of the primitive RP-318 (see later under Korolyev). He discussed rocket aircraft with Isayev, who had been a Dushkin engineer involved with the RP-318. In late May 1941 they decided to propose a high-speed rocket-engined fighter.
They put the suggestion to Prof Bolkhovitinov .After discussion with all interested parties Bolkhovitinov sent a letter to GUAP (chief administration of aviation industry) on 9th July 1941 putting forward a detailed proposal. Soon a reply came from the Kremlin.
The principals were called to GUAP before Shakhurin and A S Yakovlev, and within a week there was a full go-ahead. The order was for five prototypes, with the time to first flight cut from the suggested three months to a mere 35 days.
A complete Bolkhovitinov team were confined to the OKB for 40 days, working three shifts around the clock. Tunnel testing was done at CAHI, supervised by G S Byushgens.
The first (unpowered) flight article was built without many drawings, dimensions being drawn directly on the materials and on templates. B M Kudrin made the first flight on 10th September 1941, the tug being a Pe-2. All necessary data were obtained in 15 flights. On 16th October the OKB and factory was evacuated to a half-built shed outside Sverdlovsk.
http://img516.imageshack.us/img516/8995/dibujojf7.jpg
The first (experimental) D-1A engine was installed in late January 1942, but exploded during testing on 20th February, injuring Kudrin (sent to hospital in Moscow) and a technician.
The replacement pilot was Capt G Ya Bakhshivandzhi. He was in the cockpit on the first tied-down firing on 27th April 1942.
On 15th May 1942 he made the world's first flight of a fully engineered rocket interceptor,still fitted with skis. By March 1943 seven BI prototypes had been constructed, but the flying was entirely in towed or gliding flight because of serious problems caused by explosions and acid leaks.
Powered flying did not resume until
February 1943. By this time Kudrin had returned to flight status, and was assigned one of the Bis. On powered flight No 6 on 21st March 1943 a height of 3km (9,843ft) was reached in 30 seconds. On powered flight No7, with aircraft No 3, on 27th March, Bakhshivandzhi made a run at sustained full power; the aircraft suddenly pitched over and
dived into the ground.
Tunnel testing later showed that at about 900km/h the BI would develop a nose-down pitching moment which could not be held by the pilot.
This terminated the delayed plan to build a production series of 50 slightly improved aircraft,
but testing of the prototypes continued. Until the end of the War these tested various later Dushkin engines, some with large thrust chambers for take-off and combat and small chambers to prolong the very short cruise endurance (which was the factor resulting in progressive waning of interest).
Other testing attempted to perfect a sealed pressurized cockpit. To extend duration significantly BI No 6 was fitted with a Merkulov DM-4 ramjet on each wingtip. These were fired during test in the CAHI T-101 wind tunnel, but not in flight.
By 1944 the urgency had departed from the programme, and the remaining BI Nol (some were scrapped following acid corrosion) were used as basic research aircraft. BI No7 was modified with revised wing-root fairings and stronger engine cowl panels, but at high speed tailplane flutter was experienced. BI No 5s (on skis) and BI No 6 (on wheels) were
modified and subjected to investigative gliding tests, initially towed by a B-25J.
Major Walter Schmidt
07-13-2008, 02:45 PM
Looks like somthing from Luft46...
I guess people focus too much on the Luftwaffe. (myself included)
Another thing, how come people say that the first and the only rocket intercepter to be built in wwii was the famous Komet?
Chevan
07-14-2008, 12:59 PM
Looks like somthing from Luft46...
I guess people focus too much on the Luftwaffe. (myself included)
Another thing, how come people say that the first and the only rocket intercepter to be built in wwii was the famous Komet?
The B-1 wasn't fully succesfull.It never was in serial production.
The tragedy during testing ( the highly-experienced Capt G Ya Bakhshivandzhi has perished ) and many lack of rocket engine ( short working time ,great danger for pilot durign speed landing and other pure technical troubles make it DAMN hard in service in the regular aviation.
Beside in the 1942-43 the science know too less about Subsonic/supersonic regimes of fly. Many pilots died during testing the subsonic aircraft.
As i know in the 1944 the program of Soviet Rocket interceptor B-1 has been finally frozen- it was clear that Rocket engine can't be effectively used in field-based aircraft.
The needs to carry on the board the VERY chemicaly DANGER oxidizing agent ( usialy the nitric acid) make the pilot work very danger.
In the 1944 it was already clear - the future of aviation belong to the Jet engines.Germans already started the mass production of Me-262 that was almost as speedy as the rocket interceptors , but lose most of rocket engines technical lacks.
Panzerknacker
07-15-2008, 09:32 AM
Another thing, how come people say that the first and the only rocket intercepter to be built in wwii was the famous Komet?
The komet was tested first as a glider, the BI received his rocket engined some months earlier than the german aircraft, aniway the Komet did enter service and the BI did not.
There is plenty of russian experimental and interesting design, ill post more soon.
Panzerknacker
07-17-2008, 09:04 PM
Grushin shturmovik
Purpose:
To devise an improved configuration for a tactical attack aircraft.
Design Bureau:
Moscow Aviation Institute, designer Pyotr Grushin.
Born in 1906, Grushin worked on various aircraft at MAI, as well an remarkable steam engine tested in a U-2 (Po-2).
In 1935 he began scheming a tandem-wing aircraft, thinking this could form the basis of an attack aircraft with a rear gun turret. The single example of the Sh-Tandem (Shturmovik-Tandem) was constructed in the Institute's production training school. It was exhaustively tested by Stefanovskii from 5th December 1937.
Once the dangerously inadequate directional (yaw) stability had been corrected, by adding fins and rudders above the tailplcine, the aircraft flew well.
Eventually it was judged to be unreliable and not really needed, but a derivate with armour, an M-82 engine and a cannon in the turret might have proved very useful.
The key feature of this aircraft was that it had a main wing and a rear wing with 45 per cent as much area, both having R-l 1 aerofoil profile. After experimenting with elevens the control surfaces on the rear wing were linked to move in unison as elevators, all lateral control being by the ailerons on the main wing.
Fins and rudders were fitted at 50 per cent of the semi-span on the rear wing, initially on the underside only in order to leave a clear 250° arc of fire for the electrically driven turret with a 7,62mm ShKAS. Four more ShKAS were to be fixed firing ahead from the main wing, but these cannot cant be seen in photographs. An internal bay housed a 300 kg bombload.
http://img205.imageshack.us/img205/985/93753947bd0.jpg
The engine was an M-87 (derived from the Gnome-Rhone K14) radial rated at 930hp.
The tailwheel was fixed but the neat main units had single legs and retracted into the wing. The airframe was constructed mainly of wood, with skins of delta bakelite-impregnated veneer. Other features included a three-blade variable-pitch propeller.
http://img410.imageshack.us/img410/118/72042831xk5.jpg
Despite its extraordinary appearance this aircraft was clearly basically successful.
Whether a developed version could have done better than the Ilyushin Shturmovik is debatable.
Wingspan of the Grushin Sh was 11 meters, lenght 8,5 and it have a maximum speed of 410 km/h
Panzerknacker
07-18-2008, 09:52 AM
More photos of the Grushin Sh also know as "Grushin Tandem":
http://www.airwar.ru/image/idop/aww2/shtandem/shtandem-1.jpg
http://www.airwar.ru/image/idop/aww2/shtandem/shtandem-2.jpg
http://www.airwar.ru/image/idop/aww2/shtandem/shtandem-4.jpg
Major Walter Schmidt
07-18-2008, 11:35 AM
the thing looks like a biplane from the front:D
Hey, Hans look at the red piece of schise over htere! its a bloddy biplane!
Oh, wait...WTH? that bloddy turret... Arrrgh!
:D:D:D
Human_SE
07-18-2008, 12:45 PM
So many the bloody brilliant ideas!!! Sadly, our grandpa's meet The War with I-16 called "burro".
Chevan
07-18-2008, 01:03 PM
Despite its extraordinary appearance thisaircraft was clearly basically successful
Whether a developed version could have done better than the Ilyushin Shturmovik is debatable
This project NEVER was succesfull..
Even the in first look anybody should note - this aircraft will suffer from lack of lengthwise stability in fly.Becouse of TOO rear mass-centre.
Besides, the rear cocpite creats the additional resistence , so aircraft losed about 34 km/h in speed.
http://www.airwar.ru/enc/aww2/shtandem.html
Exactly that was the reason , why this aircraft hasn't been puted at the mass production.
Unique for its time- it was rather sensless and danger in service.
It wasn't match for Il-2.
Chevan
07-18-2008, 01:06 PM
So many the bloody brilliant ideas!!! Sadly, our grandpa's meet The War with I-16 called "burro".
Thank to god , it was just I-16, slow but very maneuvrable fighter.If the Grushin Tandem was was in service- many of our grandpa's simly crushed during landing or taking off.
Panzerknacker
07-18-2008, 06:45 PM
I suppose that Yefim Gordom in Soviet X-planes ( my main source for this topic) means that the configuration was succesful not the aircraft itself.
So many the bloody brilliant ideas!!! Sadly, our grandpa's meet The War with I-16 called "burro".
Burro wich means "donkey" in spanish.:D
Unique for its time- it was rather sensless and danger in service.
It wasn't match for Il-2.
The first single seat Il-2s without rear defense fell like flies to Bf-109s despite its heavy armor, the Grushin Sh in other hand had a gunner from the start, in that aspect it could ; I say again could be more "survivor" in the battlefield.
Tomashevich Pegas:
This was a real oddity. Tomashevich was part of the team wich designed the I-180 series, given the failure of that fighter Tomashevich and other were imprisoned and evacuated to Siberia in 1942.
http://i36.tinypic.com/54vfc7.jpg
In there Tomashevich ( teorically under detention) designed a attack aircraft wich would to be construted in a very short time and with simple materials by non-skilled labour hands.
Its target was to replace the Polikarpov U-2 in night bombing and harrasing duties, also it could carry a heavy punch in the way of large caliber cannons for the anti armor role.
http://i38.tinypic.com/f0bwjo.jpg
His main drawback was that it is really underpowered ( 2 x 150 hp five cilinder radials) and that gave low velocity, to counter this the pilot was completely protected from machinegun fire in an armored "bathhub".
Low quality construction plywood, roof cover tan, pine wood, soft steel (joints and armour), angular shape made '111' very easy to built even for least skilled workers. Duralumin was used only on engines cowling. Pilot cockpit was protected against 20 mm shells, windshield - against 7.62mm ammo. Main external fuel tanks were dropable, with internal armored tanks providing fuel for 30min flight. Pilot cockpit construction provided very good down-forward sight, special in the No04 configuration.
http://i34.tinypic.com/260egyu.gif
Panzerknacker
07-27-2008, 11:08 PM
Prototipes profile, gun configuration, bombload and pilot armor in the Tomashevic pegas.
Sergej
09-20-2008, 10:39 AM
ITP
Istribitel Tizholi Pushechni
http://img227.imageshack.us/img227/662/politpste4.gif
In winter 1940 Polikarpov began to work on a heavy armed fighter.
The designation ITP means heavy cannon fighter.
The plan was to create an aircraft for bomber escort and ground
attack. The armament should consist of a 37mm Sh-37
with 50 rounds and two synchronized 20mm Shwak 200 rounds each.
The ITP M-1
In October 1941 the first prototype, the M-1, was ready.
Powered by a M-105P with 1400 hp. The evacuation of the OKB
delayed the maiden flight until the 23 February 1942.
The test flights couldn't been made til end, because of the
unreliability of the engine.
In late 1942 the machine was brought back to Moscow.
The engine was replaced by a M-107PA with 1650hp and the
Sh-37 by a third Shwak. After the static tests, ordered by
the NKAP (National Commisariat of aviation industery),
the M-1 was unable to fly.
http://img227.imageshack.us/img227/1701/itp3gk4.jpg
http://img233.imageshack.us/img233/1769/itp2qs3.jpg
The ITP M-2
The second prototype, the M-2, was build in Novosibirsk.
It was powered by a AM-37 engine and armed with 3 Shwak.
In December 1942 the M2 was also brought to Moscow, where
the engine was replaced for a AM-39 with 1800hp.
http://img87.imageshack.us/img87/3146/itp7om3.jpg
http://img233.imageshack.us/img233/2726/itp1gf1.jpg
The maiden flight of the M-2 on the 23 November 1943
was very promising, the high speed was by 650km/h at 2500m.
But the project was stopped, because the plants started the
production of fighters with simular preformance.
The first attached photo shows the engine of the M-1
and the second shows the M-1 during the testflights
Panzerknacker
09-21-2008, 10:55 AM
This was fast, thanks for the information.
Sergej
10-02-2008, 01:22 PM
In the 1930's the VVS thought about a massproduced, multifunctional aircraft.
In 1936 the project "Ivanov" was started. The main task was to create an aircraft for
the role as ground attack aircraft, reconnaissance aircraft, light bomber and
bomber escort. The main attribute of the Ivanov should be reliability and
it should be easy to maintenance.
http://img230.imageshack.us/img230/4807/ivanoveb9.th.jpg (http://img230.imageshack.us/my.php?image=ivanoveb9.jpg)http://img230.imageshack.us/images/thpix.gif (http://g.imageshack.us/thpix.php)
I'll write a seperate post to each aircraft later.
Panzerknacker
10-05-2008, 08:49 PM
To many task for a single aircraft usually leds to failure like the Me-210, nice squematics.
Panzerknacker
10-06-2008, 08:39 AM
The Grigorovich I-z.
Information about the little fighter wich is mostly related with the APK-4 gun, extracted from "Soviet X Planes" and , by the way APK was for Avtomateshko Pushka Kurchevski, meaning Kurchevski automatic cannon.
----
By the end of the 1920s design bureaux were receiving contracts for experimental fighters designed to be armed with such weapons. In late 1929 Grigorovich was sent to Central Construction Bureau 7, which was really Hangar 7 at Factory 39, an OGPU secure prison for designers. Here he led the design of the Z, a secret monoplane to be armed with two 76.2mm (Sin) APK-4 guns. To speed construction the powerplant group and forward fuselage of the first prototype were the same as those of the Polikarpov I-5, which was also built in Hangar 7.
http://i38.tinypic.com/nb23o5.jpg
The complete aircraft, called I-Z (Fighter Z) was flown by Benedikt
Bukhgol'ts in (it is believed) early May 1931. It was inspected by Stalin, Voroshilov, Molotov and others on 6th July 1931. Subsequently a small series of 21 production I-Z fighters were produced at GAZ No 39. These were still regarded as experimental. In February/March 1933 aircraft No 39009 was placed on a high platform and used for firing trials, and in September 1933 No 39010 underwent NIl-WS testing. Two of these aircraft were later used in Zveno trials, as described under Vakhmistrov. In 1934-35 Factory No 135 at
Kharkov built a further 72, with modifications, designated IP-1. These saw only limited use, partly because of difficult spin recovery.
At this time monoplanes were still structurally difficult, and the wing, though of torch-welded stainless (Enerzh-6) lattice construction, still needed underwing bracing to the fixed landing gears. Apart from the semimonocoque rear fuselage, the covering of the whole airframe was fabric. The prototype hada Bristol Jupiter, in a helmeted cowling, while the first production batch had the same 480hp engine built under licence as the M-22
and cowled in a Townend ring. The second batch, from Kharkov, had the 700hp M-25 (Wright Cyclone). The main landing gears variously had spatted wheels, plain wheels or skis.
http://i33.tinypic.com/r9loo9.jpg
ww11freak34
10-06-2008, 06:55 PM
interesting pictures
Panzerknacker
10-09-2008, 07:54 PM
Tupolev ANT-23.
other project using the 76mm guns.
Of unconventional design, it employed a tandem fore-and-aft engine arrangement and twin tailbooms embodying recoilless 76mm Kurchevski APK-4 weapons as integral, but non-load-carrying, structural components, the gun gases being discharged from their tails. First flown in late December 1931. Flight testing continued and it was found the aircraft was overweight and suffered substantially higher drag than had been calculated. On a May 19, 1932 gun test-flight, the port gun exploded, damaging the tail boom which collapsed on touchdown. The plane was repaired and a system to eject the rear propeller to give pilot a safe way to get out was installed. However the project was discontinued in early 1933.
Tupolez ANT-23 designated I-12 "Baumanski Komsomoletz"
http://i36.tinypic.com/dbm5xh.jpg
http://i38.tinypic.com/s3hf1w.jpg
rapidd77
10-09-2008, 08:03 PM
thanks for the info
navyson
10-09-2008, 08:28 PM
These have all been really interesting to read about. Sergej's post about the ITP fighter/bomber escort got me to thinking about Soviet bombers. I don't know if this is the correct thread, but since it's about CCCP planes I'll give it a shot. Did the Soviets develop any heavy bombers to bomb Germany, or did they leave that to the US and Great Britain? I guess I mean strategic bombing.
Sergej
10-09-2008, 08:57 PM
I read something about that just some days before. The only Soviet strategic bomber
that could reach germany was the Pe-8 also known as TB-7. but only 93 of
them were build. And only a few raids on Germany were made.
You're right strategic bombing wasn't part of Soviet doctrine.
Panzerknacker
10-09-2008, 10:44 PM
Looking for heavy bomber I find this:
Kalinin K-7
From 1925 Kalinin made himself famous with a series of single-engined aircraft characterised by having a quasi-elliptical monoplane wing. In 1930 he sketched a gigantic transport aircraft, the K-7, with a tail carried on two booms and with four 1,000hp engines mounted on the wing, which was deep enough to house 60 passengers or 20 tonnes of cargo.
http://i37.tinypic.com/netg5.jpg
No engine of this power was readily available, so in 1931 he redesigned the aircraft to have seven engines of (he hoped) 830hp. GUAP (the Ministry of Aviation Industry) gave permission for the aircraft to be built, but with the role changed to a heavy bomber.
This meant a further total redesign, one change being to move the centreline engine to the trailing edge. This near-incredible machine was completed in summer 1933.Ground running of the engines began on 29th June, and it was soon obvious from serious visible oscillation of the tail that the booms were resonating with particular engine speeds.
The only evident solution was to reinforce the booms by adding steel angle girders, and brace the tail with struts.
Flight testing by a crew led by pilot M A Snegiryov began on l l th August 1933, causing intense public interest over Kharkov. On Flight 9, on 21st November, during speed runs at low altitude, resonance suddenly struck and the right tail boom fractured. The aircraft dived into the ground and burned, killing the pilot, 13 crew and a passenger; five crew survived. Kalinin was sent to a new factory at Voronezh.
http://i38.tinypic.com/258c9av.jpg
Here a plan was organised by P I Baranov to build two improved K-7s with stressed-skin booms of rectangular section, but this scheme was abandoned in 1935, the K-7 no longer being thought a modern design.
The basis of this huge bomber was theenormous wing, of typical Kalinin plan form. It had (TsAGI) R-II profile, with a thickness/ chord ratio of 19 per cent, rising to 22 per cent on the centreline, where root chord was 10.6m (34ft 9%in) and depth no less than2.33m (7ft 7%in).
http://i33.tinypic.com/20l1qhz.jpg
The two main and two subsidiary spars were welded from KhMA Chromansil high-tensile steel, similar lattice girder construction being used for the ribs. The wing was constructed as a rectangular centre section, with Dl skin, and elliptical outer sections covered mainly in fabric.
A small nacelle of Dl stressed-skin construction projected from [SIZE=2][SIZE=2]the leading edge. On the leading edge were six 750hp M-34F water-cooled V-12 engines, each with a radiator underneath, and driving a two-blade fixed-pitch propeller; a seventh engine was on the trailing edge.
Walkways along the wing led to each engine, and on the ground mechanics could open sections of leading edge to work on the engines without needing ladders. Metal tanks in the wings housed 9,130 litres (2,008 Imperial gallons, 2,412 US gallons) of fuel. Just outboard of the innermost engines were the booms holding the tail, 11 .0 m (36ft P/in) apart, each having a triangular cross-section with a flat top.
All flight controls were driven by large servo surfaces carried downstream on twin arms. Under the wing, in line with the booms, were extraordinary landing gears.
Maximum bomb load was no less than 19 tonnes .
Defensive armament comprised a 20mm cannon in a cockpit in the nose, two more in the ends of the tail booms and twin DA machine guns aimed by gunners in the front and rear of each gondola.
Total crew numbered 11, all linked by an intercom system. Though a fantastic and deeply impressive aircraft, the K-7 was flawed by its designer's inability to solve the lethal problem of harmonic vibration. Even without this, it would probably have been a vulnerable aircraft in any war in which it might have taken part.
Wingspan was 54 meters and max speed about 250 km/h.
http://www.pilotfriend.com/photo_albums/potty/images/16.jpg
More information:
http://www.aviastar.org/air/russia/kalinin_k-7.php
Panzerknacker
10-11-2008, 10:25 PM
The Ultimate Shturmovik: Sukhoi's Long-Ranging Su-8
Shortly after the start of the new year 1942, with the German invasion just 6 months old, Kremlin planners were already preparing for the moment when the Red Army would go over to the offensive and pursue the enemy across the vast spaces of western Russia. For this, they reasoned, the excellent Il-2 and Su-6 assault aircraft would need the assistance of a larger, longer-ranging aircraft, preferably with twin engines. The large aircraft would strike at columns of retreating troops and vehicles far ahead of the front lines, while the smaller Shturmovik airplanes concentrated on close support along the forward edge of battle. The enemy would thus have no respite, even in flight, and every attempt at tactical disengagement or regrouping would be likely to turn into a route. Kremlin planners called this airplane the DDBsh (the Russian abbreviation for "twin-engined, long-range armored attacker") and ordered two prototypes from Pavel Sukhoi's design bureau.
Under the desperate conditions prevailing in contemporary Soviet Russia, nothing much could be done about Project B, as the proposed aircraft was also known. But, as the war began to turn against the Germans and their allies, the Kremlin committee's far-sightedness became increasingly evident. By the winter of 1943-1944, when the first prototypes appeared, Germany's retreat to the west was already at times so precipitous that the Il-2s could not reach them from their most advanced landing grounds. Soon, advanced Soviet forces would be outrunning their air support as well.
Sukhoi's Su-8 emerged as the most powerful, most heavily armed, and best protected attack aircraft of the war. The designers set out to build the smallest airframe that could carry the requisite fuel and two of the most powerful engines available, Shvetsov ASh-71F 18-cylinder air-cooled radials each offering 2100 hp.
The narrow forward fuselage housed the pilot, a large fuel tank, and the radio operator/air gunner in a fully structural armored shell up to 15-mm thick. Extensive bullet-proof glazing in the canopy and lower nose gave the pilot a good view for this type of aircraft. Over 1600 kg of armor was used in all. Twin fins and rudders provided redundancy in the event of damage and gave the air gunner a better field of fire above and to the rear. Defensive armament consisted of a 12.7-mm Beresin machine gun flexibly mounted in the rear cockpit (or in a small power-driven turret, according to some sources) and a 7.62-mm ShKAS machine gun firing from a ventral position. The aircraft spanned 67 ft 1 in, was 44-ft 7-in long, and had a wing area of 646 sq-ft. Empty they weighed about 20,000 lbs, loaded about 27-29,000 lbs.
The offensive armament was, of course, the aircraft's real reason for being, and here the design team excelled themselves. The main armament consisted of a battery of heavy cannon sized to defeat even the heavy Tiger and Panther tanks. The guns were housed in a broad, shallow pod under the center fuselage. The first prototype had four 37-mm 11P-37 (later NS-37) automatic cannon, each loaded with 50-round clips by the air gunner.
Each gun could fire 735-gram shells at about 250 shots/min with a muzzle velocity of 900 meters/sec. They would penetrate 40-mm armor at any angle up to 45 degrees. In the second prototype, these weapons were supplanted by a quartet of 45-mm OKB-16-45 (later NS-45) automatic antitank guns, essentially the same weapon with a larger bore and shorter barrel.
These formidable weapons fired 1065-gram shells at the same rate with a muzzle velocity of 850 meters/sec, and could guarantee penetration of 58-mm armor. These, too, were clip-fed in the prototype. But the OKB-16 design team already had a fully automatic feed system in test. On their own, these guns fired approximately 1 ton/min, the heaviest weight of fire achieved by any wartime aircraft. For sighting and for attacks on soft targets, eight 7.62-mm ShKAS machine guns were mounted in the wings immediately outboard of the propellers, each gun being capable of rates of fire between 1800 and 2700 rounds/min. In addition, four 150-kg FAB150 general-purpose bombs could be carried in bays between the engines and the wing guns.
Many, perhaps most, heavily armored attack aircraft have emerged overweight, underpowered, and ill-handling. Even the successful ones were often tolerated for their utilitarian virtues rather than loved for their flying qualities.
But the Su-8 was reportedly an excellent airplane, with first-rate handling at all design weights. Maximum speed was 311 mph at sea level, 342 mph at 15,000 ft. It could takeoff in 1300 ft and land in 1528 ft at a modest 87 mph. It could climb to 10,000 ft in 7.3 min and to 16,000 ft in 9 min. Service ceiling was 28,000 ft. Range with maximum weapons load was 373 miles, 932 miles without the bombs.
http://www.sukhoi.org/img/content/history/image007.jpg
By the time the Su-8 appeared, however, its time was already past, in the eyes of officialdom at least. Russia was clearly winning the war, and anything that might interfere with the production of the existing, war-winning aircraft types was frowned upon.
http://www.sukhoi.org/eng/img/gallery/museum/su8/su8-2.jpg
No doubt this was the right decision, given the outcome. But there can also be little doubt that many a Soviet soldier would have been glad of the assistance of this last and greatest of the Shturmoviks, especially during the last, frantic dash for Berlin, when Soviet spearheads often faced elephantine heavy tanks 150 miles or more from the nearest air support.
http://www.sukhoi.org/eng/gallery/?id=552&gallery_id=&cur_gallery_id=
navyson
10-12-2008, 08:07 AM
Thanks Panzerknacker! That was some good reading! Sorry if we got off trail for a bit!
Panzerknacker
10-14-2008, 11:31 AM
No problem, is topic related, not off-topic.
Panzerknacker
10-21-2008, 06:54 PM
Yakovlev Yak-3K
In mid 1944 the VV-s made an attemp to heavily arm its more famed fighter, the Yakovlev Yak-3 with its "krupnokalibr" variant.
An OKB-16 designed NS-45 45 mm automatic cannon was mounted between the clinders banks. It was spected that the muzzle brake fitted would reduce 70 % of the felt recoil: however in flying test the aircraft showed several failures, mostly caused by the excessive vibration and stress imposed by the big gun when firing. The recoil was so severe that affected the airframe durability.
Clearly was an "overgunned" aircraft, only two prototypes were manufactured, no further development for placing such big gun in such light fighters continued.
http://i33.tinypic.com/sxlz0l.jpg
Innocenti
11-26-2008, 05:03 PM
Regarding the ITP, I know that the Soviets had a seemingly insurmountable problem with the development of more powerful inline engines in general and their cooling in particular. Most of their fighter aircraft development was handicapped by this problem. The M-107 was a case in point. Its bugs were only squared away by 1944 though it had been in development since 41' or so. Apart from the need to use non-strategic materials, this issue with their water-cooled engine development hindered due progress on the Yak and LaGG series fighters especially. This was offset brilliantly however by the excellent aerodynamic designs which combined small, light airframes with superb aerodynamic features... This legacy continues to this day in some sense...
Innocenti
11-26-2008, 05:16 PM
About the I-16 I have read from recent reports that it was in fact quite fast, and perhaps more importantly had good acceleration. The nose for example used some ingenious aerodynamic features that negated the rather flat profile! This was accomplished by a clever use of openings on the front as well as the exhausts nacelles. These features were redescovered by a company in Australia that built a few exact replicas. Even more interestingly, the lovely I-153 Biplane (a personal favourite of mine) was nearly as fast as the I-16! Again, a very interesting aerodynamic design allowed for a surprisingly efficient drag coefficient... They were slower than the Bf109F of course, but were better in every respect than the Hurricane for example...
Innocenti
11-26-2008, 05:22 PM
One more thing I've never been able to understand and perhaps one of you illustrious cognoscenti might be able to enlighten me. Why did Polikarpov not provide the I-16 with a modern, 3 blade constant speed propeller? It seems that especially the the later, more powerful M-62 engine models would have benefited accordingly... :confused:
Panzerknacker
11-26-2008, 05:33 PM
One more thing I've never been able to understand and perhaps one of you illustrious cognoscenti might be able to enlighten me. Why did Polikarpov not provide the I-16 with a modern, 3 blade constant speed propeller? It seems that especially the the later, more powerful M-62 engine models would have benefited accordingly...
I am not sure, probably those type were reserved for teh new generation of Fighter like the Lagg-3 , Mig-3, Yak.1 etc.
About the I-16 I have read from recent reports that it was in fact quite fast, and perhaps more importantly had good acceleration. The nose for example used some ingenious aerodynamic features that negated the rather flat profile! This was accomplished by a clever use of openings on the front as well as the exhausts nacelles. These features were redescovered by a company in Australia that built a few exact replicas. Even more interestingly, the lovely I-153 Biplane (a personal favourite of mine) was nearly as fast as the I-16!
Interestingly some people tried to combine the benefits of a monoplane with the maneouvrability of the biplane, check this:
http://img260.imageshack.us/img260/649/75502196ue6.jpg
http://img260.imageshack.us/img260/1287/72055695pu1.jpg
Innocenti
11-27-2008, 03:50 AM
Yes the IS-1. The main problem it had was that it was realized that any damage to the wings would in all likelihood hamper the mechanism from returning to the biplane configuration, and since the landing gear was lowered in this same process, the plane would have to perform an emergency belly landing! Not very practical I'm afraid! That and the fact that it was very expensive limited its appeal. In fact its pretty clear that the I-153, whith its modern retractable landing gear (much more modern that the I-16 with its manual mechanism) achieved the same goals as the IS-1. Most people don't realize that the I-153 came years after the I-16!!
http://landman.vif2.ru/images/I-153-2.jpg
Note how the IS-1 had the M-63 motor and a 3 blade prop! :shock: I don't see why the VVS would exclude the adaptation of a newer prop from new build airplanes? Remember that the I-16 type 29 and the I-153 were built up to 1940! Very odd! I know that a 3 blade prop, with variable pitch (the 2 blade props used also had variable pitch of course) would have provided a more efficient use of the 900+ horsepower, particularly in rate of climb which is essential in vertical combat. Why develop the I-16 with a bigger, more powerful engine, and not also give it a 'proper' (and widely available by this time) propeller? Odd.... (I suppose it was a political decision, like Pekerman not bringing Zanetti to Germany..no te pa?) ;)
Innocenti
11-27-2008, 04:00 AM
The New gen fighters used inline engines and totally different props, mi coronel ;)
Panzerknacker
11-27-2008, 04:59 PM
I know I know, but the russian razionalization was very much like that, remeber the Il-2 began as all metal monoplane and ended as mixed constrution for metal saving reason.
I think the same coul be said about the case of the propellers, beside the Il-16 was already a obsolecense design, it probably didnt worth to invest more money on it.
Panzerknacker
11-27-2008, 05:05 PM
Polikarpov Malyutka
Purpose: Short-range interceptor to defend high-value targets.
Design Bureau: OKB of Nikolai N
Polikarpov, evacuated to Novosibirsk. This was the last aircraft of Polikarpov design, and he oversaw its progress himself. It was an OKB project, begun in June 1943.
http://i36.tinypic.com/2v8pdhv.jpg
Constructionof a single prototype began in early 1944. Progress was rapid until 30th July 1944, when Polikarpov suffered a massive heart attack and died at his desk.
Even though the prototype was almost complete, work stopped and was never resumed. The key to the Malyutka ('Little one') was the existence of the NIl-1 rocket engine. Developed by the team led by V P Glushko, this controllable engine had a single thrust chamber fed with RFNA (concentrated nitric acid) and kerosene. Maximum thrust at sea level was 1,200kg, but in this aircraft the brochure figure was 1,000kg (2,205 Ib).
Bearing no directrelevance to any previous Polikarpov fighter, the airframe had a curvaceous Shpon (plastic-bonded birch laminates) fuselage sitting on a wing of D-l stressed-skin construction.
The tail was also D-l alloy. The pressurized cockpit was in the nose, behind which was the radio, oxygen bottles and gun magazines, followed by a relatively enormous tank of acid and a smaller one of kerosene. The tricycle landing gears and split flaps were operated pneumatically, and the armament comprised two powerful VYa-23 cannon. Had it run a year or two earlier this might have been a useful aircraft, though it offered little that was not already being done by the BI and Type 302.
At the same time, the death of the General Constructor should not have brought everything to a halt.
http://i38.tinypic.com/2hrk2e0.jpg
Innocenti
11-28-2008, 02:04 AM
Ok it was obsolescent, but they were still developing new variants in 1940! (the type 29) Why develop new variants and not add a new prop? We have a 930hp engine in an aerodynamic and small, relatively light plane! I'd just wish my friend Yefim would have mentioned something.... The same argument could be made for the Hawker Hurricane; it too was obsolescent by 1940 but it was developed further. Earlier variants of the I-16 could have been easily made more competitive with new engines and props. The Soviets always did this. There are many instances where the weapons system that was intended to be replaced continued in service and in production side by side with the new weapon. Many times weapons were upgraded when they came in for repair or refurbishment (the T-34/76 remanufatured as a T-34/85 comes to mind) As an interceptor (not a fighter) and ground attack the I-16 could and in fact was used well into 1943. Stukas are slow after all...
I'd even add that the I-16 itself was not so woefully obsolescent as is commonly thought. The VVS's tactics, its relative inexperience, and its lack of radios were bigger factors...
My point is, here you have a plane which numbers in the thousands, the backbone of your air defense, make the most of it! And I suppose in an inexplicably incomplete way they did! But with obsolescent propellers.... :rolleyes:
OK NO MORE, I promise!!! haha
Chevan
11-28-2008, 05:22 AM
Ok it was obsolescent, but they were still developing new variants in 1940! (the type 29) Why develop new variants and not add a new prop? We have a 930hp engine in an aerodynamic and small, relatively light plane! I'd just wish my friend Yefim would have mentioned something.... The same argument could be made for the Hawker Hurricane; it too was obsolescent by 1940 but it was developed further. Earlier variants of the I-16 could have been easily made more competitive with new engines and props. The Soviets always did this. There are many instances where the weapons system that was intended to be replaced continued in service and in production side by side with the new weapon. Many times weapons were upgraded when they came in for repair or refurbishment (the T-34/76 remanufatured as a T-34/85 comes to mind) As an interceptor (not a fighter) and ground attack the I-16 could and in fact was used well into 1943. Stukas are slow after all...
I'd even add that the I-16 itself was not so woefully obsolescent as is commonly thought. The VVS's tactics, its relative inexperience, and its lack of radios were bigger factors...
The I-16 wasn't obsolet at all for it's time- end of 1930yy.
It had an amazing maneuvreability ( one of the best in its class).
The soviet I-15s were better fighters then Japanes Ki-10 and I-16 successfully shoted down the Ki-27 Nate in 1937-38 in Halkin-gol, during the SOviet-Japane hostilities.
During the Spanish Civil war the both I-15 and I-16 might fight effectively with Italian Fiat CR-32 and GErman He-51A1.
To the contrast of traditional view - the most of Soviet I-16 were losed on the ground during the German bombings in june of 1941. In air it wasn't the "easy booty" for Bf-109F2 in air.
Some of early soviet aces , piloted on I-16 claims the dozen of victories over Messers.
Panzerknacker
11-28-2008, 08:44 AM
The I-16 wasn't obsolet at all for it's time- end of 1930yy.
But it was when entered in action against the germans in june 1941.
The I-16 was to be replaced by the I-180, but as you know the I-180 was a failure.
http://www.aviastar.org/pictures/russia/pol_i-185.jpg
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