| Highlights
of the Russian Air Force Museum at Monino |
| In August of 2005
I made my way to Russia, hungry to see some Russian military aircraft flying
at
the
MAKS airshow. Also high on my list of planned activities
was a visit to the official Russian Air Force museum at the town of Monino,
about an hour's train ride north of Moscow. The museum used
to be operated by the air force but it's now independent, which means you
no longer need an invitation to visit. This is the view from
the main gate. |
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| At
the top of the list of things I wanted to see was this helicopter, the
largest which has ever flown. It has the NATO code name "Homer"
and is usually referred to as the Mi-12, however since it never entered
production its correct name is actually V-12. Two or three
prototypes were built and did quite a bit of flying, including a trip across
Europe to the Paris Air Show. Depending on which source you
believe, this was either in 1965, 1971, 1981 or 1985; as far as I can tell
1971 is the correct date. The V-12 used two of the power plants
and rotors from the already massive Mi-6 "Hook", which you can see later
on this page and also in
Vietnamese Air Force colours. The fuselage is 37 meters
long and 12.5 meters high (121 x 41 feet), the rotors are each 35 meters
(114 feet) in diameter and it can lift up to 25 tonnes (55,000 pounds)
of cargo, though in a special record-breaking effort in 1969 it lifted
40 tonnes (88,600 pounds) to a height of 2250 meters (7400 feet).
With a more normal load the maximum range was a very useful 1000 kilometers
(625 miles). |
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| This
is the inside of the main hangar, visible in the photograph taken from
the front entrance. On the far left hand side is an Ant-25
which flew from Moscow to California in the 1930s, and there are also some
original and replica early Russian aircraft, as well as a few space exhibits.
A new hangar is being built near this one, which bodes well for the future
of the museum. It would certainly be a good thing to get some
more of the museum's unique aircraft out of the nasty Russian weather. |
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| This
was one of the few other space exhibits at the museum, the MiG 105-11 single-person
lifting body craft, which actually has a turbojet engine to allow it to
divert or reattempt a landing after a failed approach. This
craft did several flights after being dropped from a modified Tu-95 "Bear".
As you can see, the grass in this display area could really use a cut,
though most of the aircraft looked to be in quite good condition. |
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| As
you might expect, the museum had examples of pretty much every single type
of Russian jet fighter, arranged by manufacturer with separate sections
for Sukhoi, Mikoyan-Gurevich (MiG) and Yakovlev. Quite a number
of the exhibits are the actual prototypes used to test the aircraft and
there are also a number of experimental aircraft which never went into
production, including this Sukhoi S-26 experimental ski-equipped jet fighter,
which apparently performed very well. |
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| There
weren't too many naval aircraft on display, apart from a two-engined Beriev
Be-12 "Mail" seaplane and this Yak-38 "Forger", which is a vertical takeoff
and landing fighter which went into production in 1975 and served aboard
Soviet Kiev-class aircraft carriers. Near the Yak-38 was another
Yakovlev designed VTOL naval fighter, the supersonic Yak-141 "Freestyle". |
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| I'm
not a great expert on Soviet aircraft, so it was a real treat to see some
of the less common types which I wasn't familiar with, like this Myasischev
M-50 "Bounder" supersonic intercontinental nuclear bomber which first flew
in 1959. This is one weird looking aircraft, the long tubular
fuselage with pointed nose mounted above a bicycle style undercarriage
with outrigger landing gear at the end of the wings. An engine
is mounted at each wingtip, leading one person to comment that it looked
like it had been designed by a ten year old boy! Very few of
these aircraft were built, because Khruschev decided that all efforts in
this area should be concentrated on ICBMs. This decision spelled
the end for both the Myasischev and the Lavochkin design bureaus. |
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| This
extraordinary aircraft is the Sukhoi T-4, a Russian attempt to emulate
the USAF XB-70 Valkyrie mach-3 bomber. The T-4 (sometimes incorrectly
referred to as the Su-100) is largely constructed from titanium and stainless
steel and featured the world's first "fly by wire" control system.
It started its flight test program in 1972, but made only 10 flights before
the program was scrapped. Like Concorde and the Tu-144, the
T-4 has a drooping nose to provide better forward vision when taking off
and landing however, unlike either of these aircraft, there are no forward
windows to look through when the nose is lifted. Instead the
pilots must use a periscope for forward vision, and a couple of small windows
(one of which is visible through one of the front windows in this photo)
to provide a view sideways and up. Interestingly, the bilingual
sign in front of the T-4 states its purpose as "destruction of attack aircraft
carriers and reconnaisance". |
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| In
the last photo you can see a part of the field set aside for the display
of Russian designed helicopters. There must have been a total
of 15 or 20 helicopters at the museum, just a couple of the interesting
Kamov models with contra-rotating rotors, and almost all of the others
being Mils, like the well-known Mi-24 "Hind-D" gunship at the front of
this photo, standing next to its less well-known Mi-24 "Hind-A" predecessor. |
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| This
Mi-10 "Harke" was a great sight, tucked away at the back of the display.
The Mi-10 was a flying crane dating back to 1960 which, like the V-12,
used the same powerplant and rotor as the Mi-6 "Hook". As you
can see, the Mi-10 also featured a platform which could be used to carry
a vehicle. Although all of the display areas were surrounded
by low chain-link fences, the custodians quickly gave me permission to
go past them in order to get better photographs. Although they
didn't speak English and I didn't speak Russian, I was able to make my
request known to them by sign language and acting out what I wanted to
do! |
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| Here
finally is the Mi-6 "Hook", the grey one a regular version with the wings
mounted just behind the rotor head, and a fire-fighting version without
the wings. There were three Mi-6s at the museum, another one
being in the main helicopter display area. For many years the
Mi-6 was the largest helicopter in the world, able to carry twice the load
of the largest helicopter ever produced in America. |
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| Behind
the grey Mi-6 in the previous photo is this Mi-26 "Halo", currently the
world's largest operational helicopter. It's essentially an
enlarged Mi-6 with an eight-bladed rotor, allowing it to carry 66% more
payload. It has been exported to several countries, including
India, Greece, Peru and Laos. |
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| Mil
and Kamov were the dominant Russian helicopter design bureaus, but early
on Yakovlev also tried their hand, producing this Yak-24 "Horse" which
was intended as a troop transport. To my surprise, parked behind
the Yak-24 was an American twin-rotor Vertol H-21 helicopter, complete
with American flag painted on the vertical tail surfaces! Strange
as it might seem, this was apparently sold to the Russians in the late
1950s. |
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| During
world war two, three American B-29 Superfortress bombers landed on separate
occasions in the Russian city of Vladivostok, unable to return to their
home base because of battle damage or mechanical problems.
The Russians, who weren't officially at war with Japan, interned the aircraft
and their crews, who were later allowed to "escape" back to their own forces.
The aircraft remained in Russia and Stalin ordered the Tupolev design bureau
to reverse engineer them, resulting in the Tupolev Tu-4 which you see here,
which was assigned the NATO code name "Bull". About 1200 Tu-4s
were built, some of which were supplied to China which used them until
the late 1960s. |
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| Although
they had no equivalent to the B-29, the Russians had always been capable
of developing large aircraft, and home-grown alternatives to the Tu-4 soon
came into existence, such as this Tu-95 "Bear". The Tu-95 is
one of the classic Soviet cold war aircraft and was frequently encountered
by western military aircrews as the Tu-95s shadowed NATO naval forces.
It has the world's most powerful turboprop engines driving contra-rotating
propellers mounted on a wing swept back by 35 degrees, making it almost
as fast as jets of the time, and has a range of 15,000 kilometers (9,400
miles). It first flew in 1952 and has been phenomenally successful,
remaining in production into the mid-1980s and serving in a wide variety
of roles. It's still in service and as recently as 1999 some
Tu-95s on simulated nuclear bombing missions against America were intercepted
by American fighter planes. |
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| The
Antonov design bureau specialized in large transport aircraft and to this
day they hold the records for the largest transport aircraft, the An-124
with four jet engines and the even more massive An-225 with six jet engines,
which has a maximum takeoff weight of over 575 tonnes (1,250,000 pounds).
The museum doesn't have an An-124 or An-225 but it does have this An-22
Antheus (NATO code name "Cock"), which is the largest propeller-driven
plane ever built. It has the same model of turbo-prop driven
contra-rotating propellers as the Tu-95 and is capable of carrying 80 tonnes
(80 tons) of cargo. Behind it you can see one of the most unusual
aircraft at Monino, the remains of an "Ekranoplan" or Beriev VVA-14 ground-effect
hydroplane, designed in 1972 as an anti-submarine craft. |
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| This
is a Tu-114 "Russiya", a civilian derivative of the Tu-95 "Bear", which
has the distinction of being the largest propeller-driven airliner to ever
go into service, seating up to 220 passengers. It also still
holds the record for the world's fastest turbo-prop aircraft, aided by
its swept wings. It's said that this is the very aircraft in
which Khruschev flew when he visited the United States. If
you fly into Russia through Domodedovo airport (DME) then you'll see one
displayed at the front of the airport, in better looking condition than
this one. |
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| No
doubt this Tu-144 airliner will be the highlight of Monino for many people,
even though it's difficult to get photographs because of the aircraft surrounding
it. This is the Russian version of the Anglo-French Concorde
airliner, whose plans the Russians had acquired from the French by a bit
of industrial espionage. The "Concordski", as it was dubbed,
flew two months before Concorde, and had a number of differences from the
Concorde, including a main wing more optimized for high-speed flight, and
a small auxiliary canard wing just behind the cockpit which was extended
at low speeds to improve takeoff and landing performance. The
Tu-144 was about 4 meters longer than Concorde and also had a maximum speed
of Mach 2.35 (2,500 km/h or 1,550 mph) compared to the Concorde's maximum
speed of Mach 2.2 (2,330 km/h or 1,450 mph). Some think that
the French got their revenge when a Tu-144 crashed at the 1973 Paris Air
Show, the theory being that the plane's pilot had to take a drastic evasive
maneuver to avoid hitting a French Mirage chase plane which had been launched
without telling the Russians. Another theory is that the Russians
tinkered with the controls before the flight to allow a faster and more
dramatic rate of climb, which lead to the aircraft stalling and crashing,
killing the entire crew of 6 as well as 8 people on the ground.
In the end the Tu-144 only flew 102 scheduled flights with Aeroflot, about
half of which carried only freight. In 1996 NASA started a
series of flights of a refurbished Tu-144 in order to research the possibilities
of a second-generation supersonic jet airliner, and completed the project
in 1999. |
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