UA-9726592-1
Showing posts with label MAKS air show. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MAKS air show. Show all posts

Saturday, August 22, 2009

Mig: the high-flying family

22 August, 2009, 16:38




Since the first MIG took to the skies about 70 years ago, these Russian planes have become one of the world's most heralded fighters. Thousands of them were used by the Soviet Union in the Second World War.

The MiG strikes a mean and moody figure when stationary on the ground but once airborne it cuts the figure of a bird of prey; graceful yet deadly.
During a production run of more than seven decades, roughly 60,000 of these flying beasts have been produced in countless varying forms.

Piloting these machines not only requires exceptional flying skill but also intensive physical training. Only the best are allowed to sit in the cockpit. Test-pilot Andrey Shishov is one of the chosen few.

“Up in the sky a pilot cannot do without a special helmet and this antigravity equipment. At a height of several thousand kilometers, a nine-unit strong G-force means you feel like you weigh nine times more than you really do, so not 75 kilos for example but 600-700,” he explains.

“Here compressed air comes into the suit and covers the legs and stomach. The point is to stop blood flowing to the extremities, otherwise the legs will go numb,” Andrey demonstrates the flight suit. 

Andrey’s favorite is the Mig-29. Designed in the USSR to counter America's latest offerings, it still remains the company’s most popular plane around globe, where it's in use in 25 countries.

The Mig-29 is able to destroy air targets up to 200 kilometers away at all altitudes and in any weather. It can fire at four air or ground targets simultaneously while tracking ten others at the same time.

The latest addition to the family is the SMT model.

“It is a new development, due to new modern requirements for war,” says test-pilot Stanislav Gorbunov. “There are new radars, modern avionics, navigation systems, which allow our weapons to be more exact, while also providing safety in difficult weather conditions and during the night.”

But even this jet seems technologically outdated when compared to the corporation’s latest offering.

The Mig-35 is faster, more effective, safer – and many say, greater than anything the company's put into the skies before. The main feature is it’s groundbreaking radar design based on space technology. It allows the aircraft to perform all-weather precision ground strikes and aerial reconnaissance and conduct independent multi-role missions.

Pavel Vlasov is the senior test-pilot for the Mig corporation. As a hero of Russia – awarded for courage and heroism – he has spent thousands of hours roaring through the skies. Pavel says he took to the heavens before he even started driving a car.

“Everything about this plane is top notch, the latest technologies have been applied, things unheard of five or seven years ago. It would have been impossible even to imagine the equipment and weapons that this aircraft has today. To fit so many modern war gadgets in such a small plane, is unbelievable,” he explains with enthusiasm.

“And it is possible for one person to control all this effectively, and more importantly, to stay free for making decisions.” But this is not a revolution, just an evolution,” Pavel concludes.

And as the evolution continues this latest Mig fighter will certainly not be its last.

Get 30 days of free traffic analysis simply by going to Web-Stat: http://www.web-stat.com/?id=2955

Subscribe to the Rightardia feed: feeds.feedburner.com/blogspot/IGiu

Improve blog traffic with TrafficG http://trafficg.com/splash/splash01.php?uid=eelder1

Netcraft rank: 14155 http://toolbar.netcraft.com/stats/topsites?s=79282FB98226DEC71D1D0E5607A6#14155

Thursday, August 20, 2009

MAKS air show is one of the big three air shows in the world

19 August, 2009, 20:17

Rightardia note: Some of the flash videos in the links have yet to be updated.  If the videos don't show up by tomorrow, we will remove the video links.




(Moscow) All eyes are on the skies on day two of Russia's top aviation show. Aerobatics teams are giving some light relief for the aviation industry's big-hitters, who are clinching multi-million dollar deals at MAKS 2009.
Roaring jets and helicopters have been dominating the skies near Moscow on the second day of Russia's top aviation show. But as well as marveling at the machines, it was also a time for airlines to write some big checks for their fleets.

The United Arab Emirates has reportedly purchased around two dozen Russian helicopters. This follows yesterday’s announcement that Russia’s Defense Ministry has purchased various aircraft, including more than 40 Sukhoi-35 fighter jets, which are among the most sophisticated and modern fighter jets and are being produced in Russia.

As deals were made on the ground, action was filling the skies over the Zhukovsky airfield. Various performances of all kinds of aircraft have been staged so far.

The spectacular show done by one of the oldest aerobatic teams, “Patrouille de France,” concluded the day and was dedicated to a Russian pilot killed in training ahead of the MAKS air show 2009.


Pride of Russia’s aviation


The Yak-130 is not a mere upgrade of previous Soviet-era models, it’s completely different. This is the only Russian aircraft to be made from scratch since the collapse of the USSR nearly twenty years ago.

 The Yak-130's design allows it to fly at a 45 degree angle of attack with a maximum speed of more than a thousand kilometers per hour.

Vasily Sevastyanov started his flying career over two decades ago. Since then he has taken the controls of just about every Russian-made plane. He says this new jet is a breakthrough.

As a student pilot, Vasily said he could only dream of a trainer like this.
“First of all, the pilot can easily control the situation as all flight information is presented on three multifunctional displays in each cabin and at the head-up display in the front cockpit. Second, it's a very smart plane insured against almost every human error. Whatever you do, the jet will never allow you to go too far and threaten your life or the plane's safety,” the pilot explains.

The Yak-130 can take care of the majority of the entire pilot-training program. That significantly reduces the time and cost of mastering flying skills. But trainees spend a lot of time in a simulator before they are allowed near a real one. That allows the pilots to train without risking their lives or jeopardizing the 15 million dollar aircraft.

The Yak-130 jet is the only training jet capable of simulating all the fourth and fifth generation fighters – as it's the first Russian jet with all-digital avionics. The pilot just selects a model he needs from the onboard system. The Yak-130 could easily be used as a combat jet with a maximum armament payload of three tons.
The jet employs a wide range of Russian and Western-made bombs and missiles to attack targets on the ground and low-speed targets in the air.

The President of the Irkut corporation, the Yak-130's manufacturer, says the mixture of a trainer and combat jet in one makes the plane highly marketable.
“The global market for this jet is 2,500 planes. The Russian market is estimated at 250-300 jets for our pilot schools. We have already 150 requests. 62 planes are assigned to the Russian Defense Ministry. We've already signed 16 contracts with Algeria,” Demchenko said.

The Yak-130 is currently undergoing state test flights. As soon as they are over in a few months, the brand new Russian jet will take to the skies on its first flight as the country's official Air Force combat trainer.



Sukhoi aims high

Meanwhile the Sukhoi company is using the air show to land more contracts for its Sukhoi 100 superjet. The head of the corporation, Mikhail Pogosyan, hopes clients will receive first delivery of the jets by the end of the year.
The company also has ambitious plans to control 20 per cent of the world market by 2015.

"The Sukhoi 100 is going to be a great success for Russian industry", says Chris Buckley, the Executive Vice President of Sales, Airbus Europe, CIS and Latin America.


“The Sukhoi 100 superjet is a little bit smaller than the Airbus range of products right now. So it’s going to be complementary rather than a competitor. But everything we’ve seen so far suggests the Superjet’s going to be a great aircraft,” Buckley said.

Deep modernization of Russian helicopters

 

Speaking to journalists, head of the “Russian Helicopters”, Andrey Shibitov, said the company is now starting a strong modernization program of the MI-8 series.
“In two years we’ll get a completely new machine,” said Shibitov.


Get 30 days of free traffic analysis simply by going to Web-Stat: http://www.web-stat.com/?id=2955

Subscribe to the Rightardia feed: feeds.feedburner.com/blogspot/IGiu

Improve blog traffic with TrafficG http://trafficg.com/splash/splash01.php?uid=eelder1

Netcraft rank: 14155 http://toolbar.netcraft.com/stats/topsites?s=79282FB98226DEC71D1D0E5607A6#14155