Russia Aircraft and Aerospace Programs

Zafer

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We should get excited about our own positioning system and try to find a good name for it for a start. Our scientists are already at work to make the atomic clocks required for the system. I wonder if our recent foray of satellite launches that has started with the Türksat 5A to be followed by Türksat 5B in six months and Türksat 6A to follow in the next year will have anything to do with our positioning system to be. A minimum of 3 satellites can theoretically provide a positioning data that can work. What do you think?
 

Zafer

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The use of communication satellites for global positioning requires an extra radio navigation payload.(Page 154)
I have not heard of plans for this. Therefore, I think we can say that Turkey is only designing satellite communication purposes.

Like you have ears of a bat.

It is not that I've heard anything but these satellites are large satellites and adding another payload should not be too much of a problem. Of course we don't have a clue whether the required tech was already available or not but we know that our scientists have had some succes making atomic clocks and are trying to make them suitable for the task.
 

Test7

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Ground Tests of Superconducting Electric Aircraft Engine Begin in Russia

Ground test of Superconducting electric engine on Yak-40 aircraft. Image @tvzvezda


Ground tests of the world’s first electric hybrid aircraft engine based on a superconducting system has commenced in Chaplygin in Novosibirsk, Russia.
Following the successful ground tests, a flying laboratory based on the Yak-40 aircraft will be created, according to the General Director of the Research Center Zhukovsky, Andrey Dutov.
The General Director added that such aircraft should commence flying around 2030. The engine has no comparables in the world, and representatives of Airbus and Siemens approached the institute with a proposal for cooperation.

The creators of the electric motor hope that in two years there will be another laboratory that will be able to fly on electric motors without additional motors, Russian MoD’s TV channel, tvzvezda.ru reported on February 5.

Ground Tests of Superconducting Electric Aircraft Engine Begin in Russia

Yak-40 aircraft fitted with Superconducting electric engine. Image @tvzvezda


Several research efforts are progressing in different parts of the world for a superconductor based electric engine for aviation applications. However, this could well the first such effort that has reached the testing stage.

According to a research paper presented at the 2019 International Conference on Electrotechnical Complexes and Systems (ICOECS) held in Ufa, Russia, a 1.5 kW prototype of the all-superconducting electric motor for hybrid distributed propulsion system was developed by a team of researchers from the Moscow Aviation Institute.
The most promising concept for high temperature superconducting electric machines with high specific parameters technically feasible in the near future is a fully superconducting synchronous electric machine with a nonmagnetic core, the paper said.

The researchers from Moscow Aviation Institute led by Konstantin Kovalev wrote in the paper: “At the output power of more than 1 MW, the specific power is anticipated to exceed 10 kW/kg at 77 K. The fundamentals of theory and the analytical technique for calculating the basic parameters of a fully high temperature superconducting electric machine with an outer ferromagnetic screen have been developed.

To refine the developed analytical method, the 1.5 kW prototype of the all-superconducting electric motor has shown that the analytical calculation provides sufficient accuracy in determining specific power and other basic parameters of fully superconducting electrical machine,” the researchers wrote.

Ground Tests of Superconducting Electric Aircraft Engine Begin in Russia

N3-X TeDP Vehicle Concept


In 2015 Rolls Royce had presented the concept of the N3-X Turbo electric Distributed Propulsion (TeDP) Air Vehicle based on a cryogenically cooled superconducting DC TeDP Electrical System - Tasked with providing aircraft propulsion and some level of differential thrust for directional control. The current status of this project is not known.

 

Combat-Master

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Ground Tests of Superconducting Electric Aircraft Engine Begin in Russia

Ground test of Superconducting electric engine on Yak-40 aircraft. Image @tvzvezda


Ground tests of the world’s first electric hybrid aircraft engine based on a superconducting system has commenced in Chaplygin in Novosibirsk, Russia.
Following the successful ground tests, a flying laboratory based on the Yak-40 aircraft will be created, according to the General Director of the Research Center Zhukovsky, Andrey Dutov.
The General Director added that such aircraft should commence flying around 2030. The engine has no comparables in the world, and representatives of Airbus and Siemens approached the institute with a proposal for cooperation.

The creators of the electric motor hope that in two years there will be another laboratory that will be able to fly on electric motors without additional motors, Russian MoD’s TV channel, tvzvezda.ru reported on February 5.

Ground Tests of Superconducting Electric Aircraft Engine Begin in Russia

Yak-40 aircraft fitted with Superconducting electric engine. Image @tvzvezda


Several research efforts are progressing in different parts of the world for a superconductor based electric engine for aviation applications. However, this could well the first such effort that has reached the testing stage.

According to a research paper presented at the 2019 International Conference on Electrotechnical Complexes and Systems (ICOECS) held in Ufa, Russia, a 1.5 kW prototype of the all-superconducting electric motor for hybrid distributed propulsion system was developed by a team of researchers from the Moscow Aviation Institute.
The most promising concept for high temperature superconducting electric machines with high specific parameters technically feasible in the near future is a fully superconducting synchronous electric machine with a nonmagnetic core, the paper said.

The researchers from Moscow Aviation Institute led by Konstantin Kovalev wrote in the paper: “At the output power of more than 1 MW, the specific power is anticipated to exceed 10 kW/kg at 77 K. The fundamentals of theory and the analytical technique for calculating the basic parameters of a fully high temperature superconducting electric machine with an outer ferromagnetic screen have been developed.

To refine the developed analytical method, the 1.5 kW prototype of the all-superconducting electric motor has shown that the analytical calculation provides sufficient accuracy in determining specific power and other basic parameters of fully superconducting electrical machine,” the researchers wrote.

Ground Tests of Superconducting Electric Aircraft Engine Begin in Russia

N3-X TeDP Vehicle Concept


In 2015 Rolls Royce had presented the concept of the N3-X Turbo electric Distributed Propulsion (TeDP) Air Vehicle based on a cryogenically cooled superconducting DC TeDP Electrical System - Tasked with providing aircraft propulsion and some level of differential thrust for directional control. The current status of this project is not known.


This will be exciting! Looking forward to electric motors powering the future of air transport!
 

Test7

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This will be exciting! Looking forward to electric motors powering the future of air transport!
It will be battery technology that determines such developments. , Yak-40 can reach a range of 1,800 km via a fuel capacity of 3,910 liters
 

Test7

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An AN-12 military transport aircraft of the Russian Air Force made a hard landing in the Kuril Islands, which Japan calls the Northern Territories, on Tuesday afternoon.

According to multiple reports, Russian AN-12 military transport aircraft (tail number “09” red) landed slightly to the left of the runway due to a snowstorm on 9 February. The incident occurred as the Antonov AN-12 aircraft came into land at a base in Iturup, known in Japanese as Etorofu.

Officials declined to elaborate about possible damage to the aircraft but noted that while the landing didn’t cause any injuries.


The Antonov AN-12 is a Soviet-era four-engined turboprop transport aircraft.

For more than three decades the AN-12 was the standard medium-range cargo and paratroop transport aircraft and became the basic airplane of the Soviet Union military transport aviation.

A total of 1,248 were eventually built.

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Cabatli_TR

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Russian bloggers sneaked into MiG-29 fighter jet and MiG-AT advanced trainer final assembly and checkout plant and filmed abandoned fuselages of military aircraft.

Russian Youtuber with Den Stalk nickname has released an incredible video that showed how he with friends crept inside a factory in Moscov that previously produced legendary Soviet MiG-29 Fulcrum fighter jet and Russian MiG-AT advanced trainer and light attack aircraft.

He and his friends sneaked through a hole in the fence and were able to access many of the plant’s buildings unchallenged, including the assembly line of multirole fighters, without coming across a single security guard – or indeed any other employees at all.

The published video shows several fuselages of a rare MiG-AT trainer from an initial series that was developed in 1996. MiG-AT is a Russian advanced trainer that was intended to replace the Aero L-39 of the Russian Air Force. Designed by the Mikoyan Design Bureau and built by the Moscow Aircraft Production Association, the MiG-AT made its first flight in March 1996. It is the first joint aircraft development program between Russia and France and the first military collaborative project between Russia and the West.

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MiG-AT.jpg


Also spotted dozens of MiG-29 radomes made from fiber glass-reinforced plastic, boxes with spare parts and the fuselage of combat aircraft.

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MiG-29-1.jpg
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In addition, earlier in December 2020, The Drive has reported that unknown thieves have helped themselves to equipment from inside one of the Russian Aerospace Forces’ rare Il-80 Maxdome “doomsday aircraft.” The converted airliner, as a strategic airborne command post in time of nuclear conflict, was at an airfield in southwest Russia when the caper took place.

 

Nilgiri

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Initially thought this was a bald and bankrupt escapade when I saw title heh.

These pics are kind of painful to see though, as I love aircraft and the capital machinery that is behind them

Compare the opportunity costs of that hypothetical w.r.t to the reality of Russia idling/atrophying and even carving out and cannibalising significant proportions of its sector here like ended up happening for nearly 2 decades.
 

Nilgiri

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What the hell man,the place looks so fucking dirty.

Need to take you on road trip through parts of Detroit....same industrial wasteland. I had look inside couple times in some abandoned factories there, it was enough for a lifetime. These places were humming with activity once upon a time...quite tragic.

BTW, Mig 29 hold special place in my heart....I just realised couple minutes later after this thread, that my die cast 1:200 Mig - 29 that I got when I was just a very young boy (who didn't know a thing about what it was at the time, just that it "flew"!), is still on my table. So its first thing that pops up in my head when I think "fighter".

It must be nearing 30 years old now:

20210217_165701.jpg


It has seen better days like the Migs here on this thread's shop floor....being through all my nonsense with it taking its wear and tear heh.

Canopy was first thing to fall off...I didn't take care of it like I should have in the early years, but I still have it heh.

It was my second aircraft like this...I have a faint memory of a USAF one (thinking back it was likely a super-sabre)...but I lost that one really early somewhere.

The "MIG-29 FULCRUM" and Soviet Air Force star...

20210217_173253.jpg


@anmdt @UkroTurk @Sinan @Saiyan0321 @Joe Shearer @Kaptaan @xenon5434 @Deliorman @#comcom @Madokafc @Indos @VCheng @Paro et al.
 

Kaptaan

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Need to take you on road trip through parts of Detroit....same industrial wasteland. I had look inside couple times in some abandoned factories there, it was enough for a lifetime. These places were humming with activity once upon a time...quite tragic.

BTW, Mig 29 hold special place in my heart....I just realised couple minutes later after this thread, that my die cast 1:200 Mig - 29 that I got when I was just a very young boy (who didn't know a thing about what it was at the time, just that it "flew"!), is still on my table. So its first thing that pops up in my head when I think "fighter".

It must be nearing 30 years old now:

View attachment 14447

It has seen better days like the Migs here on this thread's shop floor....being through all my nonsense with it taking its wear and tear heh.

Canopy was first thing to fall off...I didn't take care of it like I should have in the early years, but I still have it heh.

It was my second aircraft like this...I have a faint memory of a USAF one (thinking back it was likely a super-sabre)...but I lost that one really early somewhere.

The "MIG-29 FULCRUM" and Soviet Air Force star...

View attachment 14448

@anmdt @UkroTurk @Sinan @Saiyan0321 @Joe Shearer @Kaptaan @xenon5434 @Deliorman @#comcom @Madokafc @Indos @VCheng @Paro et al.
Amazing. Takes my mind back to 1970s when I was growing up. I was absolutely crazy about Airfix kits. I bought and assembled Spitfire, Hurricane, Dornier, Hienkel and various tanks like Sherman, Tiger, Panther. Assembling the German tanks was a nightmare as the track and wheels were so complicated. I would get glue stuck all over my fingers.

But all the effort was worth it. These models were incredibly realistic. Being nearly 50 years ago sadly I have lost all my collection.
 

Deliorman

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I find absolutely nothing surprising here because I just know what the Soviet/Russian mentality is. “Perfectionism” and “High quality” have never been part of the dictionary in that part of the planet.
 

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They should properly disband such facilities if not in use anymore
 
T

Turko

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Need to take you on road trip through parts of Detroit....same industrial wasteland. I had look inside couple times in some abandoned factories there, it was enough for a lifetime. These places were humming with activity once upon a time...quite tragic.

BTW, Mig 29 hold special place in my heart....I just realised couple minutes later after this thread, that my die cast 1:200 Mig - 29 that I got when I was just a very young boy (who didn't know a thing about what it was at the time, just that it "flew"!), is still on my table. So its first thing that pops up in my head when I think "fighter".

It must be nearing 30 years old now:

View attachment 14447

It has seen better days like the Migs here on this thread's shop floor....being through all my nonsense with it taking its wear and tear heh.

Canopy was first thing to fall off...I didn't take care of it like I should have in the early years, but I still have it heh.

It was my second aircraft like this...I have a faint memory of a USAF one (thinking back it was likely a super-sabre)...but I lost that one really early somewhere.

The "MIG-29 FULCRUM" and Soviet Air Force star...

View attachment 14448

@anmdt @UkroTurk @Sinan @Saiyan0321 @Joe Shearer @Kaptaan @xenon5434 @Deliorman @#comcom @Madokafc @Indos @VCheng @Paro et al.
İ couldnt see any top-secret technology and information there. You should see trashes of TurAF, old fighters laying on fields.
 

Test7

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A ten minute read about how it is that Russia's 929 State Flight Test Centre has become valuable again. Scramble exclusive!

With its airfield, laboratories, vast testing areas, shooting ranges and intriguing new bunker complexes, Akhtubinsk's State Flight Test Centre, also known as 929 GLITs (929-й Государственный лётно-испытательный центр), has become one of the most valuable assets for the Russian Federation Ministry of Defence.

The 929 GLITs is named after 1930s test pilot and Hero of the Soviet Union Valery Chkalov and is located near Vladimirovka, north of Akhtubinsk in the Astrakhan region (Russia). The Test Centre had to come a long way since the collapse of the Soviet Union and it has clearly emerged from the doldrums for a number of years. Even the Russian president, Vladimir Putin, paid the centre a high profile visit on 14 May 2019. On that day, Putin's Ilyushin Il-96 presidential aircraft was escorted by six Su-57 fighters, flown by 929 GLITs test pilots, while approaching Akhtubinsk airfield.

How did Akhtubinsk's 929 GLITs became so important?

When you think of testing and evaluating military aircraft in the Russian Federation, you think of Moscow-Zhukovsky, Lipetsk Jejsk and Saki. Aircraft are still being tested and evaluated at and from these airfields. Partly responsible for testing aerodynamics, jet engines and minor changes to aircraft, the famous Gromov Flight Research Institute and the Fedotov Test Pilot School are located at Zhukovsky near the outskirts of Moscow. Positioned at Lipetsk Air Base in the eponymous region, operational testing of aircraft is carried out by the 4th Centre for Combat Employment and Retraining of Russian Aerospace Forces (VKS) Personnel. For Russia's navy equivalent, the Naval Aviation Combat Training and Conversion Centre is located near the town of Jejsk in the Krasnodar Region and partly at Saki on the Crimea peninsula annexed by Russia.

Nowadays, 929 GLITs at Akhtubinsk is none of the beforementioned. Its all about new domestic developed weapons testing, evaluating and integrating them with aircraft and helicopters. Akhtubinsk is often mentioned in the same breath as American test centres such as Edwards AFB, Naval Air Weapons Station China Lake, UK's Boscombe Down and the French Istres-Le Tube test centres.


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Facilitating Russia's air, sea and ground joint forces, Akhtubinsk is located about twenty kilometers from the border with Kazakhstan. 929 GLITs has its own inventory of jets, transport aircraft and chase planes. Sometimes being singular attached to the test centre, like the Test Centre's Antonov An-12 or Tupolev Tu-134, all have their use. In Akhtubinsk, the average percentage of the sky covered by clouds experiences extreme seasonal variation over the course of the year. The clearer part of the year in Akhtubinsk begins around the beginning of May and lasts for more than five months, ending around mid-October. During that period multiple new Russian aircraft, weapons and equipment are tested and evaluated with Russia's joint State Flight Test Centre. Also, the new cadre of pilots, who in principle come from Russian operational units, are also educated and trained here as test pilots on various aircraft and/or helicopters.

It is no secret that 929 GLITs has a convinient outpost at Khmeimim Air Base (Syria). Located south-east of the city of Latakia, Khmeimim is co-located with Bassel Al-Assad International Airport. Since the end of 2015, 929 GLITs is heavily involved in testing new models of aviation equipment and weapons, as well as research on expanding the combat capabilities of existing serial built aircraft and helicopters from Syrian soil. For now, multiple aircraft and helicopters, including weapons and equipment, have been tested in, above and near Syria under auspices of 929 GLITs.

Russia_51_RED_52_RED.jpg


Most notable were the deployments of the Sukhoi Su-57 pre-series aircraft. Scramble Magazine has recognised that the Su-57s Bort number 509 Blue and Bort number 510 Blue have made multiple very short voyages from Russia to be deployed to and over Syria during the past few years. Compared to other aircraft, such as the Sukhoi Su-30SM and the Sukhoi Su-35S, which certainly have flown various (test) missions over Syria, Scramble Magazine assesses that the temporary stationing of the Su-57 has more to do with Russia's internal and external publicity consumption.

2020 became a significant year for 929 GLITs

Russia_MiG-35_Vezhlivyye_Lyudi.jpg


On 21 September 2020, 929 GLITs celebrated their centenary since the establishment of the test centre in 1920. In 2020, the centre received six serial built MiG-35s (see Scramble News from 20 August 2020). Also, on 25 December 2020, 929 GLITs received the first serial built Su-57 with Bort number 01 Blue (see Scramble News from 28 December 2020). This is also the first Su-57 with the 929 GLITs marking on the fuselage behind the cockpit. Reportedly, this FELON - as it is named in the NATO reporting system - will be used to test hypersonic air-launched weapons at Akhtubinsk. And lastly, on 29 December 2020, The highest general of the Russian military, General of the Army Sergey Shoygu, presented the Order of Suvorov to the 929th GLITs by putting a streamer on their banner. General Shoygu pointed to the effectiveness of flight and ground tests of aviation equipment that was carried out by 929 GLITs during the past years. The Order of Suvorov is a military decoration of high standing within the Russian Federation named in honour of 18th century Russian Field Marshal Count Alexander Suvorov.

Russia_mig-31-kinzhal-missile-1.jpg


Besides the effectiveness of various tests by aircraft, weapons and equipment, 929 GLITs owes the rising of its name to one man in recent years. As commander of 929 GLITs, Major General Radik Bariev is probably one of the most prominent figures both before and behind the scenes of the test centre. Under his inspiring leadership, the Mikoyan Gurevich MiG-31 has been revived. In recent years, the MiG-31K at Akhtubinsk has been thoroughly tested for carrying a Kinzhal (Dagger) Air-Launched Ballistic Missile (ALBM). Being a new strategic Russian weapon system, the combination of a MiG-31K and a Kinzhal, which reportedly reaches more than 2,000 kilometers, will be a stimulus for Russia's deterrence. Although not tested yet in Syria, the first launch of a Kinzhal missile took place mid-November 2019 in and over the Arctic. Reportedly, the launch was carried out by a MiG-31K from Olenya Air Base. It was stated that the Kinzhal missile hit a ground target at the "Pemboy" test ranges, reaching the speed of Mach 10 (!). About ten MiG-31Ks, sighted with the Bort numbers in the 91-99 Red range are now based at Akhtubinsk.

Analysing recent Google Earth imagery reveals some interesting facts. At various hangars, more MiG-31s appear to be waiting to be converted to carry the Kinzhal under its centre line. Also, new built bunker complexes on the vast area north of Akhtubinsk's runways can be seen surrounded by double fences. One can only wonder what is happening at the complexes behind those double fences.

More prestigious and interesting aircraft under the care of 929 GLITs

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With all the major weapons and engineering companies of the Russia's Military-Industrial Complex located in Akhtubinsk, it is easy to rebuild or assemble weapon systems into one. The things that have been learned, in Syria for example, can be reviewed or adjusted on spot. Once intended to succeed the Sukhoi Su-24, most Sukhoi Su-34s have now been delivered to the VKS. With the Su-34M now on the horizon, 929 GLITs is currently preparing to make the weapons, equipment and electronic warfare upgrades for the Su-34M run smoothly. In collaboration with various companies, the centre has also converted Russia's Su-35S into the SU-35SM. Scramble Magazine has learned from various footages that their are two examples that already gained upgrades to fire a Vympel R-37M long range air-to-air missile. Both 929 GLITs Su-35SMs with Bort number 51 Red (RF-81718), which has seventeen Syria (test) mission marks and Bort number 52 Red (RF-81719), which is adorned with fifteen Syria (test) mission marks were prominently seen during the 2019 International Aviation and Space Show (MAKS) at Zhukovsky.

Russia_Okhotnik.jpg


Akhtubinsk is also the home of the first flying Okhotnik. The Sukhoi Okhotnik (Hunter) Russian stealthish like Unmanned Combat Aerial Vehicle (UCAV) is being developed by Sukhoi and Russian Aircraft Corporation (MiG). On 3 August 2019, the first Okhotnik, with Bort number 071 Red performed its maiden flight. The UCAV flew for about 20-30 minutes at an altitude of 600 meters above the Chkalov State Flight Test Centre grounds. On later released footage by the Russian Ministry of Defence, the Okhotnik flew alongside a Su-57. On 12 February 2021, it was announced by a source within Russia's Military-Industrial Complex that three additional prototypes were under construction at the The Novosibirsk Chkalov Aviation Plant. The second Okhotnik model will be a modified copy of the first prototype while the third and fourth protypes will be identical to the serial production unit. The improvements will relate to the systems of onboard radio-electronic equipment and structural elements of the airframe. The three additional prototypes should be ready for flight tests in 2022 and 2023 and will undoubtedly show up on Akhtubinsk.

The growth of new test pilots

Russia 929 Radik Bariev 320 While the flamboyant Major General Radik Bariev has been in the saddle of 929 GLITs for over a decade, the unit is at risk of running out of test pilots. Like Bariev, the recent years saw multiple test pilots receiving the "Hero of Russia" title. For their work as test pilots for 929 GLITs Colonels Igor Malikov and Viktor Romanov also gained their Hero of Russia titles. There are promising young test pilots like Majors Sorokin (Su-57) and Gordienko (MiG-31) with 929 GLITs, but the unit is faced with a situation where military pilots do not want to go to test units. This, since the pilot's workload has seriously increased due to the upgrading of existing aircraft and actively testing of new equipment abroad. At the same time, Russia's test pilots at Akhtubinsk have less benefits compared to pilots in Russia's conventional air regiments or the pilots that test aircraft and helicopters for civilian research institutes or United Aircraft Corporation. Something is now being done about the latter.

Russia Mikoyan 320

In the long term, the ranks of test pilots will probably be increased, whereby the pay will also go up. It is then expected that a test pilot is at least a major and has enough service experience. With the ranks going up it will be much easier for a Lieutenant Colonel or Colonel to talk to the chief designer of an aircraft, or weapon systems, than it is for a major.

With more new Su-57s and Okhotniks on the way, jets like the Su-30SM being further developed and multiple weapon systems to be upgraded, Russia's Akhtubinsk State Flight Test Centre is surely on the rise. 929 GLITs will keep its outpost in Syria. Operational testing in and over Syria of the Kinzhal or MiG-35 next? By the time pilots like the above mentioned Sorokin or Gordienko will become commander of Akhtubinsk's State Flight Test Centre it will probably look more different in terms of aircraft and technological state of affairs than it is today.

Photos: Russian MoD, Zvezda, RT and Sputnik plus as stated with the photo

 

VCheng

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What the hell man,the place looks so fucking dirty.

Because they are abandoned plants?

Need to take you on road trip through parts of Detroit....same industrial wasteland. I had look inside couple times in some abandoned factories there, it was enough for a lifetime. These places were humming with activity once upon a time...quite tragic.

Detroit looks like an old war zone TBH. Scary. Some residential areas are attempting a comeback, but it is faltering still.
 

Joe Shearer

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Need to take you on road trip through parts of Detroit....same industrial wasteland. I had look inside couple times in some abandoned factories there, it was enough for a lifetime. These places were humming with activity once upon a time...quite tragic.

BTW, Mig 29 hold special place in my heart....I just realised couple minutes later after this thread, that my die cast 1:200 Mig - 29 that I got when I was just a very young boy (who didn't know a thing about what it was at the time, just that it "flew"!), is still on my table. So its first thing that pops up in my head when I think "fighter".

It must be nearing 30 years old now:

View attachment 14447

It has seen better days like the Migs here on this thread's shop floor....being through all my nonsense with it taking its wear and tear heh.

Canopy was first thing to fall off...I didn't take care of it like I should have in the early years, but I still have it heh.

It was my second aircraft like this...I have a faint memory of a USAF one (thinking back it was likely a super-sabre)...but I lost that one really early somewhere.

The "MIG-29 FULCRUM" and Soviet Air Force star...

View attachment 14448

@anmdt @UkroTurk @Sinan @Saiyan0321 @Joe Shearer @Kaptaan @xenon5434 @Deliorman @#comcom @Madokafc @Indos @VCheng @Paro et al.
Just try to stay under 200 kmph without that cockpit cover.
 

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