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Tupolev ANT 9

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Top speed
  
215 km/h

Length
  
17 m

First flight
  
May 5, 1929

Wingspan
  
24 m

Retired
  
1945

Manufacturer
  
Tupolev ANT-9 Tupolev ANT9 amp Krokodil RC Groups

Laddie s tupolev ant 9


The Tupolev ANT-9 (Russian: Туполев АНТ-9) was a Soviet passenger aircraft of the 1930s. It was developed as a reaction to the demand for a domestic airliner. At this time Deruluft, one of the forerunners of Aeroflot, flew only with foreign models, which were mainly German or Dutch.

Contents

Tupolev ANT-9 Tupolev ANT9 amp Krokodil RC Groups

Design work began in December 1927. The first prototype, named Krylia Sovietov (wing of the Soviets) used three French Gnome-Rhone Titan radial engines. It was presented to the public on 1 May 1929 at Red Square and it went to the national flight testing, which was completed in June. In the first series 12 aircraft were built. In production, the Titan engines were replaced with M-26 engines, but these proved too unreliable and were replaced with imported Wright Whirlwind engines. Two of these airplanes were used by Deruluft, starting from 1933 on the Berlin-Moscow service. Mikhail Gromov accomplished a European round flight on the route Moscow – Travemünde – Berlin – Paris – Rome – Marseille – London – Paris – Berlin – Warsaw – Moscow with the Krylia Sovietov, which lasted from 10 July to 8 August 1929 and generated considerable publicity. It carried eight passengers over a distance of 9,037 km (5,615 mi), in 53 flying hours with an average speed of 177 km/h (110 mph).

Tupolev ANT-9 Tupolev PS9 ANT9 Photo Story Characteristics

In September 1930, testing of the Wright-powered version of the ANT-9 was completed. A few were used as executive transports for the Soviet Air Forces. A military variant with standard and retractable turrets was under construction, but was abandoned before trials began. An ambulance version was studied and considered, but never built. In 1932, GVF engineer Sergei Ivanovich Komarov proposed a modification of the ANT-9 wing to accommodate two M-17 engines, similar to what was done on the R-6. Production began in 1933 as the PS-9 (пассажирский самолёт, passazhirskiy samolot = passenger airplane). The number of aircraft built amounted to about 70 machines. Up to the beginning of the German invasion of the Soviet Union, they served as passenger or staff airplanes mainly on routes in Central Asia and the Caucasus. Afterwards they were used until 1943 as transportation and medical airplanes. One PS-9 was modified into a propaganda aircraft named Krokodil (Crocodile) with a reptile-like plywood nose.

Tupolev ANT-9 wwwtayyarecicom TUPOLEV ANT9 1923 1950 Period TUAF AIRCRAFTS

Military Operators

 Soviet Union
  • Soviet Air Force
  •  Turkey
  • Turkish Air Force
  • Civil Operators

     Soviet Union
  • Aeroflot
  • Deruluft
  •  Turkey
  • Turkish Airlines
  • Accidents and incidents

    Tupolev ANT-9 Internet Modeler Airkits 172 Tupolev ANT9

  • On December 6, 1936, a Deruluft ANT-9, registration CCCP-D311, crashed near Moscow due to pilot error, killing nine of 14 on board.
  • Specifications (PS-9)

    Data from The Osprey Encyclopedia of Russian Aircraft 1875–1995

    General characteristics

    Tupolev ANT-9 wwwaviastarorgpicturesrussiaant91jpg

  • Crew: two
  • Capacity: nine passengers
  • Length: 17.01 m (55 ft 9⅔ in)
  • Wingspan: 23.85 m (78 ft 10 in)
  • Height: 5 m (16 ft 4¾ in)
  • Wing area: 84.0 m² (904 ft²)
  • Empty weight: 4,400 kg (9,700 lb)
  • Loaded weight: 6,200 kg (13,668 lb)
  • Powerplant: 2 × Mikulin M-17 water-cooled V-12, 373 kW (500 hp) each
  • Performance

    Tupolev ANT-9 WINGS PALETTE Tupolev ANT9PS9 Turkey

  • Maximum speed: 215 km/h (117 kn, 134 mph)
  • Cruise speed: 180 km/h (97 kn, 112 mph)
  • Range: 700 km (378 nm, 435 mi)
  • Service ceiling: 5,100 m (16,732 ft)
  • Rate of climb: 2.8 m/s (550 ft/min)
  • Wing loading: 73.8 kg/m² (15.1 lb/ft²)
  • Power/mass: 0.12 kW/kg (0.073 hp/lb)
  • References

    Tupolev ANT-9 Wikipedia