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Antonov An-26

The Antonov An-26 (NATO reporting name: Curl) is a twin-engined turboprop civilian and military transport aircraft, designed and produced in the Soviet Union from 1969 to 1986.[2]

An-26
An-26 of the Serbian Air Force
Role Transport aircraft
National origin Soviet Union
Design group Antonov
First flight 21 May 1969[1]
Introduction 1970
Status Operational
Primary users Soviet Air Forces (former)
Russian Air Force
Pakistan Air Force
Vietnam People's Air Force
Produced 1969–1986
Number built 1,403
Developed from Antonov An-24
Variants Antonov An-32

Development

While the An-24T tactical transport had proved successful in supporting Soviet troops in austere locations, its ventral loading hatch restricted the handling of cargo, and in particular vehicles, and made it less effective than hoped in parachuting men and supplies.[3] As a result, interest in a version with a retractable cargo ramp increased, and the Antonov design bureau decided in 1966 to begin development on the new An-26 derivative, in advance of an official order. The cargo ramp was based on that design and allowed the cargo deck to be sealed and pressurised in flight. When loading cargo, it could either be lowered to allow vehicles to be driven in, or slid beneath the aircraft's fuselage, so that cargo could be loaded straight in off a truck bed. In March 1968, the OKB received official permission to begin development.[4] Particular attention was given to the military mission, and the majority of early An-26 production was delivered to the VTA (voyenno-transportnaya aviatsiya).[2]

Using the majority of the An-24 airframe, it has high-set cantilevered wings, wing-mounted twin turboprops with a turbojet engine in the starboard nacelle for use as an auxiliary power unit and also for extra take-off thrust, plus long main undercarriage legs. The An-26 includes military equipment, such as tip-up paratroop canvas seats, an overhead traveling hoist, bulged observation windows and parachute static line attachment cables. It can be configured in 20-30 minutes from the troop transport or freight mission to the medical evacuation role with up to 24 stretchers fitted.[5]

The An-26 made its public debut at the 27th Paris Air Show at Le Bourget where the second prototype, CCCP-26184 (c/n00202), was shown in the static aircraft park.[citation needed]

The An-26 is also manufactured without a license agreement[6] in China by the Xian Aircraft factory as the Y-14, later changed to be included in the Xian Y7 series.[6]

Total production

Total Production[7] 1986 1985 1984 1983 1982 1981 1980 1979 1978 1977 1976 1975 1974 1973 1972 1971 1970 1969
1159 1 53 33 54 77 86 125 149 130 103 99 77 62 35 36 21 14 4

Operational history

The An-26 has a secondary bomber role with underwing bomb racks. The racks are attached to the fuselage in front of and behind the rear landing gear. In the bombing role it was extensively used by the Vietnam People's Air Force during the Cambodian–Vietnamese War and Sudanese Air Force during the Second Sudanese Civil War and the War in Darfur.[8] Russian Forces have also trained with the An-26 as a bomber.[9]

One An-26 was involved in the Purulia Incident in 1995 in which arms were dropped in the Purulia district of West Bengal, India. The reason behind the drop is not disclosed to the public due to national security.[3]

Variants

 
An-26 cargo cabin
 
CAAC Antonov An-26 at China Aviation Museum, Beijing
An-26
"Curl-A" : Twin-engine tactical transport aircraft.[10]
An-26-100
Convertible passenger/cargo aircraft modified from An-26 aircraft at the Kyiv plant from 1999.[11]
An-26 Nel'mo
An arctic surveillance and reconnaissance aircraft retrofitted with Nel'mo equipment.[12]
An-26 Pogoda
(Weather) Another aircraft for weather control duties, similar to the An-26 Tsiklon, with a simplified equipment test lab.[13]
An-26 Polyot
(Flight) A single aircraft retrofitted for the purpose of research of unified air traffic control and monitoring system throughout the USSR, with a comprehensive navigation test lab including precision compasses and Doppler speed/shift sensors.[14]
An-26 Sfera
(Sphere) A single production aircraft built as a laboratory for atmospheric research.[13]
An-26 Shtabnoy
(Shtab: or Headquarters) some An-26s delivered to the Soviet and DDR air forces for use as staff transports/mobile command posts.[15]
 
An-26 Vita
An-26 Vitauk
(Life) A single mobile operating room, surgery and intensive care unit ('25 Blue', c/n5406), for the Ukrainian Air Force.[13]
An-26A
A one-off assault transport prototype with higher performance due to removal of some military equipment.[16]
An-26ASLK
(Avtomatizirovannaya sistema lyotnogo kontrolya – automated flight control and monitoring system) : A modern flight control and monitoring system equipped with automatic calibration and navigation systems. Recognizable by the distinctive pod low on the forward fuselage side.[12]
An-26B
A civil cargo version equipped with roller gangsways which can be swung up against the cabin walls when not in use. It was also equipped with two ZMDB Progress (Ivchyenko) Al-24VT turboprop powerplants to deliver higher thrust.[17]
An-26B
The prototype An-26B retrofitted as a mobile civilian emergency hospital.[17]
An-26B Tsiklon
(Cyclone) A weather research/control and cloud-seeding aircraft for the Central Aerologic Laboratory. This aircraft was used for rain induction and protection using cloud-seeding chemicals dropped from slab-sided pods hung from pylons.[13]
An-26B-100
Convertible passenger/cargo aircraft modified from An-26B aircraft at the Kyiv plant from 1999.[11]
An-26BL
Alternative designation for the An-26L.[12]
An-26BRL
Alternative designation of the An-26RL Arctic surveillance and reconnaissance aircraft.[12]
An-26D
(Dal'niy – long-range) An extended range version with extra fuel in wing tanks and additional external tanks attached to the airframe of the fuselage. One aircraft ('21 Yellow', c/n 13806) was retrofitted and delivered, but no further orders were forthcoming.[18]
An-26K Kaira
(Great Auk) A single An-26 aircraft converted to a Kaira test airframe for the development of airborne Laser guided systems.[14]
An-26K Kaplya
(Drop [of liquid]) After completion of the laser designator trials the An-26K Kaira was retrofitted to search or optically guided weapons as the navigation systems. During a night test flight at low level, in March 1989, the An-26K Kaplya suffered a massive bird strike, which consequently destroyed the windshield and injured the pilot, who involuntarily downed the aircraft into the Azov Sea.[14]
An-26KPA
(Kontrol'no-Poverochnaya Apparatura – Testing and calibration equipment) : A navigation aids inspecting aircraft with comprehensive navigation equipment and calibration equipment.[19]
An-26L
A single An-26, (14 Orange, c/n 00607), used at Sperenberg Airfield near Berlin, for airfield and NAVAID calibration.[12]
An-26LL-PLO
(Letayuschaya Laboratoriya – Protivolodochnoy Oborony – ASW (Anti-Submarine Warfare) testbed) : A single An-26A aircraft, (c/n 0901), retrofitted and modified to accommodate range of sophisticated laboratory for surveillance systems, detecting and tracking stealthy nuclear submarines.[13]
An-26LP
Firefighting version. At least 9 converted.[17]
An-26M Spasatel
(Rescue worker) Flying hospital with an emergency surgery facility. Two converted.[20]
An-26P
(Protivopozharnyy – firefighting) : Aircraft fire-bomber, retrofitted with water tanks in pods on either side of the lower fuselage, which could be substituted for dispensers for silver iodide flares for rainmaking. At least 5 converted.[21]
An-26P Prozhektor
(Projector or Searchlight) A single conversion of an An-26 as a guided missile system airframe.[22]
An-26REP
(Rahdioelektronnoye protivodeystviye – ECM (Electronic Counter-Measures) ) : Electronic countermeasures aircraft fitted with active jammers in cylindrical pods on either side of the lower fuselage sides, as well as chaff and I/R flares for self-defense. One built but did not enter service.[23]
An-26RL
(Razvedchik Ledovyy – An arctic surveillance, reconnaissance and monitoring) : An arctic surveillance, reconnaissance and monitoring aircraft used to monitor the icebergs and ice formations at arctic circle fitted with SLAR (Sideways Looking Airborne Radar) in long pods on either side of the lower fuselage, extra fuel in a cargo hold fuel tank, provision for surveyors and radar operators.[12]
An-26RR
Alternative unit designation of the An-26RT ELINT(ELectronic INTelligence) aircraft.[24]
An-26RT
"Curl-B": (First use of the designation) A basic designation for a series of ELINT aircraft fitted with a wide range of electromagnetic surveillance equipment. At least one aircraft, (tactical code '152'), retrofitted with the Tarahn (Ramming Attack) ELINT suite for use in Afghanistan.[24]
An-26RT
(Retranslyator – Interpreter -Translator): (Substitute of designation) Battlefield communications relay aircraft, fitted with powerful Inzheer (Fig) radio relay system, for connecting forward units to headquarters units. 42 built.[25]
An-26RTR
Alternative unit designation of the An-26RT ELINT aircraft.[24]
An-26S
(Salon – [VIP] Lounge) : A new VIP Lounge aircraft for the Ukrainian Ministry of Defense delivered about 1997.[11]
An-26Sh
(Shturmanskiy – Navigator) : Navigator trainer for the VVS, 36 built at Kyiv.[24]

Non-USSR /-Ukrainian versions

 
DDR An-26SM "369", later German Air Force "52+09", at the Museum Berlin-Gatow.
An-26SM
One aircraft modified as an ELINT aircraft for the East German Air Force.[26]
An-26M
One aircraft modified for NAVAID calibration and flight monitoring for the East German Air Force and transferred to the post-unification German Air Force.[27]
An-26ST
East German designation for An-26s used as staff transports.[15]
An-26T
Unofficial East German designation for An-26s operated by Transportfliegerstaffel 24 (transport squadron 24).[16]
An-26Z-1
Czechoslovakian ELINT conversion of one aircraft for ELINT duties.[28]
Xian Y-7H
Military transport version. Chinese production version.[6]
Xian Y-14
Initial designation of the An-26 copy, later changed to 'Y-7H' (Hao – cargo).[6]

Operators

Military operators

 
Map with military An-26 operators in blue, and former military An-26 operators in red
 
Russian An-26 intercepted by a British Typhoon over the Baltics in July 2015
 
Ukrainian An-26B in Portugal
 
Slovak Air Force An-26 at Farnborough Airshow, 2008
 
Russian Air Force Antonov An-26
  Angola
  Belarus
  Cape Verde
  Chad
  China
  Cuba
  Democratic Republic of the Congo
  Ethiopia
  Ivory Coast
  Kazakhstan
  • Kazakh Air Force – five An-24 or An-26 in service December 2015.;[36] Received one refurbished An-26 from Ukraine on 3 November 2017.[37]
  Kyrgyzstan
  Laos
  Libya
  Madagascar
  Moldova
  Mozambique
  Namibia
  Nicaragua
  Puntland
  Romania
  Russia
  Serbia
  Sudan
  Syria
  Transnistria
  Ukraine
  Uzbekistan
  Yemen

Former military operators

  Afghanistan
  • Afghan Air Force – All remaining aircraft retired June 2011. One of their An-26 which defected to Pakistan, is preserved at PAF Museum, Karachi
  Bangladesh
  Benin
  Bulgaria
  Cambodia
 
An-26 of the Czech Air Force
  Republic of the Congo
  Czechoslovakia
  East Germany
  Germany
  Guinea-Bissau
  Hungary
 
Hungarian Air Force Antonov An-26 departs RIAT at RAF Fairford, England
  Iraq
 
An-26 of the Lithuanian Air Force (now retired)
  Lithuania
  Madagascar
  Mali
  Mongolia
  Niger
  North Yemen
  Pakistan
  Peru
 
An-26 of the Polish Air Force (Operated before 2009, now retired)
  Poland
  Slovakia
  Somalia
  South Yemen
  Soviet Union
  Tanzania
  Turkmenistan
  United States

  Vietnam

  Yugoslavia
  Zambia

Civil operators

  Belarus
  • Genex (two)
  Bulgaria
  • Air Bright (one)
  Colombia
  • Sadelca (one)
  • Servicio Aéreo del Vaupés SELVA (three)
  Cuba
  Denmark
  Hungary
  Latvia
  Moldova
  • Valan International Cargo Charter[64]
  Peru
  Philippines
  Poland
  Russia
  Sudan
  Tajikistan
  Ukraine
  Venezuela
  • Solar Cargo (two)
AN-26 operators within Aeroflot and post break-up Commonwealth of Independent States (data from[78])
UGA – (Upravleniye Grazhdanskoy Aviatsii – Civil Aviation Directorate) OAO – (Otdel'nyy Aviaotryad – independent flight detachment) LO – (Lyvotnyy Otryad – flight squad) / Aviaeskadril'ya – squadrons) Home Base CIS (Commonwealth of Independent States) Airline)
Azerbaijan Baku 360th / 1st & 3rd squadrons Baku-Bina AZAL (no An-26s)
Belarusian Gomel' 105th / 2nd squadron Gomel' Gomel'avia
1st Minsk 353rd / 2nd Squadron Minsk-Loshitsa (Minsk-1) Belavia;Minsk-Avia
Central Regions Bykovo 61st / 4th Squadron Moscow-Bykovo Bykovo Avia
Kursk Kursk Kurskavia
Tula 294th Tula Tula Air Enterprise
East Siberian Chita 136th / 1st Squadron Chita Chita Avia
Irkutsk 134th Irkutsk-1 Baikal Airlines
Far Eastern 1st Khabarovsk 289th Khabarovsk Dalavia Far East Airlines Khabarovsk
Kamchatka CAPA / Petropavlovsk Petropavlovsk-Kamchatskiy Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky Air Enterprise
Sakhalin CAPA / Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk UAD 147th Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk / Khomutvo Sakhalinskiye Aviatrassy
Komi Pechora Pechora Komiavia;Komiinteravia
Krasnoyarsk Igarka 251st Igarka
2nd Krasnoyarsk 126th Krasnoyarsk-Severnyy Kras Air
Khatanga 221st / 2nd Squadron Khatanga
Leningrad 2nd Leningrad 70th / 2nd Squadron Leningrad-Rzhevka Rzhevka Air Enterprise
Pskov 320th / 2nd Squadron Pskov Pskov Avia
Lithuanian Vilnius 277th Vilnius Lithuanian Airlines*
Magadan Anadyr' 150th / 2nd Squadron Anadyr'-Ugol'nyy Chukotavia
1st Magadan 185th Magadan-Sokol Kolyma-Avia
Seymchan Seymchan NW Aerial Forestry Protection Base
Moldavian Kishinyov 407th Kishinyov Air Moldova
North Caucasian Krasnodar 241st Krasnodar ALK Kuban Airlines
1st Krasnodar 406th Krasnodar
Tajik Leninabad 292nd / 2nd Squadron Leninabad
Training Establishments Directorate KVLUGA (Kirovograd Civil Aviation Higher Flying School) Kirovograd Ukraine State Flight Academy
Turkmen Krasnovodsk 360th Krasnovodsk Turkmenistan Airlines/Khazar
Tyumen' Salekhard 234th / 5th Squadron Salekhard
2ndTyumen' 357th Tyumen'-Roschchino Tyumen'AviaTrans (UTair)
Ukrainian Dnipropetrovsk 327th Dnipropetrovsk-Volos'kie Dniproavia
Kirovograd Kirovograd-Khmelyovoye Air URGA
Simferopol 84th Simferopol Aviakompaniya Krym / Crimea AL
Urals Izhevsk Izhevsk Izhavia
Magnitogorsk Magnitogorsk Magnitogorsk Air Enterprise
1st Perm' Perm'-Bolshoye Savino Perm Airlines
1st Sverdlovsk Sverdlovsk-Kol'tsovo Ural Airlines [Yekaterinburg]
Volga Penza 396th Penza Penza Air Enterprise
Saransk Saransk Saransk Air Enterprise
West Siberian Barnaul 341st Barnaul Barnaul Air Enterprise
Kemerovo 196th Kemerovo
Novokuznetsk 184th Novokuznetsk Aerokuznetsk
Omsk 365th Omsk Omsk-Avia
Tolmachevo 448th Novosibirsk-Tolmachevo Sibir'
Tomsk 119th Tomsk Tomsk Avia
Yakutian Kolyma-Indigirka Cherskiy?
Mirnyy 190th Mirnyy Almazy Rossii – Sakha (Alrosa)
Yakutsk 139th / 3rd Squadron Yakutsk
GosNII GVF (Gosudarstvenny Nauchno-Issledovatel'skiy Institut Grazdahnskovo Vozdushnovo Flota – state scientific test institute for civil air fleet) Moscow - Sheremet'yevo-1

*note: Lithuania was not a CIS country.

Accidents and incidents

 
Sudan Air Force Antonov An-26-100 crash-landed in 1997 at the airstrip of Gogrial. The plane was hit by SPLA-fire and had to make an emergency landing.

1970s

  • 23 May 1976: An Aeroflot An-26 (CCCP-26567) crashed short of the runway near Teply Klyuch Airport, Russia.[79]
  • 14 July 1977: An National Air Force of Angola An-26 was shot down by UNITA rebels near Cuangar, killing 30 people on board.[80]
  • 18 August 1977: An Aeroflot An-26 (CCCP-26536) landed hard at Ust-Kuyga Airport due to pilot error; no casualties.[81]
  • 9 December 1978: An Aeroflot An-26 (CCCP-26547) lost control and crashed shortly after takeoff from Cherskiy Airport due to a shifted load, killing all seven on board. The cargo had not been secured properly.[82]
  • 26 March 1979: Aeroflot Flight 37293, an An-26 (CCCP-26569), struck a wooded hillside near Baykit, Russia, killing four of 12 on board.[83][84]

1980s

  • 12 December 1980: A Soviet Air Forces An-26 was shot down by guerrilla forces in Angola near the border with Namibia, killing five people on board.[85]
  • 23 December 1981: Aeroflot Flight 22237, an An-26 (CCCP-26505), crashed while on approach to Severo-Yeniseisk Airport in poor weather during an attempted go-around after descending too soon, killing two of seven on board. The flight mechanic and navigator were drunk.[86]
  • 14 January 1982: An Ethiopian Air Force An-26 crashed near Addis Ababa, killing 73 Ethiopian, Libyan and Cuban troops. This accident remains the deadliest involving the An-26.[87]
  • 11 February 1982: Vietnam People's Air Force An-26 26264 was shot down by two Royal Thai Air Force Northrop F-5Es and crashed in a rice field near Prachinburi, Thailand, during an intelligence-gathering mission from Phnom Penh, reportedly killing one of 13 on board.[88]
  • 15 March 1982: A Soviet Navy An-26 (MSN 6805) crashed shortly after a night-time take off from Anapa Airport when the flaps were retracted prematurely, killing all nine people on board.[89]
  • 29 November 1982: a TAAG Angola Airlines An-26 (D2-TAB) flew into a mountain in the Bibala region, killing all 15 people on board.[90]
  • 23 December 1982: An Aeroflot An-26 (CCCP-26627) crashed on takeoff from Rostov Airport, killing all 16 on board. The aircraft was overloaded.[91]
  • 6 May 1983: a Soviet Air Forces An-26 hit trees on a night-time approach in heavy snow as it was trying to land at Klyuchi, Klyuchevsky District, Altai Krai, killing 33 of the 37 people on board.[92]
  • 3 July 1984: A Peruvian Air Force An-26 (FAP-377) crashed into mountains northeast of Lima, killing all five people on board.[93]
  • 22 January 1985: a Soviet Air Forces An-26 operating in Afghanistan exceeded the maximum allowable speed and broke apart, killing all eight people on board.[94]
  • 3 May 1985: Soviet Air Force An-26 101 red (callsign "CCCP-26492") collided in mid-air with Aeroflot Flight 8381, a Tupolev Tu-134, due to ATC errors, killing all 94 on board both aircraft.
  • 4 September 1985: A Bakhtar Afghan Airlines An-26 (YA-BAM) was shot down by a SAM near Kandahar, killing all 52 people on board.
  • 30 March 1986: A Mozambique Air Force An-26 crashed while trying to land at Pemba Airport. All three crew and 41 of the 46 passengers were killed.
  • 6 December 1986: a Hungarian Air Force An-26 (MSN 2210) crashed after take-off from Budapest-Ferihegy Airport, most likely because of icing. Four of the five people on board were killed.[95]
  • 9 February 1987: an Afghan Air Force An-26 was shot down by Mujahideen guerrillas shortly after takeoff from Kabul International Airport, killing all 36 people on board.[96]
  • 19 February 1987: a Soviet Air Forces An-26 crashed in fog near Stadnitsa while attempting to land at Vinnytsia, killing all nine people on board.[97]
  • 6 March 1987: an Aeroflot An-26 (CCCP-26007) struck a mountain near Almaty after failing to change heading, killing all nine people on board.[98]
  • 11 June 1987: a Bakhtar Afghan Airlines An-25 (YA-BAL) was shot down by rebels near Khost, killing 53 of the 55 people on board.[99]
  • 18 June 1987: a Peruvian Air Force An-26 (FAP-392) crashed into a mountain near Saposoa, killing all 46 people on board.[100]
  • 13 August 1987: an Afghan Air Force An-26 was reportedly shot down, killing all 12 on board.[101]
  • 1 September 1987: an Afghan Air Force An-26 was shot down near Khost, killing all right people on board.[102]
  • 13 September 1987: a Soviet Air Forces An-26 was shot down by Afghanistan rebels near Kunduz, killing all 15 people on board.[103]
  • 16 September 1987: Vietnam People's Air Force An-26 285 flying from Hanoi to Ho Chi Minh City crashed at Bảo Lộc while on approach to Ho Chi Minh City, killing all 31 crew and passengers on board, mostly military personnel and their family members. Wreckage was found in 1989.[104]
  • 22 October 1987: a Soviet Air Forces An-26 was shot down near Jalalabad Airport, killing all eight people on board.[105]
  • 21 December 1987: A Soviet Air Force An-26 flying from Kabul to Bagram was shot down by a Stinger missile shortly after takeoff. The no. 1 engine was hit and shrapnel punctured the fuel tank. Smoke entered the cabin. Five of the six crew members bailed out safely, however the pilot jumped out at an altitude too low to open the parachute and did not survive.[106]
  • 10 April 1988: an Afghan Air Force An-26 was shot down near Maymana, killing all 29 people on board.[107]
  • 20 April 1988: a Soviet Air Forces An-26 (MSN 11808) crashed shortly after takeoff from Chkalovsky Air Base when the right engine failed, killing all six people on board.[108]
  • 27 April 1988: a Cuban Air Force An-26 T-237 was accidentally shot down by Cuban troops stationed at Techamutete, Angola, killing all 29 people on board.[109]
  • 24 June 1988: a Soviet Air Forces An-26 was shot down by Mujahideen rebels after take off from Kabul International Airport, killing all five people on board.[110]
  • 19 November 1988: an Afghan Air Force An-26 was shot down by the Pakistan Air Force near Parachinar, killing all 30 people on board. Afghan officials said the plane had crossed the border after suffering mechanical problems while Pakistani officials said it had failed to identify itself.[111]
  • 10 December 1988: an Ariana Afghan Airlines An-26 was shot down over Pakistan by the Pakistan Air Force, killing all 25 people on board.[112]
  • 10 March 1989: an National Air Force of Angola An-26 crashed at Cazombo, killing all five people on board.[113]
  • 18 June 1989: an Ariana Afghan Airlines An-26 (YA-BAK) crash landed on a hill near Zabol after the ramp was opened in flight, killing six of the 39 people on board.[114]
  • 19 July 1989: an Aeroflot An-26 (CCCP-26685) was on an ice observation flight over the East Siberian Sea to guide ships when it crashed at Cape Kibera after the left wing hit a cliff during a turn that was too close to the shore, killing all 10 on board.[115]
  • 23 July 1989: an National Air Force of Angola An-26 was shot down by UNITA rebels near Chana, killing 42 of the 48 people on board.[116]
  • 8 September 1989: a Cuban Air and Air Defense Force An-26 (MSN 3805) crashed into the sea near Playa de Baracoa during a nighttime exercise, killing seven of the eight people on board.[117]
  • 26 October 1989: a Soviet Air Forces An-26 flew into a mountain in bad weather near Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, killing all 37 people on board.[118]

1990s

  • 1990s: Soviet Air Force An-26 01 red burned out on the ground at Orenburg Air Base following an APU fire.[119]
  • mid 1990s: Russian Air Force An-26 RA-47415 force-landed at Belgorod Airport and was withdrawn from use and cancelled from the Russian register in 2001. Although the aircraft was planned to become a cinema for the "Rolan Bykov Fund" in Belgorod, this was abandoned in 2004 because some of the radioactive sensors had not been removed.[120]
  • 23 March 1990: Cubana de Aviacion Flight 7406, an An-26 (CU-T1436), overran the runway at Antonio Maceo Airport following an aborted takeoff, killing four of 46 on board.[121]
  • 5 May 1990: a Soviet Air Forces An-26 crashed near Sparfayev island while on a flight from Magadan, killing all seven people on board.[122]
  • 22 February 1991: an National Air Force of Angola An-26 was shot down near Cazombo Airport, killing all 47 people on board.[123]
  • 15 August 1991: due to an air traffic controller's mistaken direction a Soviet Air Forces An-26 hit a mountain after take-off from Burevestnik Airport, killing all nine people on board.[124]
  • 27 February 1992: German Air Force An-26 "52+10" crashed after a hard landing. None of the crew members was injured.
  • 8 April 1992: Yasir Arafat's An-26 crashed during a sandstorm. Of the 13 on board, both pilots and an engineer were killed.
  • 23 April 1993: A MIAT Mongolian Airlines An-26 (BNMAU-14102) struck the side of Marz Mountain, Zavkhan Province, Mongolia while descending for Ölgii, killing all 32 on board.[125]
  • 17 June 1993: A Tajikistan Airlines An-26 (26035) stalled, spun down and crashed into a hillside 22 mi north of Tbilisi, Georgia, after encountering severe turbulence, killing all 33 on board.[126]
  • 26 December 1993: A Kuban Airlines An-26 (RA-26141) stalled and crashed upside down while landing at Leninakan Airport due to overloading, killing 35 of 36 on board.[127]
  • 13 July 1994: A Russian Air Force An-26 was stolen from Kubinka AFB by an engineer planning to commit suicide. He circled Lyakhovo at 300–2000 feet until the aircraft ran out of fuel and crashed, killing him.[128]
  • 31 July 1994: An Air Ukraine An-26B (UR-26207), operating on behalf of the UN, was reportedly shot down and crashed near Saborsko, Croatia, killing all 7 people on board.[129]
  • 16 January 1995: An Angolan Air Force An-26 was downed by rebel forces in the north of the country, killing all six occupants.[130]
  • 16 March 1995: A Central Region Airlines An-26B (RA-26084) struck a hill and crashed near Ossora Airport while on approach due to crew errors, killing nine of 10 on board.[131]
  • 31 August 1995: a Malian Air Force An-26 (TZ-347) flew into a mountain near Thessaloniki Airport in bad weather, killing all six people on board.[132]
  • 17 December 1995: Terrorist Kim Davy alias Niels Holck from Denmark dropped several tonnes of lethal weapons, ammunition, explosives and triggers by An-26 in Purulia district of West Bengal State of India. The plane was forced to land in Bombay, where his accomplices were arrested.[133]
  • 1997: Sudan Air Force An-26 7711 force-landed at Gogrial Airport after it was struck by SPLA ground fire.
  • 2 September 1998: A Permtransavia An-26 (RA-20628) operating for Prestavia, crashed near Malanje Airport, Angola, after the pilot reported an engine fire, killing all 24 on board; the wreckage was found in 2003. Some reports stated that the aircraft was shot down by UNITA forces.[134]
  • 21 January 1999: Nicaraguan Air Force An-26 152 crashed after getting too low on approach and striking a tree near Bluefields Airport, killing all 28 people on board.[135]

2000s

  • 30 March 2000: an An-26 chartered from Ukrainian company Avialinii AAR crashed near Anuradhapura Airport while carrying Sri Lanka Army troops, killing all 40 on board. The cause of the accident is unclear.[136]
  • 12 August 2000: a STAER airlines An-26 crashed near Tshikapa while trying to return to Kinshasa Airport, killing all 27 on board.[137]
  • 31 October 2000: an ACA-Ancargo An-26 (D2-FDI) crashed 20 minutes after take-off from Saurimo Airport, killing all 49 people on board. UNITA rebels say they shot it down.[138]
  • 4 April 2001: a Sudanese Air Force An-26 crashed on take-off in a sandstorm from Adar Yel, killing the deputy defence minister and 13 high-ranking officers. Another 16 passengers survived.[139]
  • 21 February 2002: a Russian Navy An-26 crashed after striking treetops while on final approach to Lakhta air base, killing 17 of the 20 people on board.[140]
  • 29 November 2003: a Congolese Air Force An-26 9T-TAD crashed during takeoff due to a burst tyre, killing 20 of the 24 people on board and 13 people on the ground.[141]
  • 5 May 2005: a chartered Aeroworld An-26 (EK-26060) crashed shortly after take-off from Kisangani Bangoka International Airport, killing 10 of the 11 people on board.[142]
  • 9 August 2005: a Yemeni Air Force An-26 crashed in Mukalla, killing one of its occupants and injuring 22 others.[143]
  • 5 September 2005: A Kavatshi Airlines An-26B (ER-AZT) operating on a non-scheduled passenger flight struck a tree and crashed on approach to Isiro Airport in Matari, killing all 11 people on board.[144]
  • 9 September 2005: An Air Kasai An-26B (9Q-CFD) operating on a non-scheduled passenger flight crashed 50 km (31 miles) north of Brazzaville, killing all 13 people on board.[145]
  • 11 February 2006: a Sudanese Air Force An-26 crashed into a building upon landing at Aweil, South Sudan after the front tyre burst, killing all 20 people on board.[146]
  • 9 January 2007: An AerianTur-M Antonov An-26 (ER-26068) crashed while attempting to land at the U.S. military base in Balad, Iraq, killing 34 of 35 on board. Although the aircraft crashed due to fog, some eyewitness and sources state that the aircraft was shot down by a missile.[147]
  • 4 October 2007: An Africa One An-26 (9Q-COS) crashed into the Kinshasa neighbourhood of Kimbaseke just after takeoff. 21 out of 22 people on board and 28 people on the ground died. Initial reports indicate a lost propeller.[148]
  • 8 April 2008: A Vietnam People's Air Force An-26 crashed in a field in the Thanh Trì district, killing all five on board.[149]

2010s

  • 18 March 2010: An Exin An-26B (SP-FDO) made an emergency landing on the Lake Ülemiste, close to Lennart Meri Tallinn Airport. None of the six crew members was injured. Initial reports indicated failure of one of the turboprop power plants.[150]
  • 25 August 2010: An Exin An-26B (SP-FDP) rejected takeoff from Tallinn's runway 08 at high speed when the gear collapsed or retracted during the takeoff roll on 2010. The airplane skidded to a stop on its belly, no injuries occurred.[151]
  • 6 June 2011: Solenta Aviation Flight 122A, an An-26 (TR-LII), crashed in the sea near Libreville, Gabon, during an attempted go-around following hydraulic problems. Four people on board were rescued and transported to a local hospital, but were not seriously injured. The aircraft was operating on behalf of DHL.[152]
  • 24 November 2011: A Yemeni Air Force An-26 crashed outside Sanaa due to technical problems. 15 crew members and passengers died.[153]
  • 21 November 2012: a Yemeni Air Force An-26 crashed close to Sanaa International Airport, killing all 10 people on board.[154]
  • 19 August 2012: An Alfa Airlines An-26-100 (ST-ARL) struck a mountain during its second approach to the Talodi airfield in South Kordofan, Sudan. All 26 passengers on board and six crew members died.[155]
  • 21 February 2014: A Libyan Air Cargo An-26 (5A-DOW), operating an ambulance flight, crashed in a farm near Grombalia, 60 km short of Tunis-Carthage Airport, after one of its engines caught fire. The accident resulted in the death of all its 11 occupants: six crew members, two doctors and three patients.[156]
  • 14 July 2014: Ukraine Air Force An-26 19 blue flying at 6,500 m (21,300 ft) was shot down and crashed near Izvaryne, Ukraine, killing two of six on board.[157] (confirmed to be shot using Buk missile system).[158] U.S. officials would later say evidence suggested the aircraft had been fired on from inside Russian territory[159]
  • 18 January 2015: Syrian Air Force An-26 YK-AND crashed while attempting to land at the besieged Abu al-Duhur military airport in Idlib Governorate, Syria, killing all 30 on board.[160]
  • 9 March 2016: A True Aviation An-26B (S2-AGZ) crashed into the Bay of Bengal near Cox's Bazar while attempting to return to Cox's Bazar Airport following an engine failure, klling three of four on board.[161]
  • 30 April 2016: A Sudan Air Force An-26 crashed during a landing attempt at Al-Ubayyid. All five crew members died.[162]
  • 20 March 2017: A South Supreme Airlines An-26B (S9-TLZ) was destroyed by fire after crashing at Wau Airport, South Sudan, after the left landing gear struck a fire truck during landing; all 45 on board survived.
  • 29 April 2017: Aerogaviota Flight FAR1436, an An-26 (CU-T1406), crashed in the Loma de la Pimienta Mountains near Las Terrazas, Cuba, killing all eight on board. The aircraft was operating on behalf of the Cuban Air Force.[163]
  • 30 May 2017: Russian Air Force An-26 RF-36160 crashed at Balashov Airfield during a training flight after descending too soon, killing one of six on board.[164]
  • 28 August 2017: A Coco Aviation An-26B (EK-26006) overran the runway at Maban Airstrip and was destroyed by the consequent fire. The crew survived.[165]
  • 14 October 2017: A Valan Air An-26 (ER-AVB) chartered by the French Military crashed shortly before landing at Abidjan, the Ivory Coast capital. Four people were killed and six were injured.[166]
  • 6 March 2018: Russian Air Force An-26 RF-92955 crashed at Khmeimim Air Base. All 33 passengers and six crew died in the incident.[167]
  • 20 December 2018: A Gomair An-26 (9S-AGB) crashed 19 nautical miles short of Kinshasa with 7 or 8 people on board. The aircraft was found more than 24 hours later by a local. The aircraft was carrying election materials on behalf of the Central Electoral National Independent Commission (CENI).[168]
  • 24 December 2018: Congolese Air Force An-26 9T-TAB crashed as it overshot the runway at Beni Airport in North Kivu province. The aircraft was reportedly transporting troops, and the crash resulted in 38 people being taken to hospital.[169]

2020s

Aircraft on display

 
An-26 "52+09" at Berlin-Gatow
 
Former Lithuanian Air Force An-26B in early 1990's paintscheme, Kaunas Aleksotas (EYKS) airfield

Specifications

Data from Jane's All The World's Aircraft 1988–89[184]

General characteristics

  • Crew: five (two pilots, one radio operator, one flight engineer, one navigator)
  • Capacity: 40 passengers / 5,500 kg (12,100 lb)
  • Length: 23.8 m (78 ft 1 in)
  • Wingspan: 29.3 m (96 ft 2 in)
  • Height: 8.58 m (28 ft 2 in)
  • Wing area: 74.98 m2 (807.1 sq ft)
  • Aspect ratio: 11.7:1
  • Empty weight: 15,020 kg (33,113 lb)
  • Max takeoff weight: 24,000 kg (52,911 lb)
  • Powerplant: 2 × Progress AI-24VT Turboprop engines, 2,103 kW (2,820 hp) each
  • Powerplant: 1 × Tumansky Ru-19-A300 Turbojet booster / APU, 7.85 kN (1,760 lbf) thrust
  • Propellers: 4-bladed Constant speed metal bladed propellers, 3.90 m (12 ft 10 in) diameter

Performance

  • Cruise speed: 440 km/h (270 mph, 240 kn)
  • Range: 2,500 km (1,600 mi, 1,300 nmi) with maximum fuel
  • Range with max payload: 1,100 km (680 mi)
  • Service ceiling: 7,500 m (24,600 ft)
  • Rate of climb: 8 m/s (1,600 ft/min)

See also

Related development

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists

References

Citations

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  179. ^ "Ukrainian military plane shot down, five killed – authorities". Reuters. 24 February 2022. from the original on 24 February 2022. Retrieved 24 February 2022.
  180. ^ Charpentreau, Clement (24 February 2022). "Ukraine Air Force Antonov An-26 crashes near Kyiv, five dead". Aerotime Hub.
  181. ^ "(untitled)". Aviations Safety Network. Retrieved 24 February 2022.
  182. ^ "Antonov's sources claim that the world's largest aircraft An-225 Mriya was destroyed". 27 February 2022. Retrieved 25 March 2022.
  183. ^ Radina Gigova and Nathan Hodge (22 April 2022). "At least one person is dead after a plane crash in Ukraine's Zaporizhzhia region". CNN. Retrieved 22 April 2022.
  184. ^ Taylor 1988, pp. 222–223

Bibliography

  • Chant, Christopher. Commercial Aircraft and Airline Markings
  • Cooper, Tom (2018). Hot Skies Over Yemen, Volume 2: Aerial Warfare Over the South Arabian Peninsula, 1994-2017. Warwick, UK: Helion & Company Publishing. ISBN 978-1-911628-18-7.
  • Cooper, Tom; Weinert, Peter; Hinz, Fabian; Lepko, Mark (2011). African MiGs, Volume 2: Madagascar to Zimbabwe. Houston: Harpia Publishing. ISBN 978-0-9825539-8-5.
  • Fontanellaz, Adrien; Cooper, Tom; Matos, Jose Augusto (2020). War of Intervention in Angola, Volume 3: Angolan and Cuban Air Forces, 1975-1985. Warwick, UK: Helion & Company Publishing. ISBN 978-1-913118-61-7.
  • Gordon, Yefim; Komissarov, Dmitry; Komissarov, Sergey (2003). Antonov's Turboprop Twins. Hinkley, UK: Midland. ISBN 978-1-85780-153-8.
  • Hoyle, Craig (8–14 December 2015). "World Air Forces". Flight International. Vol. 188, no. 5517. pp. 26–53.
  • Hoyle, Craig (6–12 December 2016). "World Air Forces Directory". Flight International. Vol. 190, no. 5566. pp. 22–53.
  • Ogden, Bob (2008). Aviation Museums and Collections of The Rest of the World. UK: Air-Britain. ISBN 978-0-85130-394-9.
  • Taylor, John W. R., ed. (1988). Jane's All The World's Aircraft 1988–89. Coulsdon, UK: Jane's Defence Data. ISBN 978-0-7106-0867-3.

External links

antonov, nato, reporting, name, curl, twin, engined, turboprop, civilian, military, transport, aircraft, designed, produced, soviet, union, from, 1969, 1986, 26an, serbian, forcerole, transport, aircraftnational, origin, soviet, uniondesign, group, antonovfirs. The Antonov An 26 NATO reporting name Curl is a twin engined turboprop civilian and military transport aircraft designed and produced in the Soviet Union from 1969 to 1986 2 An 26An 26 of the Serbian Air ForceRole Transport aircraftNational origin Soviet UnionDesign group AntonovFirst flight 21 May 1969 1 Introduction 1970Status OperationalPrimary users Soviet Air Forces former Russian Air Force Pakistan Air Force Vietnam People s Air ForceProduced 1969 1986Number built 1 403Developed from Antonov An 24Variants Antonov An 32 Contents 1 Development 1 1 Total production 2 Operational history 3 Variants 3 1 Non USSR Ukrainian versions 4 Operators 4 1 Military operators 4 1 1 Former military operators 4 2 Civil operators 5 Accidents and incidents 5 1 1970s 5 2 1980s 5 3 1990s 5 4 2000s 5 5 2010s 5 6 2020s 6 Aircraft on display 7 Specifications 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Citations 9 2 Bibliography 10 External linksDevelopment EditWhile the An 24T tactical transport had proved successful in supporting Soviet troops in austere locations its ventral loading hatch restricted the handling of cargo and in particular vehicles and made it less effective than hoped in parachuting men and supplies 3 As a result interest in a version with a retractable cargo ramp increased and the Antonov design bureau decided in 1966 to begin development on the new An 26 derivative in advance of an official order The cargo ramp was based on that design and allowed the cargo deck to be sealed and pressurised in flight When loading cargo it could either be lowered to allow vehicles to be driven in or slid beneath the aircraft s fuselage so that cargo could be loaded straight in off a truck bed In March 1968 the OKB received official permission to begin development 4 Particular attention was given to the military mission and the majority of early An 26 production was delivered to the VTA voyenno transportnaya aviatsiya 2 Using the majority of the An 24 airframe it has high set cantilevered wings wing mounted twin turboprops with a turbojet engine in the starboard nacelle for use as an auxiliary power unit and also for extra take off thrust plus long main undercarriage legs The An 26 includes military equipment such as tip up paratroop canvas seats an overhead traveling hoist bulged observation windows and parachute static line attachment cables It can be configured in 20 30 minutes from the troop transport or freight mission to the medical evacuation role with up to 24 stretchers fitted 5 The An 26 made its public debut at the 27th Paris Air Show at Le Bourget where the second prototype CCCP 26184 c n00202 was shown in the static aircraft park citation needed The An 26 is also manufactured without a license agreement 6 in China by the Xian Aircraft factory as the Y 14 later changed to be included in the Xian Y7 series 6 Total production Edit Total Production 7 1986 1985 1984 1983 1982 1981 1980 1979 1978 1977 1976 1975 1974 1973 1972 1971 1970 19691159 1 53 33 54 77 86 125 149 130 103 99 77 62 35 36 21 14 4Operational history EditThe An 26 has a secondary bomber role with underwing bomb racks The racks are attached to the fuselage in front of and behind the rear landing gear In the bombing role it was extensively used by the Vietnam People s Air Force during the Cambodian Vietnamese War and Sudanese Air Force during the Second Sudanese Civil War and the War in Darfur 8 Russian Forces have also trained with the An 26 as a bomber 9 One An 26 was involved in the Purulia Incident in 1995 in which arms were dropped in the Purulia district of West Bengal India The reason behind the drop is not disclosed to the public due to national security 3 Variants EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message An 26 cargo cabin CAAC Antonov An 26 at China Aviation Museum Beijing An 26 Curl A Twin engine tactical transport aircraft 10 An 26 100 Convertible passenger cargo aircraft modified from An 26 aircraft at the Kyiv plant from 1999 11 An 26 Nel mo An arctic surveillance and reconnaissance aircraft retrofitted with Nel mo equipment 12 An 26 Pogoda Weather Another aircraft for weather control duties similar to the An 26 Tsiklon with a simplified equipment test lab 13 An 26 Polyot Flight A single aircraft retrofitted for the purpose of research of unified air traffic control and monitoring system throughout the USSR with a comprehensive navigation test lab including precision compasses and Doppler speed shift sensors 14 An 26 Sfera Sphere A single production aircraft built as a laboratory for atmospheric research 13 An 26 Shtabnoy Shtab or Headquarters some An 26s delivered to the Soviet and DDR air forces for use as staff transports mobile command posts 15 An 26 Vita An 26 Vitauk Life A single mobile operating room surgery and intensive care unit 25 Blue c n5406 for the Ukrainian Air Force 13 An 26A A one off assault transport prototype with higher performance due to removal of some military equipment 16 An 26ASLK Avtomatizirovannaya sistema lyotnogo kontrolya automated flight control and monitoring system A modern flight control and monitoring system equipped with automatic calibration and navigation systems Recognizable by the distinctive pod low on the forward fuselage side 12 An 26B A civil cargo version equipped with roller gangsways which can be swung up against the cabin walls when not in use It was also equipped with two ZMDB Progress Ivchyenko Al 24VT turboprop powerplants to deliver higher thrust 17 An 26B The prototype An 26B retrofitted as a mobile civilian emergency hospital 17 An 26B Tsiklon Cyclone A weather research control and cloud seeding aircraft for the Central Aerologic Laboratory This aircraft was used for rain induction and protection using cloud seeding chemicals dropped from slab sided pods hung from pylons 13 An 26B 100 Convertible passenger cargo aircraft modified from An 26B aircraft at the Kyiv plant from 1999 11 An 26BL Alternative designation for the An 26L 12 An 26BRL Alternative designation of the An 26RL Arctic surveillance and reconnaissance aircraft 12 An 26D Dal niy long range An extended range version with extra fuel in wing tanks and additional external tanks attached to the airframe of the fuselage One aircraft 21 Yellow c n 13806 was retrofitted and delivered but no further orders were forthcoming 18 An 26K Kaira Great Auk A single An 26 aircraft converted to a Kaira test airframe for the development of airborne Laser guided systems 14 An 26K Kaplya Drop of liquid After completion of the laser designator trials the An 26K Kaira was retrofitted to search or optically guided weapons as the navigation systems During a night test flight at low level in March 1989 the An 26K Kaplya suffered a massive bird strike which consequently destroyed the windshield and injured the pilot who involuntarily downed the aircraft into the Azov Sea 14 An 26KPA Kontrol no Poverochnaya Apparatura Testing and calibration equipment A navigation aids inspecting aircraft with comprehensive navigation equipment and calibration equipment 19 An 26L A single An 26 14 Orange c n 00607 used at Sperenberg Airfield near Berlin for airfield and NAVAID calibration 12 An 26LL PLO Letayuschaya Laboratoriya Protivolodochnoy Oborony ASW Anti Submarine Warfare testbed A single An 26A aircraft c n 0901 retrofitted and modified to accommodate range of sophisticated laboratory for surveillance systems detecting and tracking stealthy nuclear submarines 13 An 26LP Firefighting version At least 9 converted 17 An 26M Spasatel Rescue worker Flying hospital with an emergency surgery facility Two converted 20 An 26P Protivopozharnyy firefighting Aircraft fire bomber retrofitted with water tanks in pods on either side of the lower fuselage which could be substituted for dispensers for silver iodide flares for rainmaking At least 5 converted 21 An 26P Prozhektor Projector or Searchlight A single conversion of an An 26 as a guided missile system airframe 22 An 26REP Rahdioelektronnoye protivodeystviye ECM Electronic Counter Measures Electronic countermeasures aircraft fitted with active jammers in cylindrical pods on either side of the lower fuselage sides as well as chaff and I R flares for self defense One built but did not enter service 23 An 26RL Razvedchik Ledovyy An arctic surveillance reconnaissance and monitoring An arctic surveillance reconnaissance and monitoring aircraft used to monitor the icebergs and ice formations at arctic circle fitted with SLAR Sideways Looking Airborne Radar in long pods on either side of the lower fuselage extra fuel in a cargo hold fuel tank provision for surveyors and radar operators 12 An 26RR Alternative unit designation of the An 26RT ELINT ELectronic INTelligence aircraft 24 An 26RT Curl B First use of the designation A basic designation for a series of ELINT aircraft fitted with a wide range of electromagnetic surveillance equipment At least one aircraft tactical code 152 retrofitted with the Tarahn Ramming Attack ELINT suite for use in Afghanistan 24 An 26RT Retranslyator Interpreter Translator Substitute of designation Battlefield communications relay aircraft fitted with powerful Inzheer Fig radio relay system for connecting forward units to headquarters units 42 built 25 An 26RTR Alternative unit designation of the An 26RT ELINT aircraft 24 An 26S Salon VIP Lounge A new VIP Lounge aircraft for the Ukrainian Ministry of Defense delivered about 1997 11 An 26Sh Shturmanskiy Navigator Navigator trainer for the VVS 36 built at Kyiv 24 Non USSR Ukrainian versions Edit DDR An 26SM 369 later German Air Force 52 09 at the Museum Berlin Gatow An 26SM One aircraft modified as an ELINT aircraft for the East German Air Force 26 An 26M One aircraft modified for NAVAID calibration and flight monitoring for the East German Air Force and transferred to the post unification German Air Force 27 An 26ST East German designation for An 26s used as staff transports 15 An 26T Unofficial East German designation for An 26s operated by Transportfliegerstaffel 24 transport squadron 24 16 An 26Z 1 Czechoslovakian ELINT conversion of one aircraft for ELINT duties 28 Xian Y 7H Military transport version Chinese production version 6 Xian Y 14 Initial designation of the An 26 copy later changed to Y 7H Hao cargo 6 Operators EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Military operators Edit Map with military An 26 operators in blue and former military An 26 operators in red Russian An 26 intercepted by a British Typhoon over the Baltics in July 2015 Ukrainian An 26B in Portugal Slovak Air Force An 26 at Farnborough Airshow 2008 Russian Air Force Antonov An 26 Vietnam People s Air Force Antonov An 26 AngolaNational Air Force of Angola 22 An 26s bought between 1976 and 1987 29 One aircraft still operational as of December 2021 30 BelarusBelarusian Air Force three operated December 2016 31 Cape VerdeCape Verde Army 3 ChadChad Air Force three in service December 2016 32 China23 Xian Y 7 4 Xian Y 7 100 includes all types of Y 7 aircraft People s Liberation Army Air Force People s Liberation Army Navy CubaCuban Air Force operated 17 33 two in service December 2016 34 Democratic Republic of the CongoDemocratic Republic of the Congo Air Force three in service as of 2021 35 EthiopiaEthiopian Air Force one Ivory CoastIvory Coast Air Force two in service as of 2021 35 KazakhstanKazakh Air Force five An 24 or An 26 in service December 2015 36 Received one refurbished An 26 from Ukraine on 3 November 2017 37 KyrgyzstanKyrgyz Air Force two donated from Russia in August 2017 38 LaosLao People s Liberation Army Air Force one in service December 2016 36 LibyaLibyan Air Force two An 24 An 26 as of December 2016 36 MadagascarMalagasy Air Force one MoldovaMoldovan Air Force one as of December 2016 39 MozambiqueMozambique Air Force one as of December 2016 39 NamibiaNamibian Air Force one as of December 2016 39 NicaraguaNicaraguan Air Force four as of February 2018 40 41 PuntlandPuntland Maritime Police Force one 42 RomaniaRomanian Air Force Two as 2021 will be withdrawn after 2023 of Alenia C 27J Spartan 43 RussiaRussian Air Force 104 as of December 2016 44 Russian Naval Aviation 44 Border Guard Service of Russia SerbiaSerbian Air Force one 45 SudanSudanese Air Force six as of December 2016 46 at least one has been used as an improvised bomber 47 SyriaSyrian Air Force two as of December 2016 48 one crashed TransnistriaArmed Forces of Transnistria UkraineUkrainian Naval Aviation two as of December 2016 49 Ukrainian Air Force around 22 as of 2017 43 UzbekistanUzbek Air Force four as of December 2016 50 YemenYemen Air Force sixFormer military operators Edit AfghanistanAfghan Air Force All remaining aircraft retired June 2011 One of their An 26 which defected to Pakistan is preserved at PAF Museum Karachi BangladeshBangladesh Air Force BeninBenin Air Force two 51 BulgariaBulgarian Air Force five used from 1984 until 2011 43 CambodiaRoyal Cambodian Air Force An 26 of the Czech Air Force Republic of the CongoCongolese Air Force one CzechoslovakiaCzechoslovakian Air Force East GermanyEast German Air Force GermanyGerman Air Force Guinea BissauGuinea Bissau Air Force HungaryHungarian Air Force 11 delivered from 1974 last one retired June 2020 43 52 Hungarian Air Force Antonov An 26 departs RIAT at RAF Fairford England IraqIraqi Air Force An 26 of the Lithuanian Air Force now retired LithuaniaLithuanian Air Force three operated MadagascarMalagasy Air Force two delivered in 1980 53 MaliMalian Air Force one 54 MongoliaMongolian Air Defense Forces Command four NigerNiger Air Force one bought from Libya in 1997 55 North YemenYemen Arab Republic Air Force one 56 PakistanPakistani Air Force PeruPeruvian Air Force 22 operated from 1977 to 1993 An 26 of the Polish Air Force Operated before 2009 now retired PolandPolish Air Force 12 operated from 1972 to January 2009 retired 57 SlovakiaSlovak Air Force Two retired in 2016 to be replaced by Alenia C 27J Spartan aircraft beginning in 2017 58 59 60 SomaliaSomali Air Corps South YemenPeople s Democratic Republic of Yemen Air Force three bought in 1979 56 Soviet UnionSoviet Air Force Passed on to successor states in 1991 Soviet Naval Aviation TanzaniaTanzanian Air Force none retired TurkmenistanMilitary of Turkmenistan ten United StatesUnited States Air Force Operated 2003 2007 by the 6th Special Operations Squadron 61 Vietnam Vietnam People s Air Force 62 YugoslaviaYugoslav Air Force 14 ZambiaZambian Air Force and Air Defense Command fourCivil operators Edit UTair Cargo An 26 at Pulkovo Airport Polar Airlines An 26 100 at Yakutsk Airport RAF Avia An 26B at Birmingham Airport BelarusGenex two BulgariaAir Bright one ColombiaSadelca one Servicio Aereo del Vaupes SELVA three CubaAerogaviota three 63 DenmarkSAS Cargo Group one HungaryCityLine Hungary four LatviaRAF Avia five MoldovaValan International Cargo Charter 64 PeruAero Condor one Amazon Sky two ATSA one Cielos Andinos two PhilippinesInterisland Airlines Mosphil Aero PolandExin six RussiaAngara Airlines three 65 Chukotavia three 66 IrAero ten 67 Khabarovsk Airlines three 68 Kostroma Air Enterprise four 69 KrasAvia four 70 Polar Airlines three 71 SudanBadr Airlines one 72 TajikistanTajik Air one UkraineAir Urga ten Antonov Airlines former 73 74 ARP 410 Airlines five Constanta Airline four 75 Eleron Airlines two 76 Vulkan Air three 77 VenezuelaSolar Cargo two AN 26 operators within Aeroflot and post break up Commonwealth of Independent States data from 78 UGA Upravleniye Grazhdanskoy Aviatsii Civil Aviation Directorate OAO Otdel nyy Aviaotryad independent flight detachment LO Lyvotnyy Otryad flight squad Aviaeskadril ya squadrons Home Base CIS Commonwealth of Independent States Airline Azerbaijan Baku 360th 1st amp 3rd squadrons Baku Bina AZAL no An 26s Belarusian Gomel 105th 2nd squadron Gomel Gomel avia1st Minsk 353rd 2nd Squadron Minsk Loshitsa Minsk 1 Belavia Minsk AviaCentral Regions Bykovo 61st 4th Squadron Moscow Bykovo Bykovo AviaKursk Kursk KurskaviaTula 294th Tula Tula Air EnterpriseEast Siberian Chita 136th 1st Squadron Chita Chita AviaIrkutsk 134th Irkutsk 1 Baikal AirlinesFar Eastern 1st Khabarovsk 289th Khabarovsk Dalavia Far East Airlines KhabarovskKamchatka CAPA Petropavlovsk Petropavlovsk Kamchatskiy Petropavlovsk Kamchatsky Air EnterpriseSakhalin CAPA Yuzhno Sakhalinsk UAD 147th Yuzhno Sakhalinsk Khomutvo Sakhalinskiye AviatrassyKomi Pechora Pechora Komiavia KomiinteraviaKrasnoyarsk Igarka 251st Igarka2nd Krasnoyarsk 126th Krasnoyarsk Severnyy Kras AirKhatanga 221st 2nd Squadron KhatangaLeningrad 2nd Leningrad 70th 2nd Squadron Leningrad Rzhevka Rzhevka Air EnterprisePskov 320th 2nd Squadron Pskov Pskov AviaLithuanian Vilnius 277th Vilnius Lithuanian Airlines Magadan Anadyr 150th 2nd Squadron Anadyr Ugol nyy Chukotavia1st Magadan 185th Magadan Sokol Kolyma AviaSeymchan Seymchan NW Aerial Forestry Protection BaseMoldavian Kishinyov 407th Kishinyov Air MoldovaNorth Caucasian Krasnodar 241st Krasnodar ALK Kuban Airlines1st Krasnodar 406th KrasnodarTajik Leninabad 292nd 2nd Squadron LeninabadTraining Establishments Directorate KVLUGA Kirovograd Civil Aviation Higher Flying School Kirovograd Ukraine State Flight AcademyTurkmen Krasnovodsk 360th Krasnovodsk Turkmenistan Airlines KhazarTyumen Salekhard 234th 5th Squadron Salekhard2ndTyumen 357th Tyumen Roschchino Tyumen AviaTrans UTair Ukrainian Dnipropetrovsk 327th Dnipropetrovsk Volos kie DniproaviaKirovograd Kirovograd Khmelyovoye Air URGASimferopol 84th Simferopol Aviakompaniya Krym Crimea ALUrals Izhevsk Izhevsk IzhaviaMagnitogorsk Magnitogorsk Magnitogorsk Air Enterprise1st Perm Perm Bolshoye Savino Perm Airlines1st Sverdlovsk Sverdlovsk Kol tsovo Ural Airlines Yekaterinburg Volga Penza 396th Penza Penza Air EnterpriseSaransk Saransk Saransk Air EnterpriseWest Siberian Barnaul 341st Barnaul Barnaul Air EnterpriseKemerovo 196th KemerovoNovokuznetsk 184th Novokuznetsk AerokuznetskOmsk 365th Omsk Omsk AviaTolmachevo 448th Novosibirsk Tolmachevo Sibir Tomsk 119th Tomsk Tomsk AviaYakutian Kolyma Indigirka Cherskiy Mirnyy 190th Mirnyy Almazy Rossii Sakha Alrosa Yakutsk 139th 3rd Squadron YakutskGosNII GVF Gosudarstvenny Nauchno Issledovatel skiy Institut Grazdahnskovo Vozdushnovo Flota state scientific test institute for civil air fleet Moscow Sheremet yevo 1 note Lithuania was not a CIS country Accidents and incidents Edit Sudan Air Force Antonov An 26 100 crash landed in 1997 at the airstrip of Gogrial The plane was hit by SPLA fire and had to make an emergency landing 1970s Edit 23 May 1976 An Aeroflot An 26 CCCP 26567 crashed short of the runway near Teply Klyuch Airport Russia 79 14 July 1977 An National Air Force of Angola An 26 was shot down by UNITA rebels near Cuangar killing 30 people on board 80 18 August 1977 An Aeroflot An 26 CCCP 26536 landed hard at Ust Kuyga Airport due to pilot error no casualties 81 9 December 1978 An Aeroflot An 26 CCCP 26547 lost control and crashed shortly after takeoff from Cherskiy Airport due to a shifted load killing all seven on board The cargo had not been secured properly 82 26 March 1979 Aeroflot Flight 37293 an An 26 CCCP 26569 struck a wooded hillside near Baykit Russia killing four of 12 on board 83 84 1980s Edit 12 December 1980 A Soviet Air Forces An 26 was shot down by guerrilla forces in Angola near the border with Namibia killing five people on board 85 23 December 1981 Aeroflot Flight 22237 an An 26 CCCP 26505 crashed while on approach to Severo Yeniseisk Airport in poor weather during an attempted go around after descending too soon killing two of seven on board The flight mechanic and navigator were drunk 86 14 January 1982 An Ethiopian Air Force An 26 crashed near Addis Ababa killing 73 Ethiopian Libyan and Cuban troops This accident remains the deadliest involving the An 26 87 11 February 1982 Vietnam People s Air Force An 26 26264 was shot down by two Royal Thai Air Force Northrop F 5Es and crashed in a rice field near Prachinburi Thailand during an intelligence gathering mission from Phnom Penh reportedly killing one of 13 on board 88 15 March 1982 A Soviet Navy An 26 MSN 6805 crashed shortly after a night time take off from Anapa Airport when the flaps were retracted prematurely killing all nine people on board 89 29 November 1982 a TAAG Angola Airlines An 26 D2 TAB flew into a mountain in the Bibala region killing all 15 people on board 90 23 December 1982 An Aeroflot An 26 CCCP 26627 crashed on takeoff from Rostov Airport killing all 16 on board The aircraft was overloaded 91 6 May 1983 a Soviet Air Forces An 26 hit trees on a night time approach in heavy snow as it was trying to land at Klyuchi Klyuchevsky District Altai Krai killing 33 of the 37 people on board 92 3 July 1984 A Peruvian Air Force An 26 FAP 377 crashed into mountains northeast of Lima killing all five people on board 93 22 January 1985 a Soviet Air Forces An 26 operating in Afghanistan exceeded the maximum allowable speed and broke apart killing all eight people on board 94 3 May 1985 Soviet Air Force An 26 101 red callsign CCCP 26492 collided in mid air with Aeroflot Flight 8381 a Tupolev Tu 134 due to ATC errors killing all 94 on board both aircraft 4 September 1985 A Bakhtar Afghan Airlines An 26 YA BAM was shot down by a SAM near Kandahar killing all 52 people on board 30 March 1986 A Mozambique Air Force An 26 crashed while trying to land at Pemba Airport All three crew and 41 of the 46 passengers were killed 6 December 1986 a Hungarian Air Force An 26 MSN 2210 crashed after take off from Budapest Ferihegy Airport most likely because of icing Four of the five people on board were killed 95 9 February 1987 an Afghan Air Force An 26 was shot down by Mujahideen guerrillas shortly after takeoff from Kabul International Airport killing all 36 people on board 96 19 February 1987 a Soviet Air Forces An 26 crashed in fog near Stadnitsa while attempting to land at Vinnytsia killing all nine people on board 97 6 March 1987 an Aeroflot An 26 CCCP 26007 struck a mountain near Almaty after failing to change heading killing all nine people on board 98 11 June 1987 a Bakhtar Afghan Airlines An 25 YA BAL was shot down by rebels near Khost killing 53 of the 55 people on board 99 18 June 1987 a Peruvian Air Force An 26 FAP 392 crashed into a mountain near Saposoa killing all 46 people on board 100 13 August 1987 an Afghan Air Force An 26 was reportedly shot down killing all 12 on board 101 1 September 1987 an Afghan Air Force An 26 was shot down near Khost killing all right people on board 102 13 September 1987 a Soviet Air Forces An 26 was shot down by Afghanistan rebels near Kunduz killing all 15 people on board 103 16 September 1987 Vietnam People s Air Force An 26 285 flying from Hanoi to Ho Chi Minh City crashed at Bảo Lộc while on approach to Ho Chi Minh City killing all 31 crew and passengers on board mostly military personnel and their family members Wreckage was found in 1989 104 22 October 1987 a Soviet Air Forces An 26 was shot down near Jalalabad Airport killing all eight people on board 105 21 December 1987 A Soviet Air Force An 26 flying from Kabul to Bagram was shot down by a Stinger missile shortly after takeoff The no 1 engine was hit and shrapnel punctured the fuel tank Smoke entered the cabin Five of the six crew members bailed out safely however the pilot jumped out at an altitude too low to open the parachute and did not survive 106 10 April 1988 an Afghan Air Force An 26 was shot down near Maymana killing all 29 people on board 107 20 April 1988 a Soviet Air Forces An 26 MSN 11808 crashed shortly after takeoff from Chkalovsky Air Base when the right engine failed killing all six people on board 108 27 April 1988 a Cuban Air Force An 26 T 237 was accidentally shot down by Cuban troops stationed at Techamutete Angola killing all 29 people on board 109 24 June 1988 a Soviet Air Forces An 26 was shot down by Mujahideen rebels after take off from Kabul International Airport killing all five people on board 110 19 November 1988 an Afghan Air Force An 26 was shot down by the Pakistan Air Force near Parachinar killing all 30 people on board Afghan officials said the plane had crossed the border after suffering mechanical problems while Pakistani officials said it had failed to identify itself 111 10 December 1988 an Ariana Afghan Airlines An 26 was shot down over Pakistan by the Pakistan Air Force killing all 25 people on board 112 10 March 1989 an National Air Force of Angola An 26 crashed at Cazombo killing all five people on board 113 18 June 1989 an Ariana Afghan Airlines An 26 YA BAK crash landed on a hill near Zabol after the ramp was opened in flight killing six of the 39 people on board 114 19 July 1989 an Aeroflot An 26 CCCP 26685 was on an ice observation flight over the East Siberian Sea to guide ships when it crashed at Cape Kibera after the left wing hit a cliff during a turn that was too close to the shore killing all 10 on board 115 23 July 1989 an National Air Force of Angola An 26 was shot down by UNITA rebels near Chana killing 42 of the 48 people on board 116 8 September 1989 a Cuban Air and Air Defense Force An 26 MSN 3805 crashed into the sea near Playa de Baracoa during a nighttime exercise killing seven of the eight people on board 117 26 October 1989 a Soviet Air Forces An 26 flew into a mountain in bad weather near Petropavlovsk Kamchatsky killing all 37 people on board 118 1990s Edit 1990s Soviet Air Force An 26 01 red burned out on the ground at Orenburg Air Base following an APU fire 119 mid 1990s Russian Air Force An 26 RA 47415 force landed at Belgorod Airport and was withdrawn from use and cancelled from the Russian register in 2001 Although the aircraft was planned to become a cinema for the Rolan Bykov Fund in Belgorod this was abandoned in 2004 because some of the radioactive sensors had not been removed 120 23 March 1990 Cubana de Aviacion Flight 7406 an An 26 CU T1436 overran the runway at Antonio Maceo Airport following an aborted takeoff killing four of 46 on board 121 5 May 1990 a Soviet Air Forces An 26 crashed near Sparfayev island while on a flight from Magadan killing all seven people on board 122 22 February 1991 an National Air Force of Angola An 26 was shot down near Cazombo Airport killing all 47 people on board 123 15 August 1991 due to an air traffic controller s mistaken direction a Soviet Air Forces An 26 hit a mountain after take off from Burevestnik Airport killing all nine people on board 124 27 February 1992 German Air Force An 26 52 10 crashed after a hard landing None of the crew members was injured 8 April 1992 Yasir Arafat s An 26 crashed during a sandstorm Of the 13 on board both pilots and an engineer were killed 23 April 1993 A MIAT Mongolian Airlines An 26 BNMAU 14102 struck the side of Marz Mountain Zavkhan Province Mongolia while descending for Olgii killing all 32 on board 125 17 June 1993 A Tajikistan Airlines An 26 26035 stalled spun down and crashed into a hillside 22 mi north of Tbilisi Georgia after encountering severe turbulence killing all 33 on board 126 26 December 1993 A Kuban Airlines An 26 RA 26141 stalled and crashed upside down while landing at Leninakan Airport due to overloading killing 35 of 36 on board 127 13 July 1994 A Russian Air Force An 26 was stolen from Kubinka AFB by an engineer planning to commit suicide He circled Lyakhovo at 300 2000 feet until the aircraft ran out of fuel and crashed killing him 128 31 July 1994 An Air Ukraine An 26B UR 26207 operating on behalf of the UN was reportedly shot down and crashed near Saborsko Croatia killing all 7 people on board 129 16 January 1995 An Angolan Air Force An 26 was downed by rebel forces in the north of the country killing all six occupants 130 16 March 1995 A Central Region Airlines An 26B RA 26084 struck a hill and crashed near Ossora Airport while on approach due to crew errors killing nine of 10 on board 131 31 August 1995 a Malian Air Force An 26 TZ 347 flew into a mountain near Thessaloniki Airport in bad weather killing all six people on board 132 17 December 1995 Terrorist Kim Davy alias Niels Holck from Denmark dropped several tonnes of lethal weapons ammunition explosives and triggers by An 26 in Purulia district of West Bengal State of India The plane was forced to land in Bombay where his accomplices were arrested 133 1997 Sudan Air Force An 26 7711 force landed at Gogrial Airport after it was struck by SPLA ground fire 2 September 1998 A Permtransavia An 26 RA 20628 operating for Prestavia crashed near Malanje Airport Angola after the pilot reported an engine fire killing all 24 on board the wreckage was found in 2003 Some reports stated that the aircraft was shot down by UNITA forces 134 21 January 1999 Nicaraguan Air Force An 26 152 crashed after getting too low on approach and striking a tree near Bluefields Airport killing all 28 people on board 135 2000s Edit 30 March 2000 an An 26 chartered from Ukrainian company Avialinii AAR crashed near Anuradhapura Airport while carrying Sri Lanka Army troops killing all 40 on board The cause of the accident is unclear 136 12 August 2000 a STAER airlines An 26 crashed near Tshikapa while trying to return to Kinshasa Airport killing all 27 on board 137 31 October 2000 an ACA Ancargo An 26 D2 FDI crashed 20 minutes after take off from Saurimo Airport killing all 49 people on board UNITA rebels say they shot it down 138 4 April 2001 a Sudanese Air Force An 26 crashed on take off in a sandstorm from Adar Yel killing the deputy defence minister and 13 high ranking officers Another 16 passengers survived 139 21 February 2002 a Russian Navy An 26 crashed after striking treetops while on final approach to Lakhta air base killing 17 of the 20 people on board 140 29 November 2003 a Congolese Air Force An 26 9T TAD crashed during takeoff due to a burst tyre killing 20 of the 24 people on board and 13 people on the ground 141 5 May 2005 a chartered Aeroworld An 26 EK 26060 crashed shortly after take off from Kisangani Bangoka International Airport killing 10 of the 11 people on board 142 9 August 2005 a Yemeni Air Force An 26 crashed in Mukalla killing one of its occupants and injuring 22 others 143 5 September 2005 A Kavatshi Airlines An 26B ER AZT operating on a non scheduled passenger flight struck a tree and crashed on approach to Isiro Airport in Matari killing all 11 people on board 144 9 September 2005 An Air Kasai An 26B 9Q CFD operating on a non scheduled passenger flight crashed 50 km 31 miles north of Brazzaville killing all 13 people on board 145 11 February 2006 a Sudanese Air Force An 26 crashed into a building upon landing at Aweil South Sudan after the front tyre burst killing all 20 people on board 146 9 January 2007 An AerianTur M Antonov An 26 ER 26068 crashed while attempting to land at the U S military base in Balad Iraq killing 34 of 35 on board Although the aircraft crashed due to fog some eyewitness and sources state that the aircraft was shot down by a missile 147 4 October 2007 An Africa One An 26 9Q COS crashed into the Kinshasa neighbourhood of Kimbaseke just after takeoff 21 out of 22 people on board and 28 people on the ground died Initial reports indicate a lost propeller 148 8 April 2008 A Vietnam People s Air Force An 26 crashed in a field in the Thanh Tri district killing all five on board 149 2010s Edit 18 March 2010 An Exin An 26B SP FDO made an emergency landing on the Lake Ulemiste close to Lennart Meri Tallinn Airport None of the six crew members was injured Initial reports indicated failure of one of the turboprop power plants 150 25 August 2010 An Exin An 26B SP FDP rejected takeoff from Tallinn s runway 08 at high speed when the gear collapsed or retracted during the takeoff roll on 2010 The airplane skidded to a stop on its belly no injuries occurred 151 6 June 2011 Solenta Aviation Flight 122A an An 26 TR LII crashed in the sea near Libreville Gabon during an attempted go around following hydraulic problems Four people on board were rescued and transported to a local hospital but were not seriously injured The aircraft was operating on behalf of DHL 152 24 November 2011 A Yemeni Air Force An 26 crashed outside Sanaa due to technical problems 15 crew members and passengers died 153 21 November 2012 a Yemeni Air Force An 26 crashed close to Sanaa International Airport killing all 10 people on board 154 19 August 2012 An Alfa Airlines An 26 100 ST ARL struck a mountain during its second approach to the Talodi airfield in South Kordofan Sudan All 26 passengers on board and six crew members died 155 21 February 2014 A Libyan Air Cargo An 26 5A DOW operating an ambulance flight crashed in a farm near Grombalia 60 km short of Tunis Carthage Airport after one of its engines caught fire The accident resulted in the death of all its 11 occupants six crew members two doctors and three patients 156 14 July 2014 Ukraine Air Force An 26 19 blue flying at 6 500 m 21 300 ft was shot down and crashed near Izvaryne Ukraine killing two of six on board 157 confirmed to be shot using Buk missile system 158 U S officials would later say evidence suggested the aircraft had been fired on from inside Russian territory 159 18 January 2015 Syrian Air Force An 26 YK AND crashed while attempting to land at the besieged Abu al Duhur military airport in Idlib Governorate Syria killing all 30 on board 160 9 March 2016 A True Aviation An 26B S2 AGZ crashed into the Bay of Bengal near Cox s Bazar while attempting to return to Cox s Bazar Airport following an engine failure klling three of four on board 161 30 April 2016 A Sudan Air Force An 26 crashed during a landing attempt at Al Ubayyid All five crew members died 162 20 March 2017 A South Supreme Airlines An 26B S9 TLZ was destroyed by fire after crashing at Wau Airport South Sudan after the left landing gear struck a fire truck during landing all 45 on board survived 29 April 2017 Aerogaviota Flight FAR1436 an An 26 CU T1406 crashed in the Loma de la Pimienta Mountains near Las Terrazas Cuba killing all eight on board The aircraft was operating on behalf of the Cuban Air Force 163 30 May 2017 Russian Air Force An 26 RF 36160 crashed at Balashov Airfield during a training flight after descending too soon killing one of six on board 164 28 August 2017 A Coco Aviation An 26B EK 26006 overran the runway at Maban Airstrip and was destroyed by the consequent fire The crew survived 165 14 October 2017 A Valan Air An 26 ER AVB chartered by the French Military crashed shortly before landing at Abidjan the Ivory Coast capital Four people were killed and six were injured 166 6 March 2018 Russian Air Force An 26 RF 92955 crashed at Khmeimim Air Base All 33 passengers and six crew died in the incident 167 20 December 2018 A Gomair An 26 9S AGB crashed 19 nautical miles short of Kinshasa with 7 or 8 people on board The aircraft was found more than 24 hours later by a local The aircraft was carrying election materials on behalf of the Central Electoral National Independent Commission CENI 168 24 December 2018 Congolese Air Force An 26 9T TAB crashed as it overshot the runway at Beni Airport in North Kivu province The aircraft was reportedly transporting troops and the crash resulted in 38 people being taken to hospital 169 2020s Edit 22 August 2020 A South West Aviation An 26 EX 126 lost power during take off at Juba Airport and crashed into Hai Referendum residential area on the outskirts of the airport Out of the 9 occupants on board 8 crew members were killed alongside 9 others on the ground 170 25 September 2020 Ukraine Air Force An 26 76 yellow with cadets of the Ivan Kozhedub National Air Force University crashed and immediately caught fire in Ukraine s Kharkiv Oblast 171 There were 27 people on board 25 were killed immediately and one died in hospital the sole survivor was seriously injured 171 172 13 March 2021 Kazakh Border Guards An 26 crashed short of the runway while attempting to land at Almaty Airport Two of the six occupants survived 173 6 July 2021 A Petropavlovsk Kamchatsky Air An 26 crashed on a cliff in the vicinity of Palana killing all 22 passengers and six crew members Most of the debris slid down into the Okhotsk Sea 174 175 22 September 2021 a technical flight that disappeared from flight radars 38 km from Khabarovsk crashed killing all six members of the crew 176 2 November 2021 Optimum Aviation Antonov An 26 registered as TR NGT crashed near the White Nile just after take off from Juba International Airport South Sudan All five crew were killed 177 178 24 February 2022 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine Ukrainian Air Force An 26 59 blue was shot down near Zhukivtsi by Russian fire Five of the fourteen people on board were killed 179 180 24 February 2022 Russian Air Force An 26 RF 36074 crashed near Voronezh All crew reported dead 181 27 February 2022 An Antonov Airlines An 26 100 UR 13395 was confirmed to be destroyed in Hostomel Kyiv during the attack 182 22 April 2022 A Constanta Airlines An 26B 100 UR UZB crashed after it struck power lines over Mykhailivka in the Zaporizhzhia Oblast killing one of three crew 183 Aircraft on display EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message An 26 52 09 at Berlin Gatow Germany An 26 tail number 52 04 former East German 375 is exhibited at Technikmuseum Speyer An 26 tail number 52 05 former East German 376 is exhibited at Schwabisches Bauern und Technik Museum Eschach Seifertshofen An 26 tail number 52 08 former East German 368 is exhibited at Flugausstellung Hermeskeil An 26SM tail number 52 09 former East German 369 is exhibited at Militarhistorisches Museum Flugplatz Berlin Gatow Poland An 26 tail number 1509 is exhibited in the Polish Aviation Museum in Krakow Former Lithuanian Air Force An 26B in early 1990 s paintscheme Kaunas Aleksotas EYKS airfield An 26 tail number 1602 is exhibited in the Polish Army Museum in Warsaw Lithuania An 26B civilian tail number 16444 military tail number 06 former Aeroflot from 1991 Lithuanian Airlines afterwards Lithuanian Air Force exhibited at Lithuanian Aviation Museum S Darius and S Girenas Aleksotas airfield EYKS Kaunas Pakistan A2 26 Afghan Air Force is exhibited at PAF Museum Karachi Russia An 26 is displayed in Balashov town An 26 tail number RA 26610 is displayed in place of former Nadezhda airport in Norilsk An 26 tail number CCCP 26608 is displayed at the entrance to Salekhard airport SLY USDD Ukraine An 26 tail number UR 26194 is exhibited on the street side at Prospekt Komarova 1 in front of National Aviation University in Kyiv Specifications EditData from Jane s All The World s Aircraft 1988 89 184 General characteristicsCrew five two pilots one radio operator one flight engineer one navigator Capacity 40 passengers 5 500 kg 12 100 lb Length 23 8 m 78 ft 1 in Wingspan 29 3 m 96 ft 2 in Height 8 58 m 28 ft 2 in Wing area 74 98 m2 807 1 sq ft Aspect ratio 11 7 1 Empty weight 15 020 kg 33 113 lb Max takeoff weight 24 000 kg 52 911 lb Powerplant 2 Progress AI 24VT Turboprop engines 2 103 kW 2 820 hp each Powerplant 1 Tumansky Ru 19 A300 Turbojet booster APU 7 85 kN 1 760 lbf thrust Propellers 4 bladed Constant speed metal bladed propellers 3 90 m 12 ft 10 in diameterPerformance Cruise speed 440 km h 270 mph 240 kn Range 2 500 km 1 600 mi 1 300 nmi with maximum fuel Range with max payload 1 100 km 680 mi Service ceiling 7 500 m 24 600 ft Rate of climb 8 m s 1 600 ft min See also Edit Soviet Union portal Ukraine portal Aviation portalMilitary transport aircraftRelated development Antonov An 24 Antonov An 32 Xian Y 7 Xian MA60Aircraft of comparable role configuration and era Aeritalia G 222 Transall C 160Related lists List of military aircraft of the Soviet Union and the CISReferences EditCitations Edit Gordon Komissarov amp Komissarov 2003 p 44 a b Gordon Yefim Komissarov Dmitry amp Sergey Antonov s Turboprop Twins Hinkley Midland 2003 ISBN 978 1 85780 153 8 a b Gordon Komissarov amp Komissarov 2003 pp 27 41 Gordon Komissarov amp Komissarov 2003 pp 41 42 Taylor John W R 1974 Jane s Pocket Book of Military Transport and Training Aircraft New York Collier Books p 33 a b c d Gordon Komissarov amp Komissarov 2003 p 58 Antonov An 26 Archived from the original on 23 October 2015 Retrieved 1 November 2015 ereeves 5 February 2015 The infamous Antonov An 24 and An 26 cargo planes crude retrofitted bombers Sudan Research Analysis and Advocacy Archived from the original on 5 April 2015 Retrieved 14 August 2015 The Aviationist Russian warplanes used practice bombs with To Berlin and For Stalin slogans during Baltic drills The Aviationist 14 August 2015 Archived from the original on 14 August 2015 Retrieved 14 August 2015 Gordon Komissarov amp Komissarov 2003 p 47 a b c Gordon Komissarov amp Komissarov 2003 p 54 a b c d e f Gordon Komissarov amp Komissarov 2003 p 53 a b c d e Gordon Komissarov amp Komissarov 2003 p 55 a b c Gordon Komissarov amp Komissarov 2003 p 56 a b Gordon Komissarov amp Komissarov 2003 pp 48 49 a b Gordon Komissarov amp Komissarov 2003 p 48 a b c Gordon Komissarov amp Komissarov 2003 p 52 Gordon Komissarov amp Komissarov 2003 pp 53 54 Gordon Komissarov amp Komissarov 2003 pp 52 53 Gordon Komissarov amp Komissarov 2003 pp 50 51 Gordon Komissarov amp Komissarov 2003 pp 51 52 Gordon Komissarov amp Komissarov 2003 pp 55 56 Gordon Komissarov amp Komissarov 2003 p 50 a b c d Gordon Komissarov amp Komissarov 2003 p 49 Gordon Komissarov amp Komissarov 2003 pp 49 50 Gordon Komissarov amp Komissarov 2003 p 57 Gordon Komissarov amp Komissarov 2003 pp 57 58 Gordon Komissarov amp Komissarov 2003 pp 56 57 Fontanellaz Cooper amp Matos 2020 p 18 Hoyle Craig 2021 World Air Forces 2022 Flight International Retrieved 29 January 2022 Hoyle 2016 p 30 Hoyle 2016 p 32 Ogden 2008 page needed Hoyle 2016 p 33 a b World Air Forces 2021 FlightGlobal 4 December 2020 Retrieved 5 January 2021 a b c Hoyle 2016 p 39 1 listopada 2017 roku na DP ZAVOD 410 CA vidbulas peredacha vidnovlenogo litaka An 26 Nacionalnoyi Gvardiyi Respubliki Kazahstan Press release in Ukrainian Plant 410 CA 1 November 2017 Archived from the original on 14 November 2017 Retrieved 3 November 2017 Russia donates two An 26 aircraft to Kyrgyzstan Armed Forces Air Recognition 10 August 2017 Archived from the original on 12 August 2017 Retrieved 11 August 2017 a b c Hoyle 2016 p 41 Hoyle 2016 p 43 Sanchez Alejandro 26 February 2018 Russia donates two Antonov aircraft to Nicaragua IHS Jane s 360 Washington DC Archived from the original on 27 February 2018 Retrieved 2 March 2018 Martin Guy and David C Isby Thrushes Operated by Puntland Air International May 2014 Vol 86 No 5 p 25 a b c d Przeworski Marcin July 2017 Transportowa Europa cz II Skrzydlata Polska in Polish No 7 2453 2017 pp 38 46 ISSN 0137 866X a b Hoyle 2016 p 45 2022 World Air Forces Flight Global Retrieved 14 August 2022 Hoyle 2016 p 47 Cooper et al 2011 p 239 Hoyle 2016 p 48 Hoyle 2016 p 49 Hoyle 2016 p 53 Wheeler Barry 4 October 1980 World s Air Forces Flight 118 3726 1326 Historical moments Saying goodbye to the AN 26s honvedelem hu 11 June 2020 Retrieved 25 January 2021 Cooper et al 2011 p 34 Cooper et al 2011 p 41 Delalande Arnaud Niger s desert warriors Key Publishing Retrieved 9 May 2022 a b Cooper 2018 p 11 in Polish D Salata K Salata A Wrona Pozegnanie Ana 26 Goodbye to An 26 Skrzydlata Polska Nr 2 2009 p 28 World Air Forces 2017 Flight Global Archived from the original on 31 July 2017 Retrieved 10 August 2017 World Aif Forces 2016 PDF Flight Global Archived PDF from the original on 10 August 2017 Retrieved 10 August 2017 Rossi Marco 9 August 2017 First flight for Slovak Spartan Air Forces Monthly Archived from the original on 10 August 2017 Retrieved 10 August 2017 6th Special Operations Squadron Fact Sheet Archived from the original on 5 December 2008 Vietnam Facebook Retrieved 18 April 2021 Our Fleet aerogaviota com Archived from the original on 16 July 2017 Retrieved 8 September 2019 ER APV Accident description Aviation Safety Network Archived from the original on 14 October 2017 Retrieved 14 October 2017 Fleet of airline angara aero Retrieved 8 September 2019 About company chukotavia com Retrieved 8 September 2019 IrAero Company fleet iraero ru Retrieved 8 September 2019 Fleet khbavia ru Retrieved 8 September 2019 AEROTECHNICS kostroma avia ru Retrieved 8 September 2019 An 26 ak krasavia ru Retrieved 8 September 2019 Park VS polarair ru Archived from the original on 13 August 2020 Retrieved 8 September 2019 Cooper et al 2011 p 244 AN 26 100 antonov airlines com Archived from the original on 27 October 2019 Retrieved 8 September 2019 Antonov Airlines updates on fleet as it gains access to Hostomel Air Cargo News 6 April 2022 Retrieved 21 April 2022 Fleet constantaairlines com Archived from the original on 16 June 2019 Retrieved 8 September 2019 Our company ELERON aviation company Aircraft Specifications vulkanair com Retrieved 8 September 2019 Gordon Komissarov amp Komissarov 2003 p 102 Accident description for CCCP 26567 at the Aviation Safety Network Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26 T 20 Cuangar aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Accident description at the Aviation Safety Network Accident description for CCCP 26547 at the Aviation Safety Network Accident description for CCCP 26569 at the Aviation Safety Network Katastrofa An 26 Uralskogo UGA v a p Bajkit Accident An 26 Baykit Airport Retrieved 16 March 2021 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26 registration unknown Angola Namibia border aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Accident description for CCCP 26505 at the Aviation Safety Network Accident description at the Aviation Safety Network Accident description for 26264 at the Aviation Safety Network Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26 53 Anapa Airport AAQ aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26 D2 TAB Monte Bibala aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Accident description for CCCP 26627 at the Aviation Safety Network Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26 01 Klyuchi Air Base aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26 FAP 377 Casapalca aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26RT 05 Dzhabal Ussaradzh aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26 210 Veszprem Szentkiralyszabadja Air Base aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26 registration unknown Khost Airport KHT aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26 registration unknown Stadnitsa aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26 CCCP 26007 Alma Ata aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26 YA BAL Khost aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26 FAP 392 Saposoa Airport SQU aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26 registration unknown aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26 registration unknown Khost aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26 registration unknown Kunduz www asndata aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Tai nạn may bay quan sự 32 năm trước Kỳ 1 285 mất tich Military plane crash 32 years ago Period 1 285 missing Thanh Nien in Vietnamese 27 July 2019 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26 registration unknown Jalalabad Airport JAA aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Accident description at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 2021 02 14 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26 registration unknown Maimana aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26RT 04 Kudinovo aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26 T 237 Techamutete aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26 29 Kabul Airport KBL aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26 registration unknown Parachinar aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26 registration unknown aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26 registration unknown Cazambo aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26 YA BAK Zabol Airport ACZ aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Accident description for CCCP 26685 at the Aviation Safety Network Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26 registration unknown Chana aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26 14 22 Playa de Baracoa www asndata aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26 09 Petropavlovsk Kamchatsky Airport PKC www asndata aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Accident description for 26264 at the Aviation Safety Network Accident description for RA 47415 at the Aviation Safety Network Accident description for CU T1436 at the Aviation Safety Network Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26 52 Blue Spafaryev Island aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26 registration unknown Cazombo aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26 51 Petrel Sakhalin Oblast aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Accident description for BNMAU 14102 at the Aviation Safety Network Accident description for 26035 at the Aviation Safety Network Accident description for RA 26141 at the Aviation Safety Network Accident description at the Aviation Safety Network Accident description for UR 26207 at the Aviation Safety Network Harro Ranter 16 January 1995 ASN Aircraft accident Antonov 26 registration unknown North Angola Archived from the original on 20 March 2015 Retrieved 26 December 2014 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26B RA 26084 Ossora Airport aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26 TZ 347 Thessaloniki International Airport SKG aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Purulia arms drop case Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26B RA 26028 Malanje Airport MEG aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26 152 Bluefields Airport BEF aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26 UR 79170 Anuradhapura Airport ADP aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26B 9Q CJI Tshikapa aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26 D2 FDI Mona Quimbundo aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26 registration unknown Adar Yel www asndata aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26 07 red Lakhta Air Base aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26 9T TAD Boende Airport BNB aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26B EK 26060 Kisangani aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Cooper 2018 p 28 Accident description at the Aviation Safety Network Accident description at the Aviation Safety Network Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26 7799 Aweil Airport aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26B 100 ER 26068 Balad Air Base aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26 9Q COS Kinshasa N Djili Airport FIH aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Vietnam military plane crash kills five ABC News 8 April 2008 Retrieved 29 January 2022 Reed Business Information Limited Crashed An 26 had engine problem and aborted first approach Archived from the original on 3 September 2011 Retrieved 26 December 2014 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a author has generic name help Hradecky Simon Accident Exin AN26 at Tallinn on Aug 25th 2010 gear collapse during takeoff Aviation Herald Archived from the original on 3 October 2018 Retrieved 26 August 2010 DHL cargo plane crashes in Gabon no fatalities BNO News Archived from the original on 21 February 2019 Retrieved 7 June 2011 Cooper 2018 pp 28 29 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26 420 Sana a International Airport SAH aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Sudan Plane Crash Kills Government Minister Scores of Senior Officials NYCAviation BNO News 20 August 2012 Archived from the original on 23 August 2012 Retrieved 21 August 2012 Laura Smith Spark and Jomana Karadsheh CNN 21 February 2014 11 killed as Libyan military plane crashes in Tunisia CNN Archived from the original on 5 June 2014 Retrieved 26 December 2014 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a author has generic name help Sanchez Raf 17 July 2014 Ukrainian separatists suspected of bringing down Malaysia Airlines flight on Russian border The Telegraph Archived from the original on 17 July 2014 Retrieved 18 July 2014 Today the self defense destroyed An 26 airplane using SAM 9K37M1 better known as Buk Opolchency soobshili iz chego sbili ukrainskij An 26 Vzglyad 14 July 2014 Archived from the original on 17 July 2014 Retrieved 18 July 2014 Peter Baker 18 July 2014 U S Sees Evidence of Russian Links to Jet s Downing Archived 2 March 2017 at the Wayback Machine The New York Times Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26 YK AND Abu adh Dhuhur Air Base aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Accident description for S2 AGZ at the Aviation Safety Network Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Antonov An 26 registration unknown El Obeid Airport EBD www aviation safety net Retrieved 4 June 2022 Farrell Paul 29 April 2017 Aerogaviota Plane Crash 5 Fast Facts You Need to Know Heavy com Archived from the original on 29 April 2017 Accident description for RF 36160 at the Aviation Safety Network EK 26006 Accident description Aviation Safety Network Archived from the original on 30 August 2017 Retrieved 29 August 2017 Abidjan Antonov crash claims four lives Air International Vol 93 no 6 December 2017 p 15 ISSN 0306 5634 V Minoborony RF utochnili chislo pogibshih v aviakatastrofe An 26 v Sirii in Russian Zvezda 6 March 2018 Archived from the original on 7 March 2018 Retrieved 6 March 2018 Crash Gomair AN26 near Kinshasa on Dec 20th 2018 impacted terrain short of runway Retrieved 22 December 2018 Cherisey de Erwan 2 January 2019 DRC air force An 26 crashes Jane s 360 Paris Archived from the original on 3 January 2019 Retrieved 3 January 2019 An 26 Cargo Plane Crashes After Takeoff In South Sudan Simple Flying 22 August 2020 Retrieved 15 March 2021 a b in Ukrainian PLANE FALL IN KHARKIV REGION TWENTY PEOPLE KILLED Ukrayinska Pravda 25 September 2020 Ukrajina truchli za obeti padu letadla pilot si mohl splest drahu s cestou 26 September 2020 Antonov An 26 Turboprop Crashes In Kazakhstan Simple Flying 14 March 2021 Litvinova Daria 6 July 2021 Plane apparently crashes in Russia 28 aboard feared dead The Associated Press Retrieved 6 July 2021 No survivors in Russian An 26 plane crash reports Reuters 6 July 2021 Antonov An 26 crew did not survive plane crash in Russia s Far East TASS Retrieved 22 September 2021 Ranter Harro Accident Description Aviation Safety Network Archived from the original on 3 November 2021 Retrieved 2 November 2021 Crash Euro AN26 at Juba on Nov 2nd 2021 lost height after takeoff avherald com Retrieved 21 November 2021 Ukrainian military plane shot down five killed authorities Reuters 24 February 2022 Archived from the original on 24 February 2022 Retrieved 24 February 2022 Charpentreau Clement 24 February 2022 Ukraine Air Force Antonov An 26 crashes near Kyiv five dead Aerotime Hub untitled Aviations Safety Network Retrieved 24 February 2022 Antonov s sources claim that the world s largest aircraft An 225 Mriya was destroyed 27 February 2022 Retrieved 25 March 2022 Radina Gigova and Nathan Hodge 22 April 2022 At least one person is dead after a plane crash in Ukraine s Zaporizhzhia region CNN Retrieved 22 April 2022 Taylor 1988 pp 222 223 Bibliography Edit Chant Christopher Commercial Aircraft and Airline Markings Cooper Tom 2018 Hot Skies Over Yemen Volume 2 Aerial Warfare Over the South Arabian Peninsula 1994 2017 Warwick UK Helion amp Company Publishing ISBN 978 1 911628 18 7 Cooper Tom Weinert Peter Hinz Fabian Lepko Mark 2011 African MiGs Volume 2 Madagascar to Zimbabwe Houston Harpia Publishing ISBN 978 0 9825539 8 5 Fontanellaz Adrien Cooper Tom Matos Jose Augusto 2020 War of Intervention in Angola Volume 3 Angolan and Cuban Air Forces 1975 1985 Warwick UK Helion amp Company Publishing ISBN 978 1 913118 61 7 Gordon Yefim Komissarov Dmitry Komissarov Sergey 2003 Antonov s Turboprop Twins Hinkley UK Midland ISBN 978 1 85780 153 8 Hoyle Craig 8 14 December 2015 World Air Forces Flight International Vol 188 no 5517 pp 26 53 Hoyle Craig 6 12 December 2016 World Air Forces Directory Flight International Vol 190 no 5566 pp 22 53 Ogden Bob 2008 Aviation Museums and Collections of The Rest of the World UK Air Britain ISBN 978 0 85130 394 9 Taylor John W R ed 1988 Jane s All The World s Aircraft 1988 89 Coulsdon UK Jane s Defence Data ISBN 978 0 7106 0867 3 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Antonov An 26 Pictures of An 26 at Airliners net https web archive org web 20061023125914 http www antonov com about an 26 xml https web archive org web 20061103104838 http www aeronautics ru an26a jpg http rus air ru airplanes images An 26pict htm http www transportflieger eu http www luroko de Details of An 26 at EnglishRussia com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Antonov An 26 amp oldid 1145339059, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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