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Ilyushin Il-12

The Ilyushin Il-12 (NATO reporting name: Coach) was a Soviet twin-engine cargo aircraft, developed in the mid-1940s for small and medium-haul airline routes and as a military transport.

Il-12
Ilyushin Il-12 at China Aviation Museum, Beijing
Role Transport aircraft
Design group Ilyushin
First flight 15 August 1945
Introduction 1947
Retired 1986 (China)
Status Retired
Primary user Aeroflot
Produced 1946-1949[1]
Number built 663
Developed into Ilyushin Il-14

Design and development Edit

The Il-12 was developed as a private venture by the Ilyushin Design Bureau from autumn 1943 and was intended as a replacement for the Lisunov Li-2, a license-produced version of the Douglas DC-3.[2][3] Initial studies proposed a 29-seat airliner powered by four 1,000 hp (750 kW) supercharged M-88V engines (as used in the Ilyushin Il-4 bomber) and with a pressurized cabin, allowing the aircraft to cruise at an altitude of 6,000–7,000 m (20,000–23,000 ft), with a range of 5,000 km (3,100 mi) at almost 400 km/h (250 mph). The aircraft would be fitted with a tricycle landing gear, the first use by the Ilyushin OKB.[4]

During 1944, the design was changed, with the M-88B engines replaced by two ACh-31 diesel V-12 engines (each producing 1,900 hp (1,400 kW) at take-off). The plans for a pressurized fuselage were abandoned and the number of passengers reduced to 27. The lower operating altitude resulted in a reduction in the aircraft's range and cruising speed.[5] The Il-12 made its maiden flight on 15 August 1945.[2][6][7] It was soon decided to re-engine the aircraft with Shvetsov ASh-82 radial engines, as is was expected to take too long to develop the ACh-31 to an acceptable reliability and time between overhauls for commercial service.[8] The modified first prototype flew with its new engines on 9 January 1946.[9][10][7]

The Il-12 was found to have problems with vibration during testing, having poor engine out characteristics and requiring a strut under the rear fuselage to prevent tipping during loading due to centre-of-gravity problems.[11] However, factory test pilots praised the quality of the new aircraft, with much better performance and handling than the Li-2, which contributed to the decision to launch the Il-12 in series production.[12] One problem was the use of magnesium near the engines which, in case of engine fire, could cause an uncontrolled fire, damaging the wing structure. This was revealed by a crash of an Ilyushin Il-12 near Voronezh in 1949 which killed all on board, following an engine fire. Subsequently, as a result of the accident investigation, the magnesium was replaced by aluminium alloys and the fire extinguishing system was redesigned. In addition, the aircraft's takeoff weight was restricted to ease the hazard of an engine failure during take-off - this in turn reduced the aircraft's passenger capacity, which was temporary limited to 18.[13]

The Il-12 was a low-wing cantilever monoplane, with a single fin and rudder and a retractable tricycle undercarriage. It was powered by two Shvetsov ASh-82FN radial engines, rated at 1,850 hp (1,380 kW) for take-off and 1,630 hp (1,220 kW) at 1,550 m (5,090 ft), driving four-bladed propellers.[9][14] The fuselage had a considerable volume, and was equipped with eight rectangular windows on each side. The crew consisted of three and the aircraft could transport 32 soldiers, 32 parachutists or cargo. There was also a civil version, which although designed to carry up to 32 passengers, was limited in Aeroflot service to 21, with normally only 18 carried.[11] At that passenger load, it meant that use of the Il-12 for passenger use was un-economic.

A total of 663 Il-12s were manufactured.[11] The aircraft was later improved into the Ilyushin Il-14.

Operational history Edit

 
Ilyushin Il-12 of Aeroflot at Budapest Ferihegy Airport, 1956

The Il-12 was revealed to the public on 1 May 1947, when a group of aircraft participated in the annual May Day flyby over Red Square in Moscow. Performance testing was completed by 20 May, and the first regular passenger service by the Il-12 on Aeroflot began in June 1947. The first regular international use of the Il-12 was on the Moscow-Sofia route in 1948. The Il-12 was used on Aeroflot's services to Paris from 1954.

Within the USSR, the Il-12 was placed on Aeroflot's longest route: Moscow-Khabarovsk, with the flight lasting 28 hours, including five refueling stops. From 1956, the Il-12 (modified for use on ice runways) supported the Soviet expeditions to Antarctica. Aeroflot continued to use the Il-12 on some routes until the end of 1970.

Export sales Edit

The first export customer for the Il-12 was LOT Polish Airlines, who placed an order for five Il-12Bs after it was displayed at the Poznan Fair in Poland in the spring of 1948. This was followed by Czech Airlines, who purchased 10 aircraft from 1949 to 1951, TAROM in Romania from 1949, and at least 20 aircraft to CAAC in China.

Variants Edit

  • Il-12A : Basic passenger version with 27 seats standard, also produced in versions with 6, 11, 16, 18, 21 and 32 seats.
  • Il-12B : Modification from 1948, fitted with an improved de-icing system, lengthened nosewheel and a small dorsal fin fillet.
  • Il-12D : military transport version for the Soviet Air Force launched in 1948, for 38 paratroops or military cargo to 3700 kg.
  • Il-12T : transport version for arctic operations, with a large cargo door on the left side of the fuselage.

Accidents and incidents Edit

Of the 663 Il-12s produced, 56 have been lost in accidents with a total of 465 fatalities.

1940s Edit

1 July 1947
An Aeroflot Il-12P (CCCP-Л1317) crashed on takeoff from Vnukovo Airport due to loss of speed following unexplained engine failure, killing four of six on board.[15]
19 September 1947
An Aeroflot Il-12P (CCCP-Л1332) was struck by a crashing North American B-25 (CCCP-И850) that had lost control during an emergency landing at Vnukovo Airport; both aircraft burned out, but there were no casualties.[16]
24 November 1947
An Aeroflot Il-12P (CCCP-Л1356) overran the runway on takeoff from Koltsovo Airport; all six crew survived. The aircraft was overloaded by 330 kg (728 lb) and had not been properly de-iced.[17]
1 December 1947
A Polyarnaya Aviatsiya Il-12 (CCCP-Н439) was on an unauthorized positioning flight from Kimry to Moscow when it force-landed near Taldom (27 km (17 mi) south of Borki Airfield) after the left engine lost power due to an oil leak; all five crew survived.[18]
18 December 1947
Aeroflot Flight 6, an Il-12P (CCCP-Л1343), stalled and crashed near Severny Airport while attempting to land following a go-around due to engine failure, killing seven of 25 on board.[19]
2 September 1948
An Aeroflot Il-12 (CCCP-Л1465) crashed on takeoff from Severny Airport after entering a descent when the flight engineer reduced engine power; a propeller blade broke off and penetrated the fuselage, killing one of 20 on board.[20]
9 September 1948
An Aeroflot Il-12 (CCCP-Л1427) crashed near Baimakovo Aerodrome during a training flight following a loss of control, killing all four crew. The pilot was practicing flying with one engine out. The instructor feathered the propeller too soon after a go-around with the flaps deployed and the aircraft entered a banking turn with a loss of airspeed. Control was lost and the aircraft entered a dive.[21]
12 October 1948
An Aeroflot Il-12 (CCCP-Л1450) disappeared over the Caucasus Mountains near Yevlakh with ten on board. After arriving at Baku, the flight was unable to continue to Tbilisi due to bad weather. The next day the aircraft left for Tbilisi, but the crew failed to check weather conditions along the flight route. The aircraft climbed to 3,000 m (9,800 ft). En route the aircraft encountered navigation problems due to poor reception of radio beacons. The crew then decided to return to Baku but never made it. Last radio contact was near Yevlakh; the aircraft has never been found.[22]
23 December 1948
An Aeroflot Il-12P (CCCP-Л1731) collided in mid-air near Valuyevo with an Aeroflot TS-62 (CCCP-Л861) that was being ferried from Vnukovo Airport to Bykovo Airport, killing all 12 on board both aircraft. The brand-new Il-12 was being handed over to a crew from Aeroflot's Georgian division, but when the crew failed to turn up in time, the aircraft was then handed over to a crew from the Uzbek division instead. The Il-12 then departed for Tashkent via Lyubertsy, although ATC did not know the change in the flight plan and assumed the Il-12 was going to land at Vnukovo. The Il-12 collided with the TS-62, breaking off both engines while the tail of the TS-62 was sheared off. ATC errors were blamed.[23][24]
19 January 1949
An Aeroflot Il-12P (CCCP-Л1381) crashed shortly after takeoff from Stalino Airport (now Donetsk Airport) due to loss of altitude following engine problems, killing eight of nine on board; two people also died when the aircraft crashed into a house.[25]
13 May 1949
Aeroflot Flight 17, an Il-12P (CCCP-Л1791), crashed during descent to Novosibirsk in bad weather due to loss of control following a lightning strike, killing all 25 on board.[26]
21 July 1949
Aeroflot Flight 5, an Il-12P (CCCP-Л1714), crashed and burned in a forest near Marga while attempting a forced landing following an engine fire, killing 13 of 14 on board.[27][28]
20 August 1949
An Aeroflot Il-12 (CCCP-Л1434) crashed near Polukotelnikovo after losing altitude in a downdraft, killing eight of 11 on board.[29]
25 August 1949
An Aeroflot Il-12P (CCCP-Л1844) struck Mount Kabanya (20 mi south of Kabansk) following an unexplained descent from 2,400 m (7,874 ft) to 1,200 m (3,900 ft), killing all 14 on board.[30]
20 September 1949
An Aeroflot Il-12 (CCCP-Л1462) crashed near Savasleyka while attempting a forced landing following engine failure, killing three of four crew.[31]

1950s Edit

19 July 1950
An Aeroflot Il-12P (CCCP-Л1340) struck the top of a 175 m (574 ft) hill and crashed near Tbilisi Airport during a training flight after the pilot deviated from the glide scope and approach pattern, killing four of 11 on board; on board were six unauthorized passengers, all Tbilisi Airport employees. The hill that the aircraft hit was not indicated on the flight map.[32]
30 July 1950
An Aeroflot Il-12P (CCCP-Л1803) crashed shortly after takeoff from Karaganda Airport due to loss of control following engine failure, killing all 25 on board. Six minutes after takeoff the crew radioed that engine number one had failed and that they were returning to the airport. While turning for final approach, the aircraft turned left (in the direction of the failed engine) and lost speed while lowering the landing gear. Control was lost and the aircraft spiraled down and crashed. The left engine was having problems before and after maintenance, but the crew operating the test flight failed to report the problem.[33]
11 August 1950
Aeroflot Flight 8, an Il-12P (CCCP-Л1706), struck trees and crashed in a meadow while on approach to Koltsovo Airport in fog after descending below the glide scope due to pilot error, killing two of five crew; all 22 passengers survived.[34][35]
9 January 1951
An Aeroflot Il-12P (CCCP-Л1811) crashed in the Black Sea off Tuapse following a fuel tank explosion and fire due to a lightning strike, killing all eight on board. The storm that the crew flew into was not forecast and a storm warning was issued some 40 minutes after the crash.[36]
13 March 1951
An Aeroflot Il-12P (CCCP-Л1319) crashed near Koltsovo Airport following a loss of altitude during approach; there were no casualties.[37]
29 March 1951
An Aeroflot Il-12P (CCCP-Л1313) crashed near Vnukovo Airport during a test flight following multiple diversions due to spatial disorientation caused by a malfunctioning radio compass, killing three of four crew; all four passengers survived.[38]
14 November 1951
An Aeroflot Il-12P (CCCP-Л1360) crashed shortly after takeoff from Nikolayevsk-na-Amure following a loss of altitude due to pilot error; all 19 on board survived. The aircraft took off with moist snow on the fuselage that had accumulated during taxiing and engine tests. A late and slow takeoff caused the aircraft to vibrate and the flight engineer mistook the vibration for a rough-running engine and overfueled the left engine, and it lost power. Altitude was lost and the aircraft crashed.[39]
17 November 1951
An Aeroflot Il-12P (CCCP-Л1775) lost control and crashed shortly after takeoff from Novosibirsk Severny Airport due to wing icing, killing all 23 on board.[40]
21 February 1952
An Aeroflot Il-12 (CCCP-Л1849) crashed shortly after takeoff from Baratayevka Airport during a training flight, killing one of 18 on board. The aircraft took off with the center of gravity too far forward. Due to pilot error, altitude was lost. The pilot attempted to gain altitude, but the propellers had struck the ground. The aircraft bounced twice and after touching the ground a second time, a blade separated from the left propeller and penetrated the fuselage, killing a passenger and seriously injuring another. After repairs, the aircraft returned to service, flying as a cargo freighter until 1964.[41]
5 April 1952
Aeroflot Flight 5, an Il-12P (CCCP-Л1308), lost control and crashed shortly after takeoff from Magdagachi Airport, killing all six on board. A clamp had been left on the left aileron and had not been removed before takeoff.[42]
25 April 1952
An Aeroflot Il-12P (CCCP-Л1312) crashed near Karmanovo during a training flight, killing eight of nine on board. The crew was simulating flying in cloud with the left engine out and its propeller feathered. Airspeed was lost and the aircraft entered a left turn. Two of the crew ran to the rear of the aircraft. The flight engineer attempted to move the propeller to its normal position and increased power to the right engine, but the aircraft crashed. Crew errors were blamed.[43]
18 July 1952
A LOT Polish Airlines Il-12B (SP-LHC) was written off after it crashed on landing at Warsaw.[44]
23 August 1952
An Aeroflot Il-12 (CCCP-Л1488) force-landed near Chlya in a valley between Lake Oryol and Lake Chlya; seventy minutes after takeoff, the crew heard a loud clap and felt a vibration. A portion of a blade on the right propeller had broken off and penetrated the fuselage, severing hydraulic lines, engine control cables and electrical cables. Shrapnel also struck the legs of the flight mechanic and embedded itself in the upper wing of a Po-2 (CCCP-T743) that the aircraft was carrying. The engine began vibrating but the crew could not shut it down nor feather the propeller and a forced landing was made. The flight mechanic later died of blood loss, but there were no other casualties. It was found that while the aircraft was serving with Dalstroi Aviation (as CCCP-X837) the propeller blade had been improperly repaired. The aircraft was repaired and returned to service, flying until 1963.[45]
5 October 1952
Aeroflot Flight 376, an Il-12P (CCCP-Л1328), collided in mid-air near Skvoritsy with Aeroflot Flight 381, a Douglas TS-62 (CCCP-Л1055) due to ATC errors, killing all 24 on board both aircraft.[46]
23 January 1953
Aeroflot Flight 22, an Il-12P (CCCP-Л1435), collided in mid-air shortly after takeoff from Kazan Airport with an Aeroflot Lisunov Li-2 (CCCP-Л4582) due to ATC errors, killing all 11 on board both aircraft.[47]
30 April 1953
Aeroflot Flight 35, an Il-12P (CCCP-Л1777) ditched in the Volga River while on approach to Kazan Airport following double engine failure due to bird strikes (ducks), killing one of 23 on board. During the approach to Kazan, the aircraft flew into a flock of ducks. One duck hit near the windshield, damaging the engine magneto switches and causing a short circuit, after which the engines quit. The propellers could not be feathered because the generator did not supply enough power to the electrical system.[48]
14 June 1953
Aeroflot Flight 229, an Il-12P (CCCP-Л1375), crashed on a hillside 9 mi northeast of Zugdidi due to wing failure after flying into a thunderstorm, killing all 18 on board, including Georgian film actress Nato Vachnadze.[49]
27 July 1953
A Soviet Navy Il-12 was shot down by USAF F-86F Sabre 51-12959 and crashed near Mao-erh-Shan, killing all 21 on board; the Il-12 was the last aircraft destroyed during the Korean War (the armistice was signed later that day). The pilot of the F-86 initially identified the aircraft as a North Korean Il-12 and decided to shoot it down. A long burst of gunfire was enough to shoot down the Il-12, which turned out to be a Soviet Navy transport flying through North Korean airspace to Vladivostok.[50][51]
14 October 1953
Aeroflot Flight 9, an Il-12P (CCCP-Л1727), stalled and crashed shortly after takeoff from Irkutsk Airport after the pilot mistook inner marker lights for an aircraft approaching head-on, killing four of six crew; all 22 passengers survived.[52]
27 October 1953
Aeroflot Flight 783, an Il-12P (CCCP-Л1765), crashed near Magadan-13 Airport due to wing icing and overloading, killing 22 of 27 on board.[53]
4 November 1953
Aeroflot Flight 5, an Il-12P (CCCP-Л1367), crashed on approach to Magdagachi Airport due to an incorrectly set altimeter, killing the five crew.[54]
July 1954
Flight mechanic V. Polyakov stole an Il-12 at Novosibirsk, intending to ram the house where his unfaithful wife lived. For four hours he circled the city, performing sharp turns around buildings. Two fighters were scrambled and had orders to redirect the Il-12 out of the city and then shoot it down. Polyakov did not follow the fighters and instead after calming down, landed safely at the airport where he was arrested. Although threatened with severe punishment, Polyakov only received three years thanks to a petition from Sergey Ilyushin, who proved that the Il-12 could be safely flown in such extreme conditions.[55]
27 September 1954
Aeroflot Flight 10, an Il-12P (CCCP-Л1365), struck trees and crashed short of the runway at Severny Airport in poor visibility, killing all 29 on board. This accident remains the deadliest involving the Il-12.[56]
28 October 1954
Aeroflot Flight 136, an Il-12P (CCCP-Л1789), disappeared during a Irkutsk-Krasnoyarsk-Moscow flight with 19 (or 20) on board; the aircraft was found by accident in June 1955 on Mount Sivukha, Krasnoyarsk Territory by a hunter. Strong winds had blown the aircraft off course.[57][58]
5 December 1954
Aeroflot Flight 98, an Il-12P (CCCP-Л1320), crashed at Pervomaiski (4.5 km northwest of Alma-Ata) while attempting an emergency landing following engine problems, killing one of 19 on board. The air self-start valve on cylinder 10 of engine number one burned out due to poor maintenance, but the crew mistook it for an engine fire and shut down the engine. Pilot errors were also blamed.[59]
4 March 1955
A GUSMP Il-12T (CCCP-Н479) crashed during a forced landing near Kepino following an engine fire and resultant separation, killing four of five crew; all 20 passengers survived.[60]
2 July 1955
A Polyarnaya Aviatsiya Il-12 (CCCP-Н480) crashed on landing at Nagurskoye Air Base after touching down on a portion of the runway that had not been cleared of snow, breaking off the left landing gear; no casualties.[61]
9 September 1955
Aeroflot Flight 5, an Il-12P (CCCP-Л1359) crashed near Komarovo due to tail separation and severe turbulence after flying into a thunderstorm, killing all seven on board.[62]
26 April 1956
An Aeroflot aircraft, most likely an Il-12, crashed at Berlin-Bohnsdorf after striking a church tower on approach in fog, killing three of six on board.[63]
8 September 1956
A Polarnaya Aviatsiya Il-12P (CCCP-Н525) undershot the runway during landing at Dikson Airport due to pilot error, breaking off the landing gear; no casualties.[64]
24 November 1956
A CSA Czechoslovak Airlines Il-12B (OK-DBP) crashed in a field at Eglisau (12 km (7.5 mi) from Kloten Airport) while attempting to return to the airport following an engine fire, killing all 23 on board.[65]
7 August 1957
Aeroflot Flight 554, an Il-12P (CCCP-Л1828), crashed short of the runway at Magdagachi Airport after deviating from the approach pattern due to strong winds, killing the pilot.[66]
1 October 1957
Aeroflot Flight 11, an Il-12P (CCCP-Л1389), struck trees and crashed on a hill near Akshi after the crew became disorientated after deviating from the flight route; of the 28 on board, only a passenger survived.[67]
27 October 1957
An Aeroflot Il-12P (CCCP-Н442) struck terrain and crashed at North Pole drifting station SP-7 while flying too low on approach in bad weather; although all six crew survived and were rescued 21 hours after the crash by an Mi-4, the navigator died five days later without regaining consciousness.[68]
18 December 1957
Aeroflot Flight 10, an Il-12P (CCCP-Л1309), disappeared while operating a Khabarovsk-Magdagachi-Moscow passenger service with 27 on board. In June 1958, the burned-out wreckage was found on the western slope of Mount Poktoy (30 km (19 mi) west of Birobidzhan) with no survivors. While parked and during taxiing at Khabarovsk Airport, strong winds damaged the rudder which failed 26 minutes into the flight. Another Il-12 (CCCP-Л1330) that was parked next to CCCP-Л1309 also suffered rudder damage.[69]
9 June 1958
Aeroflot Flight 105, an Il-12P (CCCP-Л1364), struck a hill in bad weather due to pilot error while descending for Magadan-13 Airport, killing all 24 on board.[70]
19 September 1958
An Aeroflot Il-12P (CCCP-Л3904) struck a mountain slope in the Lazo District due to fuel exhaustion after the crew became disorientated in bad weather at night, killing all 28 on board.[71]
15 December 1958
An Aeroflot Il-12 (CCCP-Л1467) overran the runway on landing at Cherepovets Airport after landing late due to pilot error; no casualties.[72]
24 December 1958
An Aeroflot Il-12T (CCCP-Л1458) ran off the runway on takeoff from Uralsk Airport after the flight engineer mistakenly shut down the engines in panic when he thought the aircraft was going to hit a railway embankment; all five crew survived.[73]
9 January 1959
A GUSMP Il-12L (CCCP-04249) crashed short of the runway at Mirny Station, collapsing the landing gear; no casualties. The aircraft was on its first flight after reassembly in Antarctica and was the only Il-12 equipped with ski landing gear.[74]
29 November 1959
An Aeroflot Il-12 (CCCP-01426) crashed at Irkutsk Airport after landing in the grass next to the runway after deviating from the runway centerline, killing the four crew.[75]

1960s Edit

7 January 1960
An Aeroflot Il-12 (CCCP-01438) landed hard at Leningrad Airport after the pilot had difficulty locating the reserve runway (the main runway was being cleared of snow); all five crew survived.[76]
21 July 1960
Aeroflot Flight 414, an Il-12P (CCCP-01405), crashed on takeoff at Minsk Airport into a motor depot after failing to left off due to a waterlogged runway, killing seven of 28 on board; an airport employee also died when he was electrocuted after stepping on a downed power line.[77]

Operators Edit

  Bulgaria
  Czechoslovakia
  People's Republic of China
  Laos
  Poland
  Romania
  Mongolia
  Soviet Union
  North Korea

Specifications (Il-12) Edit

Data from The Osprey Encyclopedia of Russian Aircraft from 1875 - 1995[11]

General characteristics

  • Crew: 3
  • Capacity: 21[83]-32[84] passengers
  • Length: 21.31 m (69 ft 11 in)
  • Wingspan: 31.70 m (104 ft 0 in)
  • Height: 8.07 m (26 ft 6 in) [85]
  • Wing area: 103 m2 (1,110 sq ft)
  • Empty weight: 11,045 kg (24,350 lb)
  • Max takeoff weight: 17,250 kg (38,030 lb)
  • Powerplant: 2 × ASh-82FNV fourteen-cylinder two-row air cooled radial engine, 1,380 kW (1,850 hp) each

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 407 km/h (253 mph, 220 kn) at 2,500 m (8,200 ft)
  • Range: 1,500 km (930 mi, 810 nmi)
  • Endurance: 4.5 hr
  • Service ceiling: 6,500 m (21,300 ft)
  • Time to altitude: 15 minutes to 5,000 m (16,400 ft)

References Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ . Planepictures.net. Archived from the original on 20 March 2016. Retrieved 4 May 2013.
  2. ^ a b Stroud Aeroplane Monthly September 1993, p. 59
  3. ^ Gordon, Komissarov & Komissarov 2004, p. 155
  4. ^ Gordon, Komissarov & Komissarov 2004, pp. 155–156
  5. ^ Gordon, Komissarov & Komissarov 2004, pp. 156–157
  6. ^ Gordon, Komissarov & Komissarov 2004, p. 157
  7. ^ a b "Dates of Maiden Flights by Aircraft Designed by "Ilyushin" Design Bureau." 18 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Ilyushin Aviation Complex. Retrieved: 13 November 2010.
  8. ^ Gordon, Komissarov & Komissarov 2004, pp. 157–158
  9. ^ a b Stroud Aeroplane Monthly September 1993, p. 60
  10. ^ Gordon, Komissarov & Komissarov 2004, p. 158
  11. ^ a b c d Gunston 1995, p. 110
  12. ^ Gordon, Komissarov & Komissarov 2004, pp. 158–159
  13. ^ Gordon, Komissarov & Komissarov 2004, pp. 160–161
  14. ^ Gordon, Komissarov & Komissarov 2004, p. 171
  15. ^ Accident description for CCCP-L1317 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 20 January 2016.
  16. ^ Hull-loss description for CCCP-L1332 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 22 January 2016.
  17. ^ Accident description for CCCP-L1356 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 26 August 2021.
  18. ^ Accident description for CCCP-N439 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 10 November 2016.
  19. ^ Accident description for CCCP-L1343 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 20 January 2016.
  20. ^ Accident description for CCCP-L1465 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 20 January 2016.
  21. ^ Accident description for CCCP-L1427 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 20 January 2016.
  22. ^ Accident description for CCCP-L1450 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 22 January 2016.
  23. ^ Accident description for CCCP-L1731 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 20 January 2016.
  24. ^ Accident description for CCCP-L861 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 20 January 2016.
  25. ^ Accident description for CCCP-L1381 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 22 January 2016.
  26. ^ Accident description for CCCP-L1791 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 22 January 2016.
  27. ^ Accident description for CCCP-L1714 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 22 January 2016.
  28. ^ "Катастрофа Ил-12 1-й ОАГ ГВФ в районе пос. Марга Иркутской области" [Accident Il-12 near Marga village, Irkutsk Oblast] (in Russian).
  29. ^ Accident description for CCCP-L1434 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 10 November 2016.
  30. ^ Accident description for CCCP-L1844 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 2016-01-22.
  31. ^ Accident description for CCCP-L1462 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 22 January 2016.
  32. ^ Accident description for CCCP-L1340 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 2016-01-22.
  33. ^ Accident description for CCCP-L1803 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 2016-01-22.
  34. ^ Accident description for CCCP-L1706 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 2016-01-22.
  35. ^ "Катастрофа Ил-12 1-ой Московской авиагруппы ГВФ близ а/п Свердловск-Кольцово" [Accident Il-12 near Sverdlovsk-Koltsovo Airport] (in Russian).
  36. ^ Accident description for CCCP-L1811 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 2016-01-22.
  37. ^ Accident description for CCCP-L1319 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 25 November 2021.
  38. ^ Accident description for CCCP-L1313 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 10 November 2016.
  39. ^ Accident description for CCCP-L1360 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 26 August 2021.
  40. ^ Accident description for CCCP-L1775 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 2016-01-22.
  41. ^ Accident description for CCCP-L1849 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 2016-11-10.
  42. ^ Accident description for CCCP-L1308 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 2016-11-10.
  43. ^ Accident description for CCCP-L1312 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 2016-11-10.
  44. ^ Accident description for SP-LHC at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 2016-01-22.
  45. ^ Accident description for CCCP-L1488 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 2016-11-10.
  46. ^ Accident description for CCCP-L1328 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 2016-01-22.
  47. ^ Accident description for CCCP-L1435 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 2016-01-22.
  48. ^ Accident description for CCCP-L1777 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 2016-11-10.
  49. ^ Accident description for CCCP-L1375 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 2016-01-22.
  50. ^ "Up From Kitty Hawk 1947-1953." airforce-magazine.com. Retrieved: 17 July 2011.
  51. ^ Criminal description at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 2016-01-22.
  52. ^ Accident description for CCCP-L1727 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 2016-11-10.
  53. ^ Accident description for CCCP-L1765 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 2016-01-22.
  54. ^ Accident description for CCCP-L1367 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 2016-01-22.
  55. ^ Drozdov, Sergey. "ВОЗДУШНЫЕ ПИРАТЫ СТРАНЫ СОВЕТОВ" [Air pirates of the Soviet countries].
  56. ^ Accident description for CCCP-L1365 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 2016-01-22.
  57. ^ Accident description for CCCP-L1789 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 2016-01-22.
  58. ^ "Катастрофа Ил-12 МУТА ГВФ в Красноярской тайге" [Accident Il-12 in the Krasnoyarsk taiga] (in Russian).
  59. ^ Accident description for CCCP-L1320 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 2016-01-22.
  60. ^ Accident description for CCCP-N479 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 2016-01-22.
  61. ^ Accident description for CCCP-N480 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 26 August 2021.
  62. ^ Accident description for CCCP-L1359 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 2016-01-22.
  63. ^ Accident description at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 2016-01-22.
  64. ^ Accident description for CCCP-N525 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 2016-01-22.
  65. ^ Accident description for OK-DBP at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 2016-01-22.
  66. ^ Accident description for CCCP-L1828 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 2016-01-22.
  67. ^ Accident description for CCCP-L1389 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 26 August 2021.
  68. ^ Accident description for CCCP-N442 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 2016-01-22.
  69. ^ Accident description for CCCP-L1309 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 2016-01-22.
  70. ^ Accident description for CCCP-L1364 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 2016-01-22.
  71. ^ Accident description for CCCP-L3904 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 2016-01-22.
  72. ^ Accident description for CCCP-L1467 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 26 August 2021.
  73. ^ Accident description for CCCP-L1458 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 26 August 2021.
  74. ^ Accident description for CCCP-04249 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 2016-01-22.
  75. ^ Accident description for CCCP-01426 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 2016-01-22.
  76. ^ Accident description for CCCP-01438 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 26 August 2021.
  77. ^ Accident description for CCCP-01405 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 2016-01-25.
  78. ^ Gordon, Komissarov & Komissarov 2004, p. 168
  79. ^ a b c d Gordon, Komissarov & Komissarov 2004, p. 170
  80. ^ Jońca, Adam (1985). Samoloty linii lotniczych 1945-1956, WKiŁ, Warsaw, ISBN 83-206-0529-6 (in Polish), p.15
  81. ^ Gordon, Komissarov & Komissarov 2004, p. 167
  82. ^ Gordon, Komissarov & Komissarov 2004, pp. 169–170
  83. ^ Stroud 1968, p. 99
  84. ^ Stroud 1968, p. 100
  85. ^ Stroud 1968, p. 110

Bibliography Edit

  • Gordon, Yefim; Komissarov, Dmitry; Komissarov, Sergei (2004). OKB Ilyushin: A History of the Design Bureau and its Aircraft. Hinckley, Leicestershire, UK: Midland Publishing. ISBN 1-85780-187-3.
  • Gunston, Bill (1995). The Osprey Encyclopedia of Russian Aircraft from 1875 - 1995. London: Osprey Aerospace. ISBN 1-85532-405-9.
  • Stroud, John (1968). Soviet Transport Aircraft since 1945. London: Putnam. ISBN 0-370-00126-5.
  • Stroud, John (September 1993). "Post War Propliners: Ilyushin Il-12 and Il-14". Aeroplane Monthly. Vol. 21, no. 9. pp. 58–63. ISSN 0143-7240.


ilyushin, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, 2012, learn, when. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Ilyushin Il 12 news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Ilyushin Il 12 NATO reporting name Coach was a Soviet twin engine cargo aircraft developed in the mid 1940s for small and medium haul airline routes and as a military transport Il 12Ilyushin Il 12 at China Aviation Museum BeijingRole Transport aircraftDesign group IlyushinFirst flight 15 August 1945Introduction 1947Retired 1986 China Status RetiredPrimary user AeroflotProduced 1946 1949 1 Number built 663Developed into Ilyushin Il 14 Contents 1 Design and development 2 Operational history 2 1 Export sales 3 Variants 4 Accidents and incidents 4 1 1940s 4 2 1950s 4 3 1960s 5 Operators 6 Specifications Il 12 7 References 7 1 Notes 7 2 BibliographyDesign and development EditThe Il 12 was developed as a private venture by the Ilyushin Design Bureau from autumn 1943 and was intended as a replacement for the Lisunov Li 2 a license produced version of the Douglas DC 3 2 3 Initial studies proposed a 29 seat airliner powered by four 1 000 hp 750 kW supercharged M 88V engines as used in the Ilyushin Il 4 bomber and with a pressurized cabin allowing the aircraft to cruise at an altitude of 6 000 7 000 m 20 000 23 000 ft with a range of 5 000 km 3 100 mi at almost 400 km h 250 mph The aircraft would be fitted with a tricycle landing gear the first use by the Ilyushin OKB 4 During 1944 the design was changed with the M 88B engines replaced by two ACh 31 diesel V 12 engines each producing 1 900 hp 1 400 kW at take off The plans for a pressurized fuselage were abandoned and the number of passengers reduced to 27 The lower operating altitude resulted in a reduction in the aircraft s range and cruising speed 5 The Il 12 made its maiden flight on 15 August 1945 2 6 7 It was soon decided to re engine the aircraft with Shvetsov ASh 82 radial engines as is was expected to take too long to develop the ACh 31 to an acceptable reliability and time between overhauls for commercial service 8 The modified first prototype flew with its new engines on 9 January 1946 9 10 7 The Il 12 was found to have problems with vibration during testing having poor engine out characteristics and requiring a strut under the rear fuselage to prevent tipping during loading due to centre of gravity problems 11 However factory test pilots praised the quality of the new aircraft with much better performance and handling than the Li 2 which contributed to the decision to launch the Il 12 in series production 12 One problem was the use of magnesium near the engines which in case of engine fire could cause an uncontrolled fire damaging the wing structure This was revealed by a crash of an Ilyushin Il 12 near Voronezh in 1949 which killed all on board following an engine fire Subsequently as a result of the accident investigation the magnesium was replaced by aluminium alloys and the fire extinguishing system was redesigned In addition the aircraft s takeoff weight was restricted to ease the hazard of an engine failure during take off this in turn reduced the aircraft s passenger capacity which was temporary limited to 18 13 The Il 12 was a low wing cantilever monoplane with a single fin and rudder and a retractable tricycle undercarriage It was powered by two Shvetsov ASh 82FN radial engines rated at 1 850 hp 1 380 kW for take off and 1 630 hp 1 220 kW at 1 550 m 5 090 ft driving four bladed propellers 9 14 The fuselage had a considerable volume and was equipped with eight rectangular windows on each side The crew consisted of three and the aircraft could transport 32 soldiers 32 parachutists or cargo There was also a civil version which although designed to carry up to 32 passengers was limited in Aeroflot service to 21 with normally only 18 carried 11 At that passenger load it meant that use of the Il 12 for passenger use was un economic A total of 663 Il 12s were manufactured 11 The aircraft was later improved into the Ilyushin Il 14 Operational history Edit nbsp Ilyushin Il 12 of Aeroflot at Budapest Ferihegy Airport 1956The Il 12 was revealed to the public on 1 May 1947 when a group of aircraft participated in the annual May Day flyby over Red Square in Moscow Performance testing was completed by 20 May and the first regular passenger service by the Il 12 on Aeroflot began in June 1947 The first regular international use of the Il 12 was on the Moscow Sofia route in 1948 The Il 12 was used on Aeroflot s services to Paris from 1954 Within the USSR the Il 12 was placed on Aeroflot s longest route Moscow Khabarovsk with the flight lasting 28 hours including five refueling stops From 1956 the Il 12 modified for use on ice runways supported the Soviet expeditions to Antarctica Aeroflot continued to use the Il 12 on some routes until the end of 1970 Export sales Edit The first export customer for the Il 12 was LOT Polish Airlines who placed an order for five Il 12Bs after it was displayed at the Poznan Fair in Poland in the spring of 1948 This was followed by Czech Airlines who purchased 10 aircraft from 1949 to 1951 TAROM in Romania from 1949 and at least 20 aircraft to CAAC in China Variants EditIl 12A Basic passenger version with 27 seats standard also produced in versions with 6 11 16 18 21 and 32 seats Il 12B Modification from 1948 fitted with an improved de icing system lengthened nosewheel and a small dorsal fin fillet Il 12D military transport version for the Soviet Air Force launched in 1948 for 38 paratroops or military cargo to 3700 kg Il 12T transport version for arctic operations with a large cargo door on the left side of the fuselage Accidents and incidents EditOf the 663 Il 12s produced 56 have been lost in accidents with a total of 465 fatalities 1940s Edit 1 July 1947 An Aeroflot Il 12P CCCP L1317 crashed on takeoff from Vnukovo Airport due to loss of speed following unexplained engine failure killing four of six on board 15 19 September 1947 An Aeroflot Il 12P CCCP L1332 was struck by a crashing North American B 25 CCCP I850 that had lost control during an emergency landing at Vnukovo Airport both aircraft burned out but there were no casualties 16 24 November 1947 An Aeroflot Il 12P CCCP L1356 overran the runway on takeoff from Koltsovo Airport all six crew survived The aircraft was overloaded by 330 kg 728 lb and had not been properly de iced 17 1 December 1947 A Polyarnaya Aviatsiya Il 12 CCCP N439 was on an unauthorized positioning flight from Kimry to Moscow when it force landed near Taldom 27 km 17 mi south of Borki Airfield after the left engine lost power due to an oil leak all five crew survived 18 18 December 1947 Aeroflot Flight 6 an Il 12P CCCP L1343 stalled and crashed near Severny Airport while attempting to land following a go around due to engine failure killing seven of 25 on board 19 2 September 1948 An Aeroflot Il 12 CCCP L1465 crashed on takeoff from Severny Airport after entering a descent when the flight engineer reduced engine power a propeller blade broke off and penetrated the fuselage killing one of 20 on board 20 9 September 1948 An Aeroflot Il 12 CCCP L1427 crashed near Baimakovo Aerodrome during a training flight following a loss of control killing all four crew The pilot was practicing flying with one engine out The instructor feathered the propeller too soon after a go around with the flaps deployed and the aircraft entered a banking turn with a loss of airspeed Control was lost and the aircraft entered a dive 21 12 October 1948 An Aeroflot Il 12 CCCP L1450 disappeared over the Caucasus Mountains near Yevlakh with ten on board After arriving at Baku the flight was unable to continue to Tbilisi due to bad weather The next day the aircraft left for Tbilisi but the crew failed to check weather conditions along the flight route The aircraft climbed to 3 000 m 9 800 ft En route the aircraft encountered navigation problems due to poor reception of radio beacons The crew then decided to return to Baku but never made it Last radio contact was near Yevlakh the aircraft has never been found 22 23 December 1948 An Aeroflot Il 12P CCCP L1731 collided in mid air near Valuyevo with an Aeroflot TS 62 CCCP L861 that was being ferried from Vnukovo Airport to Bykovo Airport killing all 12 on board both aircraft The brand new Il 12 was being handed over to a crew from Aeroflot s Georgian division but when the crew failed to turn up in time the aircraft was then handed over to a crew from the Uzbek division instead The Il 12 then departed for Tashkent via Lyubertsy although ATC did not know the change in the flight plan and assumed the Il 12 was going to land at Vnukovo The Il 12 collided with the TS 62 breaking off both engines while the tail of the TS 62 was sheared off ATC errors were blamed 23 24 19 January 1949 An Aeroflot Il 12P CCCP L1381 crashed shortly after takeoff from Stalino Airport now Donetsk Airport due to loss of altitude following engine problems killing eight of nine on board two people also died when the aircraft crashed into a house 25 13 May 1949 Aeroflot Flight 17 an Il 12P CCCP L1791 crashed during descent to Novosibirsk in bad weather due to loss of control following a lightning strike killing all 25 on board 26 21 July 1949 Aeroflot Flight 5 an Il 12P CCCP L1714 crashed and burned in a forest near Marga while attempting a forced landing following an engine fire killing 13 of 14 on board 27 28 20 August 1949 An Aeroflot Il 12 CCCP L1434 crashed near Polukotelnikovo after losing altitude in a downdraft killing eight of 11 on board 29 25 August 1949 An Aeroflot Il 12P CCCP L1844 struck Mount Kabanya 20 mi south of Kabansk following an unexplained descent from 2 400 m 7 874 ft to 1 200 m 3 900 ft killing all 14 on board 30 20 September 1949 An Aeroflot Il 12 CCCP L1462 crashed near Savasleyka while attempting a forced landing following engine failure killing three of four crew 31 1950s Edit 19 July 1950 An Aeroflot Il 12P CCCP L1340 struck the top of a 175 m 574 ft hill and crashed near Tbilisi Airport during a training flight after the pilot deviated from the glide scope and approach pattern killing four of 11 on board on board were six unauthorized passengers all Tbilisi Airport employees The hill that the aircraft hit was not indicated on the flight map 32 30 July 1950 An Aeroflot Il 12P CCCP L1803 crashed shortly after takeoff from Karaganda Airport due to loss of control following engine failure killing all 25 on board Six minutes after takeoff the crew radioed that engine number one had failed and that they were returning to the airport While turning for final approach the aircraft turned left in the direction of the failed engine and lost speed while lowering the landing gear Control was lost and the aircraft spiraled down and crashed The left engine was having problems before and after maintenance but the crew operating the test flight failed to report the problem 33 11 August 1950 Aeroflot Flight 8 an Il 12P CCCP L1706 struck trees and crashed in a meadow while on approach to Koltsovo Airport in fog after descending below the glide scope due to pilot error killing two of five crew all 22 passengers survived 34 35 9 January 1951 An Aeroflot Il 12P CCCP L1811 crashed in the Black Sea off Tuapse following a fuel tank explosion and fire due to a lightning strike killing all eight on board The storm that the crew flew into was not forecast and a storm warning was issued some 40 minutes after the crash 36 13 March 1951 An Aeroflot Il 12P CCCP L1319 crashed near Koltsovo Airport following a loss of altitude during approach there were no casualties 37 29 March 1951 An Aeroflot Il 12P CCCP L1313 crashed near Vnukovo Airport during a test flight following multiple diversions due to spatial disorientation caused by a malfunctioning radio compass killing three of four crew all four passengers survived 38 14 November 1951 An Aeroflot Il 12P CCCP L1360 crashed shortly after takeoff from Nikolayevsk na Amure following a loss of altitude due to pilot error all 19 on board survived The aircraft took off with moist snow on the fuselage that had accumulated during taxiing and engine tests A late and slow takeoff caused the aircraft to vibrate and the flight engineer mistook the vibration for a rough running engine and overfueled the left engine and it lost power Altitude was lost and the aircraft crashed 39 17 November 1951 An Aeroflot Il 12P CCCP L1775 lost control and crashed shortly after takeoff from Novosibirsk Severny Airport due to wing icing killing all 23 on board 40 21 February 1952 An Aeroflot Il 12 CCCP L1849 crashed shortly after takeoff from Baratayevka Airport during a training flight killing one of 18 on board The aircraft took off with the center of gravity too far forward Due to pilot error altitude was lost The pilot attempted to gain altitude but the propellers had struck the ground The aircraft bounced twice and after touching the ground a second time a blade separated from the left propeller and penetrated the fuselage killing a passenger and seriously injuring another After repairs the aircraft returned to service flying as a cargo freighter until 1964 41 5 April 1952 Aeroflot Flight 5 an Il 12P CCCP L1308 lost control and crashed shortly after takeoff from Magdagachi Airport killing all six on board A clamp had been left on the left aileron and had not been removed before takeoff 42 25 April 1952 An Aeroflot Il 12P CCCP L1312 crashed near Karmanovo during a training flight killing eight of nine on board The crew was simulating flying in cloud with the left engine out and its propeller feathered Airspeed was lost and the aircraft entered a left turn Two of the crew ran to the rear of the aircraft The flight engineer attempted to move the propeller to its normal position and increased power to the right engine but the aircraft crashed Crew errors were blamed 43 18 July 1952 A LOT Polish Airlines Il 12B SP LHC was written off after it crashed on landing at Warsaw 44 23 August 1952 An Aeroflot Il 12 CCCP L1488 force landed near Chlya in a valley between Lake Oryol and Lake Chlya seventy minutes after takeoff the crew heard a loud clap and felt a vibration A portion of a blade on the right propeller had broken off and penetrated the fuselage severing hydraulic lines engine control cables and electrical cables Shrapnel also struck the legs of the flight mechanic and embedded itself in the upper wing of a Po 2 CCCP T743 that the aircraft was carrying The engine began vibrating but the crew could not shut it down nor feather the propeller and a forced landing was made The flight mechanic later died of blood loss but there were no other casualties It was found that while the aircraft was serving with Dalstroi Aviation as CCCP X837 the propeller blade had been improperly repaired The aircraft was repaired and returned to service flying until 1963 45 5 October 1952 Aeroflot Flight 376 an Il 12P CCCP L1328 collided in mid air near Skvoritsy with Aeroflot Flight 381 a Douglas TS 62 CCCP L1055 due to ATC errors killing all 24 on board both aircraft 46 23 January 1953 Aeroflot Flight 22 an Il 12P CCCP L1435 collided in mid air shortly after takeoff from Kazan Airport with an Aeroflot Lisunov Li 2 CCCP L4582 due to ATC errors killing all 11 on board both aircraft 47 30 April 1953 Aeroflot Flight 35 an Il 12P CCCP L1777 ditched in the Volga River while on approach to Kazan Airport following double engine failure due to bird strikes ducks killing one of 23 on board During the approach to Kazan the aircraft flew into a flock of ducks One duck hit near the windshield damaging the engine magneto switches and causing a short circuit after which the engines quit The propellers could not be feathered because the generator did not supply enough power to the electrical system 48 14 June 1953 Aeroflot Flight 229 an Il 12P CCCP L1375 crashed on a hillside 9 mi northeast of Zugdidi due to wing failure after flying into a thunderstorm killing all 18 on board including Georgian film actress Nato Vachnadze 49 27 July 1953 A Soviet Navy Il 12 was shot down by USAF F 86F Sabre 51 12959 and crashed near Mao erh Shan killing all 21 on board the Il 12 was the last aircraft destroyed during the Korean War the armistice was signed later that day The pilot of the F 86 initially identified the aircraft as a North Korean Il 12 and decided to shoot it down A long burst of gunfire was enough to shoot down the Il 12 which turned out to be a Soviet Navy transport flying through North Korean airspace to Vladivostok 50 51 14 October 1953 Aeroflot Flight 9 an Il 12P CCCP L1727 stalled and crashed shortly after takeoff from Irkutsk Airport after the pilot mistook inner marker lights for an aircraft approaching head on killing four of six crew all 22 passengers survived 52 27 October 1953 Aeroflot Flight 783 an Il 12P CCCP L1765 crashed near Magadan 13 Airport due to wing icing and overloading killing 22 of 27 on board 53 4 November 1953 Aeroflot Flight 5 an Il 12P CCCP L1367 crashed on approach to Magdagachi Airport due to an incorrectly set altimeter killing the five crew 54 July 1954 Flight mechanic V Polyakov stole an Il 12 at Novosibirsk intending to ram the house where his unfaithful wife lived For four hours he circled the city performing sharp turns around buildings Two fighters were scrambled and had orders to redirect the Il 12 out of the city and then shoot it down Polyakov did not follow the fighters and instead after calming down landed safely at the airport where he was arrested Although threatened with severe punishment Polyakov only received three years thanks to a petition from Sergey Ilyushin who proved that the Il 12 could be safely flown in such extreme conditions 55 27 September 1954 Aeroflot Flight 10 an Il 12P CCCP L1365 struck trees and crashed short of the runway at Severny Airport in poor visibility killing all 29 on board This accident remains the deadliest involving the Il 12 56 28 October 1954 Aeroflot Flight 136 an Il 12P CCCP L1789 disappeared during a Irkutsk Krasnoyarsk Moscow flight with 19 or 20 on board the aircraft was found by accident in June 1955 on Mount Sivukha Krasnoyarsk Territory by a hunter Strong winds had blown the aircraft off course 57 58 5 December 1954 Aeroflot Flight 98 an Il 12P CCCP L1320 crashed at Pervomaiski 4 5 km northwest of Alma Ata while attempting an emergency landing following engine problems killing one of 19 on board The air self start valve on cylinder 10 of engine number one burned out due to poor maintenance but the crew mistook it for an engine fire and shut down the engine Pilot errors were also blamed 59 4 March 1955 A GUSMP Il 12T CCCP N479 crashed during a forced landing near Kepino following an engine fire and resultant separation killing four of five crew all 20 passengers survived 60 2 July 1955 A Polyarnaya Aviatsiya Il 12 CCCP N480 crashed on landing at Nagurskoye Air Base after touching down on a portion of the runway that had not been cleared of snow breaking off the left landing gear no casualties 61 9 September 1955 Aeroflot Flight 5 an Il 12P CCCP L1359 crashed near Komarovo due to tail separation and severe turbulence after flying into a thunderstorm killing all seven on board 62 26 April 1956 An Aeroflot aircraft most likely an Il 12 crashed at Berlin Bohnsdorf after striking a church tower on approach in fog killing three of six on board 63 8 September 1956 A Polarnaya Aviatsiya Il 12P CCCP N525 undershot the runway during landing at Dikson Airport due to pilot error breaking off the landing gear no casualties 64 24 November 1956 A CSA Czechoslovak Airlines Il 12B OK DBP crashed in a field at Eglisau 12 km 7 5 mi from Kloten Airport while attempting to return to the airport following an engine fire killing all 23 on board 65 7 August 1957 Aeroflot Flight 554 an Il 12P CCCP L1828 crashed short of the runway at Magdagachi Airport after deviating from the approach pattern due to strong winds killing the pilot 66 1 October 1957 Aeroflot Flight 11 an Il 12P CCCP L1389 struck trees and crashed on a hill near Akshi after the crew became disorientated after deviating from the flight route of the 28 on board only a passenger survived 67 27 October 1957 An Aeroflot Il 12P CCCP N442 struck terrain and crashed at North Pole drifting station SP 7 while flying too low on approach in bad weather although all six crew survived and were rescued 21 hours after the crash by an Mi 4 the navigator died five days later without regaining consciousness 68 18 December 1957 Aeroflot Flight 10 an Il 12P CCCP L1309 disappeared while operating a Khabarovsk Magdagachi Moscow passenger service with 27 on board In June 1958 the burned out wreckage was found on the western slope of Mount Poktoy 30 km 19 mi west of Birobidzhan with no survivors While parked and during taxiing at Khabarovsk Airport strong winds damaged the rudder which failed 26 minutes into the flight Another Il 12 CCCP L1330 that was parked next to CCCP L1309 also suffered rudder damage 69 9 June 1958 Aeroflot Flight 105 an Il 12P CCCP L1364 struck a hill in bad weather due to pilot error while descending for Magadan 13 Airport killing all 24 on board 70 19 September 1958 An Aeroflot Il 12P CCCP L3904 struck a mountain slope in the Lazo District due to fuel exhaustion after the crew became disorientated in bad weather at night killing all 28 on board 71 15 December 1958 An Aeroflot Il 12 CCCP L1467 overran the runway on landing at Cherepovets Airport after landing late due to pilot error no casualties 72 24 December 1958 An Aeroflot Il 12T CCCP L1458 ran off the runway on takeoff from Uralsk Airport after the flight engineer mistakenly shut down the engines in panic when he thought the aircraft was going to hit a railway embankment all five crew survived 73 9 January 1959 A GUSMP Il 12L CCCP 04249 crashed short of the runway at Mirny Station collapsing the landing gear no casualties The aircraft was on its first flight after reassembly in Antarctica and was the only Il 12 equipped with ski landing gear 74 29 November 1959 An Aeroflot Il 12 CCCP 01426 crashed at Irkutsk Airport after landing in the grass next to the runway after deviating from the runway centerline killing the four crew 75 1960s Edit 7 January 1960 An Aeroflot Il 12 CCCP 01438 landed hard at Leningrad Airport after the pilot had difficulty locating the reserve runway the main runway was being cleared of snow all five crew survived 76 21 July 1960 Aeroflot Flight 414 an Il 12P CCCP 01405 crashed on takeoff at Minsk Airport into a motor depot after failing to left off due to a waterlogged runway killing seven of 28 on board an airport employee also died when he was electrocuted after stepping on a downed power line 77 Operators Edit nbsp BulgariaTABSO 78 nbsp CzechoslovakiaCeskoslovenske statni aerolinie 79 Czechoslovak Air Force 79 nbsp People s Republic of ChinaSKOGA CAAC Airlines People s Liberation Army Air Force Imported 42 Il 12 airliners from 1950 to 1951 used to airlift to Lhasa during the Annexation of Tibet by the People s Republic of China Some were refitted to aerial survey airplanes later Retired in 1986 nbsp LaosPathet Lao nbsp PolandLOT Polish Airlines 5 bought in 1949 reg nos SP LHA to LHE plus one SP LHF leased from Czechoslovakia in 1952 80 Polish Air Force 79 nbsp RomaniaTAROM 79 nbsp Mongolia nbsp Soviet UnionAeroflot 81 Soviet Air Force Soviet Navy 82 nbsp North KoreaKorean AirwaysSpecifications Il 12 EditData from The Osprey Encyclopedia of Russian Aircraft from 1875 1995 11 General characteristicsCrew 3 Capacity 21 83 32 84 passengers Length 21 31 m 69 ft 11 in Wingspan 31 70 m 104 ft 0 in Height 8 07 m 26 ft 6 in 85 Wing area 103 m2 1 110 sq ft Empty weight 11 045 kg 24 350 lb Max takeoff weight 17 250 kg 38 030 lb Powerplant 2 ASh 82FNV fourteen cylinder two row air cooled radial engine 1 380 kW 1 850 hp eachPerformance Maximum speed 407 km h 253 mph 220 kn at 2 500 m 8 200 ft Range 1 500 km 930 mi 810 nmi Endurance 4 5 hr Service ceiling 6 500 m 21 300 ft Time to altitude 15 minutes to 5 000 m 16 400 ft References Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ilyushin Il 12 Notes Edit Ilyushin Il 12 Planepictures net Archived from the original on 20 March 2016 Retrieved 4 May 2013 a b Stroud Aeroplane Monthly September 1993 p 59 Gordon Komissarov amp Komissarov 2004 p 155 Gordon Komissarov amp Komissarov 2004 pp 155 156 Gordon Komissarov amp Komissarov 2004 pp 156 157 Gordon Komissarov amp Komissarov 2004 p 157 a b Dates of Maiden Flights by Aircraft Designed by Ilyushin Design Bureau Archived 18 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Ilyushin Aviation Complex Retrieved 13 November 2010 Gordon Komissarov amp Komissarov 2004 pp 157 158 a b Stroud Aeroplane Monthly September 1993 p 60 Gordon Komissarov amp Komissarov 2004 p 158 a b c d Gunston 1995 p 110 Gordon Komissarov amp Komissarov 2004 pp 158 159 Gordon Komissarov amp Komissarov 2004 pp 160 161 Gordon Komissarov amp Komissarov 2004 p 171 Accident description for CCCP L1317 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 20 January 2016 Hull loss description for CCCP L1332 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 22 January 2016 Accident description for CCCP L1356 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 26 August 2021 Accident description for CCCP N439 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 10 November 2016 Accident description for CCCP L1343 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 20 January 2016 Accident description for CCCP L1465 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 20 January 2016 Accident description for CCCP L1427 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 20 January 2016 Accident description for CCCP L1450 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 22 January 2016 Accident description for CCCP L1731 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 20 January 2016 Accident description for CCCP L861 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 20 January 2016 Accident description for CCCP L1381 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 22 January 2016 Accident description for CCCP L1791 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 22 January 2016 Accident description for CCCP L1714 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 22 January 2016 Katastrofa Il 12 1 j OAG GVF v rajone pos Marga Irkutskoj oblasti Accident Il 12 near Marga village Irkutsk Oblast in Russian Accident description for CCCP L1434 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 10 November 2016 Accident description for CCCP L1844 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 2016 01 22 Accident description for CCCP L1462 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 22 January 2016 Accident description for CCCP L1340 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 2016 01 22 Accident description for CCCP L1803 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 2016 01 22 Accident description for CCCP L1706 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 2016 01 22 Katastrofa Il 12 1 oj Moskovskoj aviagruppy GVF bliz a p Sverdlovsk Kolcovo Accident Il 12 near Sverdlovsk Koltsovo Airport in Russian Accident description for CCCP L1811 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 2016 01 22 Accident description for CCCP L1319 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 25 November 2021 Accident description for CCCP L1313 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 10 November 2016 Accident description for CCCP L1360 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 26 August 2021 Accident description for CCCP L1775 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 2016 01 22 Accident description for CCCP L1849 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 2016 11 10 Accident description for CCCP L1308 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 2016 11 10 Accident description for CCCP L1312 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 2016 11 10 Accident description for SP LHC at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 2016 01 22 Accident description for CCCP L1488 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 2016 11 10 Accident description for CCCP L1328 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 2016 01 22 Accident description for CCCP L1435 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 2016 01 22 Accident description for CCCP L1777 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 2016 11 10 Accident description for CCCP L1375 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 2016 01 22 Up From Kitty Hawk 1947 1953 airforce magazine com Retrieved 17 July 2011 Criminal description at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 2016 01 22 Accident description for CCCP L1727 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 2016 11 10 Accident description for CCCP L1765 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 2016 01 22 Accident description for CCCP L1367 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 2016 01 22 Drozdov Sergey VOZDUShNYE PIRATY STRANY SOVETOV Air pirates of the Soviet countries Accident description for CCCP L1365 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 2016 01 22 Accident description for CCCP L1789 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 2016 01 22 Katastrofa Il 12 MUTA GVF v Krasnoyarskoj tajge Accident Il 12 in the Krasnoyarsk taiga in Russian Accident description for CCCP L1320 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 2016 01 22 Accident description for CCCP N479 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 2016 01 22 Accident description for CCCP N480 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 26 August 2021 Accident description for CCCP L1359 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 2016 01 22 Accident description at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 2016 01 22 Accident description for CCCP N525 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 2016 01 22 Accident description for OK DBP at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 2016 01 22 Accident description for CCCP L1828 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 2016 01 22 Accident description for CCCP L1389 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 26 August 2021 Accident description for CCCP N442 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 2016 01 22 Accident description for CCCP L1309 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 2016 01 22 Accident description for CCCP L1364 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 2016 01 22 Accident description for CCCP L3904 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 2016 01 22 Accident description for CCCP L1467 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 26 August 2021 Accident description for CCCP L1458 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 26 August 2021 Accident description for CCCP 04249 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 2016 01 22 Accident description for CCCP 01426 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 2016 01 22 Accident description for CCCP 01438 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 26 August 2021 Accident description for CCCP 01405 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 2016 01 25 Gordon Komissarov amp Komissarov 2004 p 168 a b c d Gordon Komissarov amp Komissarov 2004 p 170 Jonca Adam 1985 Samoloty linii lotniczych 1945 1956 WKiL Warsaw ISBN 83 206 0529 6 in Polish p 15 Gordon Komissarov amp Komissarov 2004 p 167 Gordon Komissarov amp Komissarov 2004 pp 169 170 Stroud 1968 p 99 Stroud 1968 p 100 Stroud 1968 p 110 Bibliography Edit Gordon Yefim Komissarov Dmitry Komissarov Sergei 2004 OKB Ilyushin A History of the Design Bureau and its Aircraft Hinckley Leicestershire UK Midland Publishing ISBN 1 85780 187 3 Gunston Bill 1995 The Osprey Encyclopedia of Russian Aircraft from 1875 1995 London Osprey Aerospace ISBN 1 85532 405 9 Stroud John 1968 Soviet Transport Aircraft since 1945 London Putnam ISBN 0 370 00126 5 Stroud John September 1993 Post War Propliners Ilyushin Il 12 and Il 14 Aeroplane Monthly Vol 21 no 9 pp 58 63 ISSN 0143 7240 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ilyushin Il 12 amp oldid 1161208132, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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