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Polikarpov I-16

The Polikarpov I-16 (Russian: Поликарпов И-16) is a Soviet single-engine single-seat fighter aircraft of revolutionary design; it was the world's first low-wing cantilever monoplane fighter with retractable landing gear to attain operational status and as such "introduced a new vogue in fighter design".[2] The I-16 was introduced in the mid-1930s and formed the backbone of the Soviet Air Force at the beginning of World War II. The diminutive fighter, nicknamed "Ishak" or "Ishachok" ("donkey" or "burro") by Soviet pilots, figured prominently in the Second Sino-Japanese War,[3] the Battle of Khalkhin Gol,[3] Winter War and the Spanish Civil War[4][5] – where it was called the Rata ("rat") by the Nationalists or Mosca ("fly") by the Republicans. The Finns called the aircraft as Siipiorava "(flying squirrel)".[6]

I-16
I-16 Type 5 in the Memorial Museum of Valery Chkalov, Chkalovsk, Russia
Role Fighter
National origin Soviet Union
Manufacturer Plant No. 21 (Gorky), Plant No. 39 (Moscow), Plant No. 153 (Novosibirsk), Plant No. 458 (Rostov-on-Don/Baku)
Designer N. N. Polikarpov Design Bureau
First flight 30 December 1933 (TsKB-12)
Introduction March 1935
Retired 1945 (Soviet Air Force), 1953 (Spanish Air Force)
Primary users Soviet Air Force
Spanish Republican Air Force
Chinese Nationalist Air Force
Produced November 1934 – 1942
Number built 10,292 (6,848 fighters and 3,444 trainers)[1]
Developed into Polikarpov I-180

Design and development

While working on the Polikarpov I-15 biplane, Nikolai Nikolaevich Polikarpov began designing an advanced monoplane fighter. It featured cutting-edge innovations such as retractable landing gear and a fully enclosed cockpit, and was optimized for speed with a short stubby fuselage, and a Wright R-1820 radial engine in a NACA cowling. The aircraft is small, light and simple to build.[citation needed]

Full-scale work on the TsKB-12 prototype began in June 1933, and the aircraft was accepted into production on 22 November 1933, a month before it took to the air. The TsKB-12 was of mixed construction, using a wooden monocoque fuselage and wings employing a KhMA chrome-molybdenum steel alloy wing spar, dural ribs and D1 aluminum alloy skinning on the center and leading edges, with the remaining portions of the wings fabric covered. Another modern feature were the ailerons which ran along almost the entire trailing edge of the wing and also operated as flaps (in the manner of more modern flaperons) by drooping 15°. The cockpit was covered by a 40-centimetre-wide (16 in) canopy which featured an Aldis-type tubular gun sight which could slide back and forth on runners fitted with rubber bungee cords. A 225 L (59.4 US gal) fuel tank was fitted directly in front of the cockpit. The main landing gear is fully retractable by a hand crank. The armament consisted of a pair of 7.62×54mmR (0.30 in) ShKAS machine guns in the wings, mounted on the outboard side of the main gear and 900 rounds of ammunition.[citation needed]

These features were proposed at first by Andrei Tupolev; however, the NII VVS was more concerned about the stresses a typical combat aircraft was subjected to in combat, and initially considered the risk too great. However, TsAGI, with the help of the 3rd Design Brigade under the leadership of Pavel Sukhoi and Aleksandr Putylov, eventually convinced NII VVS that what was being proposed was not only feasible, but would enhance the aircraft's performance.[citation needed]

The TsKB-12 was designed for the Wright Cyclone SR-1820-F-3 9-cylinder radial engine (rated at 529 kW/710 hp); a license to build this engine under the supervision of the OKB-19 Shvetsov design bureau in the Soviet Union was being negotiated. As the license was not yet approved, Polikarpov was asked to settle for the less powerful M-22 (Soviet-built version of the Gnome-Rhone Jupiter 9ASB, which itself was a licensed version of the Bristol Jupiter VI) with 358 kW (480 hp). This was deemed acceptable because the projected top speed still exceeded 300 km/h (185 mph).[citation needed]

The M-22-powered TsKB-12 first took to the air on 30 December 1933 with the famous Soviet test pilot Valery Chkalov at the controls. The second TsKB-12, with a Cyclone engine and three-bladed propeller, flew in January of the following year. Initial government trials in February 1934 revealed very good maneuverability, but the aircraft did not tolerate abrupt control inputs. Thus the TsKB-12 was deemed dangerous to fly and all aerobatics were forbidden. The M-22 version was preferred due to the vibration of the Cyclone-powered aircraft. Pilots commented early on about the difficulty of climbing into the cockpit, a trait that persisted through the I-16's service life. Before continuing test flights the designers had to answer the question of spin behavior. Wind tunnel testing suggested that the TsKB-12, with its short tail, would enter an unrecoverable flat spin, but real-life trials were necessary to confirm this. Since Cyclone engines were rare, it was decided to risk the M-22 prototype for this purpose. On 1 and 2 March 1934, Chkalov performed 75 spins and discovered that the aircraft had very benign stall behavior (dipping a wing and recovering without input from the pilot when airspeed increased) and intentional spins could be easily terminated by placing the controls in the neutral position. The stories of vicious spin behavior of the I-16 perpetuated in modern literature is unfounded (perhaps extrapolated from Gee Bee experience).[citation needed] In fact, the I-16's stablemate, the biplane Polikarpov I-153, exhibited much worse spin characteristics.[citation needed]

Service trials of the new fighter, designated I-16, began on 22 March 1934. The M-22 prototype reached 359 km/h (223 mph). The pioneering presence of a complex, triple-strut manually retracted main landing gear design was prone to jamming and required considerable strength from the pilot, who directly operated the rearmost strut's upper end, moved with a manually turned jackscrew running spanwise within the wing structure, to "slide" outwards and inwards on each side to respectively get the main gear retracted and extended, with the main strut (the forward-most of the trio) needing to shorten its length during its retraction to fit the mainwheel into the lower fuselage, performed by the middle-location strut's geometric arrangement and pivot locations.[7] Most of the test flights were performed with the gear extended. On 1 May 1934, the M-22 prototype participated in the flyover of Red Square. Approximately thirty I-16 Type 1 aircraft were delivered, but were not assigned to any VVS fighter squadron. Most pilots who flew the I-16 Type 1 for evaluation purposes did not find the aircraft to have many redeeming characteristics. Regardless of pilot opinion, much attention was focused on the Cyclone-powered aircraft and the M-25 (the license-built Cyclone). On 14 April 1934, the Cyclone prototype was damaged when one of the landing gear legs collapsed while it was taxiing.

The third prototype with a Cyclone engine incorporated a series of aerodynamic improvements and was delivered for government trials on 7 September 1934. The top speed of 437 km/h (270 mph) no longer satisfied the Air Force, who now wanted the experimental Nazarov M-58 engine and 470 km/h (290 mph). Subsequently, the M-22-powered version entered production at Factory 21 in Nizhny Novgorod and Factory 39 in Moscow. Because it was the fourth aircraft produced by these factories, it received the designation I-16 Type 4. Aircraft fitted with these new engines required a slightly changed airframe, including armor plating for the pilot and changes to the landing gear doors (particularly, the hinged lower mainwheel door)[8] to allow for complete closure.

The M-25 fitted I-16, the I-16 Type 5, featured a new engine cowling which was slightly smaller in diameter and featured nine forward-facing, radially-set shuttered openings to control cooling airflow, a redesigned exhaust with eight individual outlet stubs, and other changes. The M-25 was rated at 474 kW (635 hp) at sea level and 522 kW (700 hp) at 2,300 m (7,546 ft). Due to the poor quality of the canopy glazing, the I-16 Type 5 pilots typically left the canopy open or removed the rear portion completely. By the time the Type 5 arrived, it was the world's lightest production fighter (1,460 kg/3,219 lb), as well as the world's fastest, able to reach speeds of 454 km/h (282 mph) at altitude and 395 km/h (245 mph) at sea level. While the Type 5 could not perform the high-G maneuvers of other fighters, it possessed superior speed and climb rates, and had extremely responsive aileron control, which gave it a very good roll rate, which led to precision maneuvers in loops and split-Ss.

A total of 7,005 single-seat and 1,639 two-seat trainer variants were produced.[citation needed]

Operational history

Initial service experience revealed that the ShKAS machine guns had a tendency to jam. This was the result of the guns being installed in the wings upside-down to facilitate the fit. The problem was addressed in later modifications. Evaluations from pilots confirmed the experience with prototypes. Controls were light and very sensitive, abrupt maneuvers resulted in spins, and spin behavior was excellent. An aileron roll could be performed in under 1.5 seconds (roll rate over 240 degrees/second). The machine guns were fired via a cable and the required effort, coupled with sensitive controls, made precision aiming difficult. The rear weight bias made the I-16 easy to handle on unprepared airfields because the aircraft was rather unlikely to flip over the nose even if the front wheels dug in.

The I-16 was a difficult fighter to fly. The pilots had poor visibility,[9] the canopy tended to become fouled with engine oil, and the moving portion was prone to slamming shut during hard maneuvers, which caused many pilots to fix it in the open position. The front section of the fuselage, with the engine, was too close to the centre of gravity, and the pilot's cockpit too far to the rear. The Polikarpov had insufficient longitudinal stability and it was impossible to fly the aircraft "hands off".[10]

 
I-16 in Spanish Republican colors with "Popeye mascot"

Spanish Civil War

At the start of the Spanish Civil War in 1936, Republican forces pleaded for fighter aircraft. After receiving payment in gold, Joseph Stalin dispatched around 475[11] I-16 Type 5s and Type 6s. The first I-16s appeared in Spanish skies in November 1936.[12] The Polikarpov monoplanes had their baptism of fire on 13 November 1936, when twelve I-16s intercepted a Nationalist bombing raid on Madrid. Soviet pilots claimed four air victories and two German Heinkel He 51 pilots were killed. But the Soviets suffered losses too; the group commander collided with an enemy aircraft and another I-16 pilot crash landed.[13] The Polikarpovs immediately began dominating the enemy Heinkel He 51 and Arado Ar 68 biplanes[citation needed] and remained unchallenged until the introduction of the Messerschmitt Bf 109. The arrival of the newest Bf 109Bs and the overwhelming numerical superiority of Nationalist fighters were the primary cause of the heavy I-15 and I-16 combat losses suffered throughout 1937.[14] A number of aviation publications called the new Soviet fighter a "Boeing" due to the incorrect assumption that it was based on the Boeing P-26's design. The Nationalists nicknamed the stubby fighter Rata (Rat), while the Republicans affectionately called it Mosca (Fly).

Combat experience showed that the I-16 had deficiencies; several aircraft were lost after structural failure of the wings which was quickly remedied by reinforced structures. Heavy machine gun bullets could sometimes penetrate the armored backrest and fuel tanks occasionally caught fire in spite of being protected. The hot Spanish summers required the addition of oil radiators, and dust adversely affected the life of the engines. Although some aircraft accumulated up to 400 hours of flying time, the average life of an I-16 was 87 days, of which one sixth was spent on maintenance. The biggest complaint in service was the light armament of only two 7.62 mm (0.30 in) machine guns. This was urgently addressed with the Type 6 which added a third ShKAS in the bottom of the fuselage. The four-gun Type 10 was nicknamed "Super Mosca" or simply "Super". The total number of I-16s delivered to Spain from 1936 to 1938 amounted to 276. When the war ended on 1 April 1939, 187 Ratas had been lost in Spain: 112 lost in combat, one shot down by anti-aircraft fire, eleven destroyed on the ground, one force-landed and 62 lost in accidents.[15]

The Far East and battles at Khalkhin Gol

 
I-16 with Chinese insignia, flown by Chinese pilots and Soviet volunteers

Another 250 I-16 Type 10s were supplied to China. This model added a second set of 7.62 mm (0.30 in) ShKAS machine guns, armor behind the pilot, and had a slightly upgraded 560 kW (750 hp) M-25 engine. In 1939, of the 500 I-16s[16] deployed to the fighting at Nomonhan, approximately 112 were lost during the battles of Khalkhin Gol, of which 88 were destroyed in aerial combat, primarily against the all-metal Nakajima Ki-27 Japanese fighters.[17] During test trials in Russia of a captured Ki-27, the aircraft proved superior to the Soviet I-152 (I-15bis), I-153, and the I-16 in aerial combat, as well as having a faster take-off and lower landing speed, requiring shorter airstrips than the I-16, which needed 270 meters to stop and 380 meters for take-off.[18]

Further attempts were made to upgrade the firepower of the aircraft using 20 mm (0.79 in) ShVAK cannons, making the I-16 one of the most heavily armed fighters of the period,[19] able to fire 28 rounds of ammunition in three seconds. Pilots loved the results, but the cannons were in short supply, and only a small number of the I-16 Type 12, 17, 27, and 28 were built. The cannons adversely affected performance, with 360° turn time increasing from fifteen seconds in the Type 5 to eighteen seconds. The Type 24 replaced the skid with a tailwheel and featured the much more powerful 670 kW (900 hp) Shvetsov M-63 engine. The Type 29 replaced two of the ShKAS guns with a single 12.7 mm (.50 in) UBS. Ten Type 17 fighters were supplied to the Chinese Air Force where on 20 May 1940, they effectively shot down a C5M scout-attack plane and three G3M bombers during the Battle of Chongqing.[20][21]

Types 18, 24, 27, 28, and 29 could be fitted to carry RS-82 unguided rockets. The first successful use of air-to-air missiles in air combat was on August 20, 1939. A Ki-27 was hit by an RS-82 rocket launched from a distance of about a kilometer. The shot was fired by Captain N. Zvonarev.[22]

A 1939 government study found the I-16 had exhausted its performance potential. The addition of armor, radio, battery, and flaps during the aircraft's evolution exacerbated the rear weight distribution problems to the point where the aircraft required considerable forward pressure on the stick to maintain level flight and at the same time developed a tendency to enter uncontrolled dives. Extension and retraction of the landing flaps caused a dramatic change in the aircraft's attitude. Accurate gunfire was difficult.

Soviet Union

 
VVS pilots at Khalkhyn Gol in front of their I-16 in August 1939.

The pilots nicknamed the aircraft Ishak (Russian: Ишак, Donkey/Hinny) because it was similar to the Russian pronunciation of "I-16" ("ee-shestnadtset"). When Operation Barbarossa erupted on 22 June 1941, 1,635 of 4,226 VVS aircraft were I-16s of all variants, fielded by 57 fighter regiments in frontier areas.[23] The main assault delivered by the Luftwaffe's Luftflotte 2 (in support of Wehrmacht Army Group Centre) was directed against the Soviet Western Special Military District, that deployed 361 (424 according to other sources) I-16s.[24] During the early phase of the campaign the I-16 bases were the main targets for the German aircraft and after 48 hours of combat, of the 1,635 Polikarpov monoplanes in service on 21 June 1941, only 937 were left.[25] By 30 June the number of I-16s in western front line units had dropped to 873, including 99 that required repairs.[26] To stem the Luftwaffe aerial assault several I-16 pilots adopted the taran tactic and sacrificed their lives, ramming German aircraft.[26]

Its main opponent in the sky in 1941 was the German Messerschmitt Bf 109.[27] The I-16 was slightly more maneuverable than the early Bf 109s and could fight the Messerschmitt Bf 109E, or Emil, on equal terms in turns. Skilled Soviet pilots took advantage of the Polikarpov's superior horizontal maneuverability and liked it enough to resist the switch to more modern fighters. The German aircraft, however, outclassed its Soviet opponent in service ceiling, rate of climb, acceleration and, crucially, in horizontal and diving speed, due to better aerodynamics and a more powerful engine. The main versions of the I-16 had a maximum speed of 450–470 km/h (279–291 mph), while the Bf 109E had a maximum speed of 560–570 km/h (347–353 mph), the more streamlined Bf 109F Friedrich could hit 615–630 km/h (372-390plus mph). So German pilots held the initiative and could decide if they wanted to chase their opponents, could attack them from above and behind and then gain altitude for a new attack. Meanwhile, Polikarpovs could only defend each other by forming a defensive circle or via horizontal maneuverability.[27]

Moreover, in terms of armament, Messerschmitts had a slight edge on the I-16. The Emil carried two wing-mounted 20mm MG FF cannons and two synchronized 7.92 mm MG-17s with a weight of a one-second salvo of 2.37 kg, while the most common version of the I-16 – armed with just two synchronized and two wing-mounted 7.62 ShKAS – could deliver 1.43 kg of bullets each second.[28] Finally, the ammunition storage on a Messerschmitt exceeded that of the I-16, carrying 1,000 rounds for each machine gun (plus sixty drum-housed rounds for each cannon), while the Polikarpov carried just 450 rounds for each ShKAS gun.[29]

Around half of all produced I-16s were still in service in 1943, when they were finally replaced.[citation needed]

Specially modified I-16s were used in the Zveno parasite aircraft experiments using the Tupolev TB-3 as a mothership.

The Luftwaffe was known to have captured some I-16 and UTI-4 two-seat trainers (two of which were marked with the Stammkennzeichen codes DM+HC and DM+HD) and flown from the Erprobungstelle Rechlin central Luftwaffe test facility by Kampfgeschwader 200 (KG 200).[30] The Luftwaffe was not the only air force able to test its fighters against the I-16; the Japanese captured a few I-16s as well,[3] and the Romanian Air Force also got one when a Soviet pilot defected.[31] The Finnish Air Force (FAF) captured some I-16s (along with several other Soviet types). During the Winter War and the Continuation War, the Finns captured six I-16s and one I-16UTI. Two of the captured I-16s and I-16UTIs were put back into flying condition and flight tested.[32]

Variants

There is considerable disagreement in literature on features of particular I-16 variants. This list is based on the following references.[33][34][35]

 
Russian Polikarpov UTI-4, a two seater training version of the I-16 Soviet fighter. Russia 1941.
 
Polikarpov I-16 at EAA AirVenture Oshkosh 2003
TsKB-12
First prototype, M-22 engine, 336 kW (450 hp), two unsynchronized ShKAS machine guns in the wings with 900 rpg.
TsKB-12bis
Second prototype, Wright SGR-1820-F-3 Cyclone engine, 533 kW (715 hp)
TsKB-12P (I-16P)
Prototype armed with two ShVAK cannon in the wings, 150 rpg.
TsKB-18
Ground attack prototype with M-22 engine and armored cockpit. Armed with four ShKAS or PV-1 machine guns and 100 kg (220 lb) of bombs. Two additional Type 5s were fitted with six ShKAS machine guns of which four could decline to 20° for ground strafing.
TsKB-29 (SPB)
Pneumatically-operated landing gear and flaps, Wright Cyclone engine, armament of two ShKAS machine guns, used as a high-speed dive bomber in the Zveno project
I-16 Type 1
Pre-production series, M-22 engine with 358 kW (480 hp).
I-16 Type 4
First production version, M-22 engine.
I-16 Type 5
Type 4 with a streamlined and tapered engine cowling, Shvetsov M-25 engine with 522 kW (700 hp). 2 prototypes tested with M-62 engine as well. Mass-produced.
I-16 Type 6
Shvetsov M-25B engine, 545 kW (730 hp). Weight reduction down to 1383 kg.
I-16 Type 10
Four ShKAS machine guns (two synchronized in the fuselage and two in the wings), windscreen replaced the sliding canopy, could be fitted with retractable skis for winter operations, M-25B engine with 560 kW (750 hp). Hispano-Suiza-built aircraft were powered by the Wright Cyclone R-1820-F-54 engine.
I-16 Type 12
Version of I-16 Type 5 with 2 ShKAS machine guns and 2 ShVAK cannons.
I-16 Type 16
Type 10 with synchronized ShVAK 12.7mm prototypes. Only three were built, all in January 1939, with serial numbers 16211-16213. They passed factory trials and were delivered to the VVS for military trials.[36]
I-16 Type 17
Type 10 with two ShKAS machine guns and two ShVAK cannon, rubber tail wheel, M-25V engine with 560 kW (750 hp). Some aircraft were fitted with an additional 12.7 mm (0.5 in) Berezin UB machine gun for strafing.
I-16 Type 18
Type 10 with Shvetsov M-62 engine producing 620 kW (830 hp), with a two-speed supercharger and a variable-pitch propeller. Capable of carrying two 100 L (26 US gal) underwing fuel tanks.
I-16 Type 19
Identical to the Type 10, except for the replacement of their wing-mounted ShKAS machine guns with Savin–Norov machine guns; the propeller-synchronized ShKAS were not replaced. Only three aircraft were built in this configuration, all in January 1939. They had serial numbers 19211-19213. They were first used as test platform for the new gun and then delivered to the VVS as I-16SN. They saw action during the Winter War.[36][37]
I-16 Type 20
This designation was first applied to four prototypes built in February 1939 at Factory 21 and armed with Savin–Norov (SN) machine guns synchronized to fire through the propeller. This type was however rejected in August 1939, and then the designation reused for the first I-16 version (otherwise the same as the type 10) capable of carrying drop tanks. These 93 L (25 US gal) tanks were designated PSB-21. Eighty aircraft of this specific type were delivered. Additionally, all I-16 types built after January 1940 could use these drop tanks.[36]
I-16 Type 21 and Type 22
These were planned to have four synchronized machine guns all firing through the propeller. Type 21 was to use only ShKAS, while type 22 was supposed to use a mixture of ShKAS and SN machine guns. Both types however existed only on paper; no aircraft of these types went into service.[36]
I-16 Type 23
Type 10 additionally armed with RS-82 rockets; 35 were built starting in May 1939. Further production of this type was cancelled in August 1939.[36]
I-16 Type 24
Four ShKAS, landing flaps replaced drooping ailerons, tailwheel added, second cockpit door added on the starboard side, Shvetsov M-63 engine with 670 kW (900 hp).
I-16 Type 27
Type 17 with an M-62 engine.
I-16 Type 28
Type 24 with two ShKAS and two ShVAK.
I-16 Type 29
Two synchronized ShKAS in the nose and a single 12.7 mm (0.50 in) UBS in the bottom of the fuselage; it had no guns in wings which were reserved for ground attack weapons. Three rocket racks were mounted in each wing. Additionally, starting in 1941, the external fuel tank hardpoint was changed so that it became multipurpose: it could carry the new type of drop tank, PLBG-100, or a FAB-100 bomb. Wartime photographs from the summer of 1941 show two configurations: one with 6 RS-82 rockets and two FAB-100 bombs and another with four RS-132 rockets.[38]
I-16 Type 30
Re-entered production in 1941–42, M-63 engine.
I-16TK
Type 10 with a turbocharger for improved high-altitude performance, reached 494 km/h (307 mph) at 8,600 m ( 28,200 ft), did not enter production.
UTI-1
Two-seat trainer version of Type 1.
UTI-2
Improved UTI-1 with fixed landing gear.
UTI-4 (I-16UTI) also known as I-16 Type 15
Two-seat trainer version of Type 5, most with fixed landing gear. This model was built in significant numbers, approximately 3,400 were produced.[39]

Operators

 
Chinese I-16 (China Aviation Museum)
 
Aircraft on display at a museum in Moscow
  Republic of China
  Nazi Germany
  Finland
  Mongolia
  Poland
  • Polish Air Force operated one I-16 (1 Pułk Lotnictwa Myśliwskiego) and two UTI-4 aircraft (15 Samodzielny Zapasowy Pułk Lotniczy and the Techniczna Szkoła Lotnicza.[40]
  Romania
  Soviet Union
  Spanish Republic
  Spanish State
  • Spanish Nationalist Air Force operated I-16 and UTI-4 aircraft captured from the Spanish Republican Air Force, returned by French government and 30 built in Jerez de la Frontera. I-16s were still operated in 1952.
    • Group 1-W
    • 26th Group
    • Morón Fighter School

Surviving aircraft

 
Two-seat I-16 UTI trainer version, with Finnish markings on display in the Finnish Aviation Museum in Vantaa, Finland
 
I-16 in Spanish Republican colours, property of The Infante de Orleans Foundation

Commencing in 1993, New Zealand pilot and entrepreneur Sir Tim Wallis' Alpine Fighter Collection organised the restoration of six I-16s and three I-153s, found in Russia, to an airworthy condition by the Soviet Aeronautical Research Institute (Sibnia) in Novosibirsk.[41][42][43] The flight of the first restored aircraft (I-16 9) took place in October 1995. Once restored the aircraft were transported by rail to Vladivostok and from there shipped via Hong Kong to New Zealand. This project was completed in 1999 when the third and final I-153 arrived in New Zealand. In addition a seventh I-16 was later restored for American collector Jerry Yagen.

China

Finland

Germany

  • 2421319 – I-16 Type 24 airworthy with a private owner in Germany as D-EPRN.[46]

Russia

Spain

United States

Specifications (I-16 Type 24)

 
3-view drawing of Polikarpov I-16

Data from Istoriia konstruktskii samoletov v SSSR do 1938[34]

General characteristics

  • Crew: One
  • Length: 6.13 m (20 ft 1 in)
  • Wingspan: 9 m (29 ft 6 in)
  • Height: 3.25 m (10 ft 8 in)
  • Wing area: 14.5 m2 (156 sq ft)
  • Airfoil: TsAGI R-II (16% at root)[65]
  • Empty weight: 1,490 kg (3,285 lb)
  • Gross weight: 1,941 kg (4,279 lb)
  • Powerplant: 1 × Shvetsov M-63 9-cylinder supercharged air-cooled radial engine, 820 kW (1,100 hp)
  • Propellers: 2-bladed variable-pitch propeller

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 489 km/h (304 mph, 264 kn) at 3,000 m (9,800 ft)
  • Range: 700 km (430 mi, 380 nmi) with drop tanks
  • Service ceiling: 9,700 m (31,800 ft)
  • Rate of climb: 14.7 m/s (2,890 ft/min)
  • Time to altitude: 5,000 m (16,000 ft) in 5 minutes 48 seconds
  • Wing loading: 134 kg/m2 (27 lb/sq ft)
  • Power/mass: 0.43 kW/kg (0.26 hp/lb)

Armament

See also

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists

References

Notes

  1. ^ Maslov 2008, p. 76.
  2. ^ Green, William. "Polikarpov's Little Hawk". Flying Review, November 1969.
  3. ^ a b c Liss 1966, p. 10.
  4. ^ Abanshin and Gut 1994, p. 38.
  5. ^ Léonard 1981, pp. 18–22.
  6. ^ "Polikarpov Fighters".
  7. ^ Animation of the I-16's maingear retraction cycle
  8. ^ Animation of the I-16's lower mainwheel door mechanics during retraction
  9. ^ Jackson 2003 p. 148.
  10. ^ Jackson 2003, p. 147.
  11. ^ Gunston 2003, p. 85.
  12. ^ Maslov 2010, p. 25.
  13. ^ Maslov 2010, p. 26.
  14. ^ Maslov 2010, p. 30.
  15. ^ Maslov 2010, p. 32.
  16. ^ Kotelnikov p. 109
  17. ^ Nedialkov 2011, p. 141.
  18. ^ Nedialkov p. 24, 25, 148
  19. ^ Price 1975, p. 78.
  20. ^ 红岩春秋, 唐学锋 (17 January 2019). "当年设施简陋的梁山机场,没想到却是中国空军保卫重庆的第一道空中防线! - 上游新闻·汇聚向上的力量". www.cqcb.com. Retrieved 15 January 2021. "5•20"梁山空战,我空军击落日机7架,这是当时新闻媒体报道的数字,难免有些夸大。根据南京的中国第二历史档案馆保存的《空军战斗要报》记载:此役,我空军一共击落敌轰炸机3架、侦察机1架。其大致情况如下:1、第24队队长李文庠,分队长张光蕴、王文骅、队员彭均、李廷凯等5员,在梁山上空合力击落敌重轰炸机1架(残骸在寻觅中)。2、队员陈少成在忠县上空击落敌侦察机1架,该敌机在忠县汝溪焚毁,番号为258,敌乘员3人全毙。3、队员伍国培在梁山上空击落敌重轰炸机1架,该机在忠县马家祠损毁,番号为4528,敌乘员6人全毙。4、分队长韩参在开县击落敌重轰炸机1架,敌机残骸正寻觅中。从当天中国空军的战斗要报记载来看,被击落的4架日机,只有两架是查明了具体坠落的地点,并找到了残骸,而另外两架的残骸还在"寻觅"中。{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  21. ^ Cheung, 2015, pp. 67-68. The 24th PS/4th PG received a small number of the ShVAK 20mm cannon-armed I-16 Type 17 fighters from the Soviets, and were used to good effect intercepting 24 G3Ms and a Ki-15 (C5M) on 20 May 1940
  22. ^ NASA Technical Translation. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. 1959.
  23. ^ Maslov 2010, p. 68.
  24. ^ Maslov 2010, pp. 68–69.
  25. ^ Maslov 2010, p. 69.
  26. ^ a b Maslov 2010, p. 72.
  27. ^ a b Drabkin 2007, p. 142.
  28. ^ Drabkin 2007, pp. 142–43.
  29. ^ Drabkin 2007, p. 143.
  30. ^ Thomas 2004, p. 80.
  31. ^ Stapfer 1996, p. 46.
  32. ^ Perttula, Pentti. "FAF in Color."[permanent dead link] saunalahti.fi. Retrieved: 6 September 2009.
  33. ^ Liss 1966, p. 8.
  34. ^ a b Shavrov 1985
  35. ^ Green 2001, pp. 473–475.
  36. ^ a b c d e Маслов М. А. (2008). Истребитель И-16. Норовистый "ишак" сталинских соколов (in Russian). Яуза / Коллекция / ЭКСМО. pp. 55–57. ISBN 978-5-699-25660-0.
  37. ^ С.В. Иванов (2001). И-16: Боевой "Ишак" сталинских соколов. Часть 2. Война в воздухе (in Russian). Vol. 43. ООО "АРС". Раньше чем начались испытательные стрельбы ультраШКАСа, два инженера, Савин и Норов, представили в 1935 г. на испытания еще один авиационный пулемет СН скорострельностью 2800–3000 выстрелов в минуту. В 1936 г. пулемет успешно прошел стрельбовые испытания, а в 1937 г. был рекомендован к серийному производству. Пулеметами СН немедленно вооружили истребители И-16; И-16 с пулеметами СН получили обозначение тип 19, несмотря на то, что кроме вооружения самолет ничем не отличался от И-16 тип 10. Пулеметами СН заменили крыльевые ШКАСы, синхронные пулеметы остались прежними – ШКАСы. В начале 1939 г. завод № 21 изготовил три И-16 тип 19 (заводские номера 192111, 19212 и 19213). С 17 по 26 марта самолеты испытывал заводской летчик-испытатель Томас Сузи. По результатам испытаний было рекомендовано построить партию таких самолетов. Но массовое производство посчитали нецелесообразным. Под обозначением И-16СН истребители передали в ВВС. Весной 1939 г. на вооружение ВВС РККА был принят авиационный пулемет ультраШКАС. Истребители, вооруженные ультраШКАСАми и СН, приняли участие в войне с Финляндией зимой 1939–1940 г.г.
  38. ^ Маслов М. А. (2008). Истребитель И-16. Норовистый "ишак" сталинских соколов (in Russian). Яуза / Коллекция / ЭКСМО. pp. 144–145. ISBN 978-5-699-25660-0.
  39. ^ Маслов М. А. (2008). Истребитель И-16. Норовистый "ишак" сталинских соколов (in Russian). Яуза / Коллекция / ЭКСМО. p. 76. ISBN 978-5-699-25660-0.
  40. ^ Stapfer 1996, p. 50.
  41. ^ Peat. Pages 219 to 224.
  42. ^ "Polikarpov I-16 'Ishak' ('Rata')". Kiwi Aircraft Images. Phillip Treweek. Retrieved 9 December 2016.
  43. ^ Morss, Dave. "Flying the Polikarpov". Myriad Research. Myriad Research. Retrieved 9 December 2016.
  44. ^ "Airframe Dossier – Polikarpov I-16". Aerial Visuals. AerialVisuals.ca. Retrieved 9 December 2016.
  45. ^ "POLIKARPOV UTI-4 ( I-16 UTI)". Ilmailumuseo Flygmuseum (in Finnish). Suomen ilmailumuseo. 21 May 2015. Retrieved 9 December 2016.
  46. ^ "Polikarpov I-16 "Ishak" Red Star". Flying Wings Aviation Photography. 17 March 2011. Retrieved 25 April 2022.
  47. ^ "Airframe Dossier – Polikarpov I-16-24 Rata, c/n 2421234, c/r RA-1561G". Aerial Visuals. AerialVisuals.ca. Retrieved 9 December 2016.
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  51. ^ "Airframe Dossier – Polikarpov I-16". Aerial Visuals. AerialVisuals.ca. Retrieved 9 December 2016.
  52. ^ "Policarpov I-16 Mosca/Rata". Fundación Infante de Orleans (in Spanish). Fundación Infante de Orleans. Retrieved 9 December 2016.
  53. ^ "Airframe Dossier – Polikarpov I-16-24 Rata, s/n 39 Russian AF, c/n 2421039, c/r EC-JRK". Aerial Visuals. AerialVisuals.ca. Retrieved 9 December 2016.
  54. ^ (PDF). Agencia Estatal de Seguridad Aérea. 1 December 2016. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 December 2016. Retrieved 9 December 2016.
  55. ^ (in Spanish). Ejército del Aire. Archived from the original on 18 November 2016. Retrieved 9 December 2016.
  56. ^ "Airframe Dossier – Polikarpov I-16 Rata (Replica)". Aerial Visuals. AerialVisuals.ca. Retrieved 9 December 2016.
  57. ^ . Flying Heritage Collection. Friends of Flying Heritage. Archived from the original on 6 April 2015. Retrieved 9 December 2016.
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  64. ^ "Polikarpov I-16 Soviet Fighter - New Acquisition ???". YouTube. 20 March 2019. Retrieved 24 April 2022.
  65. ^ Lednicer, David. "The Incomplete Guide to Airfoil Usage". m-selig.ae.illinois.edu. Retrieved 16 April 2019.

Bibliography

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  • Cheung, Raymond. OSPREY AIRCRAFT OF THE ACES 126: Aces of the Republic of China Air Force. Oxford: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc, 2015. ISBN 978 14728 05614.
  • Drabkin, Artem. The Red Air Force at War: Barbarossa and the Retreat to Moscow – Recollections of Fighter Pilots on the Eastern Front. Barnsley, South Yorkshire, UK: Pen & Sword Military, 2007. ISBN 1-84415-563-3.
  • Gordon, Yefim and Keith Dexter. Polikarpov's I-16 Fighter: Its Forerunners and Progeny (Red Star, vol.3). Earl Shilton, Leicester, UK: Midland Publishing Ltd., 2002. ISBN 1-85780-131-8.
  • Gordon, Yefim and Dmitri Khazanov. Soviet Combat Aircraft of the Second World War, Volume One: Single-Engined Fighters. Earl Shilton, Leicester, UK: Midland Publishing Ltd., 1998. ISBN 1-85780-083-4.
  • Green, William and Gordon Swanborough. The Great Book of Fighters. St. Paul, Minnesota: MBI Publishing, 2001. ISBN 0-7603-1194-3.
  • Green, William & Swanborough, Gordon. "Soviet Flies in Spanish Skies". Air Enthusiast Quarterly, No. 1, n.d., pp. 1–16. ISSN 0143-5450
  • Green, William and Gordon Swanborough. WW2 Aircraft Fact Files: Soviet Air Force Fighters, Part 2. London: Macdonald and Jane's Publishers Ltd., 1978. ISBN 0-354-01088-3.
  • Gunston, Bill. The Illustrated Directory of Fighting Aircraft of World War II. London: Salamander Books Limited, 1988. ISBN 1-84065-092-3.
  • Kotelnikov, Vladimir R. Air War Over Khalkhin Gol, The Nomonhan Incident. (2010) SAM Publications. ISBN 978-1-906959-23-4.
  • Kopenhagen, W., ed. Das große Flugzeug-Typenbuch(German). Stuttgart, Germany: Transpress, 1987, ISBN 3-344-00162-0.
  • Jackson, Robert. Aircraft of world war II – Development – Weaponry – Specifications. London, Amber Books, 2003. ISBN 978-1-85605-751-6.
  • Léonard, Herbert. Les Avions de Chasse Polikarpov (in French). Rennes, France: Editions Ouest-France, 1981. ISBN 2-85882-322-7.
  • Léonard, Herbert. Les Chasseurs Polikarpov (in French). Clichy, France: Éditions Larivière, 2004. ISBN 2-914205-07-4.
  • Lesnitchenko, Vladimir (November–December 1999). "Combat Composites: Soviet Use of 'Mother-ships' to Carry Fighters, 1939–1941". Air Enthusiast (84): 4–21. ISSN 0143-5450.
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  • Maslov, Mikhail A. Polikarpov I-15, I-16 and I-153 Aces. Oxford, UK: Osprey Publishing, 2010. ISBN 978-1-84603-981-2.
  • Маслов, М.А. Истребитель И-16. Норовистый «ишак» сталинских соколов. Москва: Коллекция, Яуза, ЭКСМО, 2008. Maslov M.A. Istrebitel' I-16. Norovisty "ishak" stalinskih sokolov (I-16 Fighter. A Restive "Donkey" of Stalin’s Falcons). Moscow, Russia: Collection, Yauza, EKSMO, 2008. ISBN 978-5-699-25660-0.
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  • Peat, Neville (2005). Hurricane Tim : The Story of Sir Tim Wallis (Hardback). Dunedin: Longarce Press. ISBN 1-877361-17-8.
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  • Stapfer, Hans-Heiri. Polikarpov Fighters in Action, Part 2 (Aircraft in Action number 158). Carrollton, TX: Squadron/Signal Publications, Inc., 1996. ISBN 0-89747-355-8.
  • Thomas, Geoffrey J. KG 200: The Luftwaffe's Most Secret Unit. London: Hikoki Publications, 2004. ISBN 1-902109-33-3.
  • 徐 (Xú), 露梅 (Lùméi). 隕落 (Fallen): 682位空军英烈的生死档案 - 抗战空军英烈档案大解密 (A Decryption of 682 Air Force Heroes of The War of Resistance-WWII and Their Martyrdom). 东城区, 北京, 中国: 团结出版社, 2016. ISBN 978-7-5126-4433-5.

External links

  • I-16 Fundación Infante de Orleans

polikarpov, russian, Поликарпов, soviet, single, engine, single, seat, fighter, aircraft, revolutionary, design, world, first, wing, cantilever, monoplane, fighter, with, retractable, landing, gear, attain, operational, status, such, introduced, vogue, fighter. The Polikarpov I 16 Russian Polikarpov I 16 is a Soviet single engine single seat fighter aircraft of revolutionary design it was the world s first low wing cantilever monoplane fighter with retractable landing gear to attain operational status and as such introduced a new vogue in fighter design 2 The I 16 was introduced in the mid 1930s and formed the backbone of the Soviet Air Force at the beginning of World War II The diminutive fighter nicknamed Ishak or Ishachok donkey or burro by Soviet pilots figured prominently in the Second Sino Japanese War 3 the Battle of Khalkhin Gol 3 Winter War and the Spanish Civil War 4 5 where it was called the Rata rat by the Nationalists or Mosca fly by the Republicans The Finns called the aircraft as Siipiorava flying squirrel 6 I 16I 16 Type 5 in the Memorial Museum of Valery Chkalov Chkalovsk RussiaRole FighterNational origin Soviet UnionManufacturer Plant No 21 Gorky Plant No 39 Moscow Plant No 153 Novosibirsk Plant No 458 Rostov on Don Baku Designer N N Polikarpov Design BureauFirst flight 30 December 1933 TsKB 12 Introduction March 1935Retired 1945 Soviet Air Force 1953 Spanish Air Force Primary users Soviet Air ForceSpanish Republican Air Force Chinese Nationalist Air ForceProduced November 1934 1942Number built 10 292 6 848 fighters and 3 444 trainers 1 Developed into Polikarpov I 180 Contents 1 Design and development 2 Operational history 2 1 Spanish Civil War 2 2 The Far East and battles at Khalkhin Gol 2 3 Soviet Union 3 Variants 4 Operators 5 Surviving aircraft 5 1 China 5 2 Finland 5 3 Germany 5 4 Russia 5 5 Spain 5 6 United States 6 Specifications I 16 Type 24 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Notes 8 2 Bibliography 9 External linksDesign and development EditWhile working on the Polikarpov I 15 biplane Nikolai Nikolaevich Polikarpov began designing an advanced monoplane fighter It featured cutting edge innovations such as retractable landing gear and a fully enclosed cockpit and was optimized for speed with a short stubby fuselage and a Wright R 1820 radial engine in a NACA cowling The aircraft is small light and simple to build citation needed Full scale work on the TsKB 12 prototype began in June 1933 and the aircraft was accepted into production on 22 November 1933 a month before it took to the air The TsKB 12 was of mixed construction using a wooden monocoque fuselage and wings employing a KhMA chrome molybdenum steel alloy wing spar dural ribs and D1 aluminum alloy skinning on the center and leading edges with the remaining portions of the wings fabric covered Another modern feature were the ailerons which ran along almost the entire trailing edge of the wing and also operated as flaps in the manner of more modern flaperons by drooping 15 The cockpit was covered by a 40 centimetre wide 16 in canopy which featured an Aldis type tubular gun sight which could slide back and forth on runners fitted with rubber bungee cords A 225 L 59 4 US gal fuel tank was fitted directly in front of the cockpit The main landing gear is fully retractable by a hand crank The armament consisted of a pair of 7 62 54mmR 0 30 in ShKAS machine guns in the wings mounted on the outboard side of the main gear and 900 rounds of ammunition citation needed These features were proposed at first by Andrei Tupolev however the NII VVS was more concerned about the stresses a typical combat aircraft was subjected to in combat and initially considered the risk too great However TsAGI with the help of the 3rd Design Brigade under the leadership of Pavel Sukhoi and Aleksandr Putylov eventually convinced NII VVS that what was being proposed was not only feasible but would enhance the aircraft s performance citation needed The TsKB 12 was designed for the Wright Cyclone SR 1820 F 3 9 cylinder radial engine rated at 529 kW 710 hp a license to build this engine under the supervision of the OKB 19 Shvetsov design bureau in the Soviet Union was being negotiated As the license was not yet approved Polikarpov was asked to settle for the less powerful M 22 Soviet built version of the Gnome Rhone Jupiter 9ASB which itself was a licensed version of the Bristol Jupiter VI with 358 kW 480 hp This was deemed acceptable because the projected top speed still exceeded 300 km h 185 mph citation needed The M 22 powered TsKB 12 first took to the air on 30 December 1933 with the famous Soviet test pilot Valery Chkalov at the controls The second TsKB 12 with a Cyclone engine and three bladed propeller flew in January of the following year Initial government trials in February 1934 revealed very good maneuverability but the aircraft did not tolerate abrupt control inputs Thus the TsKB 12 was deemed dangerous to fly and all aerobatics were forbidden The M 22 version was preferred due to the vibration of the Cyclone powered aircraft Pilots commented early on about the difficulty of climbing into the cockpit a trait that persisted through the I 16 s service life Before continuing test flights the designers had to answer the question of spin behavior Wind tunnel testing suggested that the TsKB 12 with its short tail would enter an unrecoverable flat spin but real life trials were necessary to confirm this Since Cyclone engines were rare it was decided to risk the M 22 prototype for this purpose On 1 and 2 March 1934 Chkalov performed 75 spins and discovered that the aircraft had very benign stall behavior dipping a wing and recovering without input from the pilot when airspeed increased and intentional spins could be easily terminated by placing the controls in the neutral position The stories of vicious spin behavior of the I 16 perpetuated in modern literature is unfounded perhaps extrapolated from Gee Bee experience citation needed In fact the I 16 s stablemate the biplane Polikarpov I 153 exhibited much worse spin characteristics citation needed Service trials of the new fighter designated I 16 began on 22 March 1934 The M 22 prototype reached 359 km h 223 mph The pioneering presence of a complex triple strut manually retracted main landing gear design was prone to jamming and required considerable strength from the pilot who directly operated the rearmost strut s upper end moved with a manually turned jackscrew running spanwise within the wing structure to slide outwards and inwards on each side to respectively get the main gear retracted and extended with the main strut the forward most of the trio needing to shorten its length during its retraction to fit the mainwheel into the lower fuselage performed by the middle location strut s geometric arrangement and pivot locations 7 Most of the test flights were performed with the gear extended On 1 May 1934 the M 22 prototype participated in the flyover of Red Square Approximately thirty I 16 Type 1 aircraft were delivered but were not assigned to any VVS fighter squadron Most pilots who flew the I 16 Type 1 for evaluation purposes did not find the aircraft to have many redeeming characteristics Regardless of pilot opinion much attention was focused on the Cyclone powered aircraft and the M 25 the license built Cyclone On 14 April 1934 the Cyclone prototype was damaged when one of the landing gear legs collapsed while it was taxiing The third prototype with a Cyclone engine incorporated a series of aerodynamic improvements and was delivered for government trials on 7 September 1934 The top speed of 437 km h 270 mph no longer satisfied the Air Force who now wanted the experimental Nazarov M 58 engine and 470 km h 290 mph Subsequently the M 22 powered version entered production at Factory 21 in Nizhny Novgorod and Factory 39 in Moscow Because it was the fourth aircraft produced by these factories it received the designation I 16 Type 4 Aircraft fitted with these new engines required a slightly changed airframe including armor plating for the pilot and changes to the landing gear doors particularly the hinged lower mainwheel door 8 to allow for complete closure The M 25 fitted I 16 the I 16 Type 5 featured a new engine cowling which was slightly smaller in diameter and featured nine forward facing radially set shuttered openings to control cooling airflow a redesigned exhaust with eight individual outlet stubs and other changes The M 25 was rated at 474 kW 635 hp at sea level and 522 kW 700 hp at 2 300 m 7 546 ft Due to the poor quality of the canopy glazing the I 16 Type 5 pilots typically left the canopy open or removed the rear portion completely By the time the Type 5 arrived it was the world s lightest production fighter 1 460 kg 3 219 lb as well as the world s fastest able to reach speeds of 454 km h 282 mph at altitude and 395 km h 245 mph at sea level While the Type 5 could not perform the high G maneuvers of other fighters it possessed superior speed and climb rates and had extremely responsive aileron control which gave it a very good roll rate which led to precision maneuvers in loops and split Ss A total of 7 005 single seat and 1 639 two seat trainer variants were produced citation needed Operational history EditInitial service experience revealed that the ShKAS machine guns had a tendency to jam This was the result of the guns being installed in the wings upside down to facilitate the fit The problem was addressed in later modifications Evaluations from pilots confirmed the experience with prototypes Controls were light and very sensitive abrupt maneuvers resulted in spins and spin behavior was excellent An aileron roll could be performed in under 1 5 seconds roll rate over 240 degrees second The machine guns were fired via a cable and the required effort coupled with sensitive controls made precision aiming difficult The rear weight bias made the I 16 easy to handle on unprepared airfields because the aircraft was rather unlikely to flip over the nose even if the front wheels dug in The I 16 was a difficult fighter to fly The pilots had poor visibility 9 the canopy tended to become fouled with engine oil and the moving portion was prone to slamming shut during hard maneuvers which caused many pilots to fix it in the open position The front section of the fuselage with the engine was too close to the centre of gravity and the pilot s cockpit too far to the rear The Polikarpov had insufficient longitudinal stability and it was impossible to fly the aircraft hands off 10 I 16 in Spanish Republican colors with Popeye mascot Spanish Civil War Edit At the start of the Spanish Civil War in 1936 Republican forces pleaded for fighter aircraft After receiving payment in gold Joseph Stalin dispatched around 475 11 I 16 Type 5s and Type 6s The first I 16s appeared in Spanish skies in November 1936 12 The Polikarpov monoplanes had their baptism of fire on 13 November 1936 when twelve I 16s intercepted a Nationalist bombing raid on Madrid Soviet pilots claimed four air victories and two German Heinkel He 51 pilots were killed But the Soviets suffered losses too the group commander collided with an enemy aircraft and another I 16 pilot crash landed 13 The Polikarpovs immediately began dominating the enemy Heinkel He 51 and Arado Ar 68 biplanes citation needed and remained unchallenged until the introduction of the Messerschmitt Bf 109 The arrival of the newest Bf 109Bs and the overwhelming numerical superiority of Nationalist fighters were the primary cause of the heavy I 15 and I 16 combat losses suffered throughout 1937 14 A number of aviation publications called the new Soviet fighter a Boeing due to the incorrect assumption that it was based on the Boeing P 26 s design The Nationalists nicknamed the stubby fighter Rata Rat while the Republicans affectionately called it Mosca Fly Combat experience showed that the I 16 had deficiencies several aircraft were lost after structural failure of the wings which was quickly remedied by reinforced structures Heavy machine gun bullets could sometimes penetrate the armored backrest and fuel tanks occasionally caught fire in spite of being protected The hot Spanish summers required the addition of oil radiators and dust adversely affected the life of the engines Although some aircraft accumulated up to 400 hours of flying time the average life of an I 16 was 87 days of which one sixth was spent on maintenance The biggest complaint in service was the light armament of only two 7 62 mm 0 30 in machine guns This was urgently addressed with the Type 6 which added a third ShKAS in the bottom of the fuselage The four gun Type 10 was nicknamed Super Mosca or simply Super The total number of I 16s delivered to Spain from 1936 to 1938 amounted to 276 When the war ended on 1 April 1939 187 Ratas had been lost in Spain 112 lost in combat one shot down by anti aircraft fire eleven destroyed on the ground one force landed and 62 lost in accidents 15 The Far East and battles at Khalkhin Gol Edit I 16 with Chinese insignia flown by Chinese pilots and Soviet volunteers Another 250 I 16 Type 10s were supplied to China This model added a second set of 7 62 mm 0 30 in ShKAS machine guns armor behind the pilot and had a slightly upgraded 560 kW 750 hp M 25 engine In 1939 of the 500 I 16s 16 deployed to the fighting at Nomonhan approximately 112 were lost during the battles of Khalkhin Gol of which 88 were destroyed in aerial combat primarily against the all metal Nakajima Ki 27 Japanese fighters 17 During test trials in Russia of a captured Ki 27 the aircraft proved superior to the Soviet I 152 I 15bis I 153 and the I 16 in aerial combat as well as having a faster take off and lower landing speed requiring shorter airstrips than the I 16 which needed 270 meters to stop and 380 meters for take off 18 Further attempts were made to upgrade the firepower of the aircraft using 20 mm 0 79 in ShVAK cannons making the I 16 one of the most heavily armed fighters of the period 19 able to fire 28 rounds of ammunition in three seconds Pilots loved the results but the cannons were in short supply and only a small number of the I 16 Type 12 17 27 and 28 were built The cannons adversely affected performance with 360 turn time increasing from fifteen seconds in the Type 5 to eighteen seconds The Type 24 replaced the skid with a tailwheel and featured the much more powerful 670 kW 900 hp Shvetsov M 63 engine The Type 29 replaced two of the ShKAS guns with a single 12 7 mm 50 in UBS Ten Type 17 fighters were supplied to the Chinese Air Force where on 20 May 1940 they effectively shot down a C5M scout attack plane and three G3M bombers during the Battle of Chongqing 20 21 Types 18 24 27 28 and 29 could be fitted to carry RS 82 unguided rockets The first successful use of air to air missiles in air combat was on August 20 1939 A Ki 27 was hit by an RS 82 rocket launched from a distance of about a kilometer The shot was fired by Captain N Zvonarev 22 A 1939 government study found the I 16 had exhausted its performance potential The addition of armor radio battery and flaps during the aircraft s evolution exacerbated the rear weight distribution problems to the point where the aircraft required considerable forward pressure on the stick to maintain level flight and at the same time developed a tendency to enter uncontrolled dives Extension and retraction of the landing flaps caused a dramatic change in the aircraft s attitude Accurate gunfire was difficult Soviet Union Edit VVS pilots at Khalkhyn Gol in front of their I 16 in August 1939 The pilots nicknamed the aircraft Ishak Russian Ishak Donkey Hinny because it was similar to the Russian pronunciation of I 16 ee shestnadtset When Operation Barbarossa erupted on 22 June 1941 1 635 of 4 226 VVS aircraft were I 16s of all variants fielded by 57 fighter regiments in frontier areas 23 The main assault delivered by the Luftwaffe s Luftflotte 2 in support of Wehrmacht Army Group Centre was directed against the Soviet Western Special Military District that deployed 361 424 according to other sources I 16s 24 During the early phase of the campaign the I 16 bases were the main targets for the German aircraft and after 48 hours of combat of the 1 635 Polikarpov monoplanes in service on 21 June 1941 only 937 were left 25 By 30 June the number of I 16s in western front line units had dropped to 873 including 99 that required repairs 26 To stem the Luftwaffe aerial assault several I 16 pilots adopted the taran tactic and sacrificed their lives ramming German aircraft 26 Its main opponent in the sky in 1941 was the German Messerschmitt Bf 109 27 The I 16 was slightly more maneuverable than the early Bf 109s and could fight the Messerschmitt Bf 109E or Emil on equal terms in turns Skilled Soviet pilots took advantage of the Polikarpov s superior horizontal maneuverability and liked it enough to resist the switch to more modern fighters The German aircraft however outclassed its Soviet opponent in service ceiling rate of climb acceleration and crucially in horizontal and diving speed due to better aerodynamics and a more powerful engine The main versions of the I 16 had a maximum speed of 450 470 km h 279 291 mph while the Bf 109E had a maximum speed of 560 570 km h 347 353 mph the more streamlined Bf 109F Friedrich could hit 615 630 km h 372 390plus mph So German pilots held the initiative and could decide if they wanted to chase their opponents could attack them from above and behind and then gain altitude for a new attack Meanwhile Polikarpovs could only defend each other by forming a defensive circle or via horizontal maneuverability 27 Moreover in terms of armament Messerschmitts had a slight edge on the I 16 The Emil carried two wing mounted 20mm MG FF cannons and two synchronized 7 92 mm MG 17s with a weight of a one second salvo of 2 37 kg while the most common version of the I 16 armed with just two synchronized and two wing mounted 7 62 ShKAS could deliver 1 43 kg of bullets each second 28 Finally the ammunition storage on a Messerschmitt exceeded that of the I 16 carrying 1 000 rounds for each machine gun plus sixty drum housed rounds for each cannon while the Polikarpov carried just 450 rounds for each ShKAS gun 29 Around half of all produced I 16s were still in service in 1943 when they were finally replaced citation needed Specially modified I 16s were used in the Zveno parasite aircraft experiments using the Tupolev TB 3 as a mothership The Luftwaffe was known to have captured some I 16 and UTI 4 two seat trainers two of which were marked with the Stammkennzeichen codes DM HC and DM HD and flown from the Erprobungstelle Rechlin central Luftwaffe test facility by Kampfgeschwader 200 KG 200 30 The Luftwaffe was not the only air force able to test its fighters against the I 16 the Japanese captured a few I 16s as well 3 and the Romanian Air Force also got one when a Soviet pilot defected 31 The Finnish Air Force FAF captured some I 16s along with several other Soviet types During the Winter War and the Continuation War the Finns captured six I 16s and one I 16UTI Two of the captured I 16s and I 16UTIs were put back into flying condition and flight tested 32 Variants EditThere is considerable disagreement in literature on features of particular I 16 variants This list is based on the following references 33 34 35 Russian Polikarpov UTI 4 a two seater training version of the I 16 Soviet fighter Russia 1941 Polikarpov I 16 at EAA AirVenture Oshkosh 2003 TsKB 12 First prototype M 22 engine 336 kW 450 hp two unsynchronized ShKAS machine guns in the wings with 900 rpg TsKB 12bis Second prototype Wright SGR 1820 F 3 Cyclone engine 533 kW 715 hp TsKB 12P I 16P Prototype armed with two ShVAK cannon in the wings 150 rpg TsKB 18 Ground attack prototype with M 22 engine and armored cockpit Armed with four ShKAS or PV 1 machine guns and 100 kg 220 lb of bombs Two additional Type 5s were fitted with six ShKAS machine guns of which four could decline to 20 for ground strafing TsKB 29 SPB Pneumatically operated landing gear and flaps Wright Cyclone engine armament of two ShKAS machine guns used as a high speed dive bomber in the Zveno project I 16 Type 1 Pre production series M 22 engine with 358 kW 480 hp I 16 Type 4 First production version M 22 engine I 16 Type 5 Type 4 with a streamlined and tapered engine cowling Shvetsov M 25 engine with 522 kW 700 hp 2 prototypes tested with M 62 engine as well Mass produced I 16 Type 6 Shvetsov M 25B engine 545 kW 730 hp Weight reduction down to 1383 kg I 16 Type 10 Four ShKAS machine guns two synchronized in the fuselage and two in the wings windscreen replaced the sliding canopy could be fitted with retractable skis for winter operations M 25B engine with 560 kW 750 hp Hispano Suiza built aircraft were powered by the Wright Cyclone R 1820 F 54 engine I 16 Type 12 Version of I 16 Type 5 with 2 ShKAS machine guns and 2 ShVAK cannons I 16 Type 16 Type 10 with synchronized ShVAK 12 7mm prototypes Only three were built all in January 1939 with serial numbers 16211 16213 They passed factory trials and were delivered to the VVS for military trials 36 I 16 Type 17 Type 10 with two ShKAS machine guns and two ShVAK cannon rubber tail wheel M 25V engine with 560 kW 750 hp Some aircraft were fitted with an additional 12 7 mm 0 5 in Berezin UB machine gun for strafing I 16 Type 18 Type 10 with Shvetsov M 62 engine producing 620 kW 830 hp with a two speed supercharger and a variable pitch propeller Capable of carrying two 100 L 26 US gal underwing fuel tanks I 16 Type 19 Identical to the Type 10 except for the replacement of their wing mounted ShKAS machine guns with Savin Norov machine guns the propeller synchronized ShKAS were not replaced Only three aircraft were built in this configuration all in January 1939 They had serial numbers 19211 19213 They were first used as test platform for the new gun and then delivered to the VVS as I 16SN They saw action during the Winter War 36 37 I 16 Type 20 This designation was first applied to four prototypes built in February 1939 at Factory 21 and armed with Savin Norov SN machine guns synchronized to fire through the propeller This type was however rejected in August 1939 and then the designation reused for the first I 16 version otherwise the same as the type 10 capable of carrying drop tanks These 93 L 25 US gal tanks were designated PSB 21 Eighty aircraft of this specific type were delivered Additionally all I 16 types built after January 1940 could use these drop tanks 36 I 16 Type 21 and Type 22 These were planned to have four synchronized machine guns all firing through the propeller Type 21 was to use only ShKAS while type 22 was supposed to use a mixture of ShKAS and SN machine guns Both types however existed only on paper no aircraft of these types went into service 36 I 16 Type 23 Type 10 additionally armed with RS 82 rockets 35 were built starting in May 1939 Further production of this type was cancelled in August 1939 36 I 16 Type 24 Four ShKAS landing flaps replaced drooping ailerons tailwheel added second cockpit door added on the starboard side Shvetsov M 63 engine with 670 kW 900 hp I 16 Type 27 Type 17 with an M 62 engine I 16 Type 28 Type 24 with two ShKAS and two ShVAK I 16 Type 29 Two synchronized ShKAS in the nose and a single 12 7 mm 0 50 in UBS in the bottom of the fuselage it had no guns in wings which were reserved for ground attack weapons Three rocket racks were mounted in each wing Additionally starting in 1941 the external fuel tank hardpoint was changed so that it became multipurpose it could carry the new type of drop tank PLBG 100 or a FAB 100 bomb Wartime photographs from the summer of 1941 show two configurations one with 6 RS 82 rockets and two FAB 100 bombs and another with four RS 132 rockets 38 I 16 Type 30 Re entered production in 1941 42 M 63 engine I 16TK Type 10 with a turbocharger for improved high altitude performance reached 494 km h 307 mph at 8 600 m 28 200 ft did not enter production UTI 1 Two seat trainer version of Type 1 UTI 2 Improved UTI 1 with fixed landing gear UTI 4 I 16UTI also known as I 16 Type 15 Two seat trainer version of Type 5 most with fixed landing gear This model was built in significant numbers approximately 3 400 were produced 39 Operators Edit Chinese I 16 China Aviation Museum Aircraft on display at a museum in Moscow Republic of ChinaChinese Nationalist Air Force Nazi GermanyLuftwaffe operated captured aircraft FinlandFinnish Air Force operated captured aircraft MongoliaMongolian People s Army Aviation operated one I 16 used for training PolandPolish Air Force operated one I 16 1 Pulk Lotnictwa Mysliwskiego and two UTI 4 aircraft 15 Samodzielny Zapasowy Pulk Lotniczy and the Techniczna Szkola Lotnicza 40 RomaniaRoyal Romanian Air Force one captured aircraft one I 16 was captured near Dorohoi in 1941 Soviet UnionSoviet Air Forces Soviet Naval Aviation Spanish RepublicSpanish Republican Air Force Spanish StateSpanish Nationalist Air Force operated I 16 and UTI 4 aircraft captured from the Spanish Republican Air Force returned by French government and 30 built in Jerez de la Frontera I 16s were still operated in 1952 Group 1 W 26th Group Moron Fighter SchoolSurviving aircraft Edit Two seat I 16 UTI trainer version with Finnish markings on display in the Finnish Aviation Museum in Vantaa Finland I 16 in Spanish Republican colours property of The Infante de Orleans Foundation Commencing in 1993 New Zealand pilot and entrepreneur Sir Tim Wallis Alpine Fighter Collection organised the restoration of six I 16s and three I 153s found in Russia to an airworthy condition by the Soviet Aeronautical Research Institute Sibnia in Novosibirsk 41 42 43 The flight of the first restored aircraft I 16 9 took place in October 1995 Once restored the aircraft were transported by rail to Vladivostok and from there shipped via Hong Kong to New Zealand This project was completed in 1999 when the third and final I 153 arrived in New Zealand In addition a seventh I 16 was later restored for American collector Jerry Yagen China Edit Unknown I 16 on static display at the Chinese Aviation Museum in Datangshang 44 It is believed to be a replica incorporating original parts citation needed Finland Edit UT 1 I 16 UTI 4 on static display at the Finnish Aviation Museum in Vantaa Uusimaa 45 Germany Edit 2421319 I 16 Type 24 airworthy with a private owner in Germany as D EPRN 46 Russia Edit 2421234 I 16 Type 24 airworthy with a private owner in Russia as RA 1561G 47 2821395 I 16 on static display at the Central Naval Museum in Saint Petersburg 48 49 Replica I 16 on static display at the Museum of the Great Patriotic War in Moscow 50 Unknown I 16 on static display at the Central Air Force Museum in Monino 51 Spain Edit 2421039 I 16 Type 24 airworthy at the Fundacion Infante de Orleans in Madrid as EC JRK 52 53 54 Replica I 16 on static display at the Museo del Aire in Madrid 55 56 United States Edit 2421014 I 16 Type 24 airworthy at the Flying Heritage Collection in Everett Washington as N7459 57 58 2421028 I 16 Type 24 airworthy at the Military Aviation Museum in Virginia Beach Virginia as N1639P 59 60 61 2421645 I 16 Type 24 under restoration to airworthy at Fantasy of Flight as N30425 62 63 64 Specifications I 16 Type 24 Edit 3 view drawing of Polikarpov I 16 Data from Istoriia konstruktskii samoletov v SSSR do 1938 34 General characteristicsCrew One Length 6 13 m 20 ft 1 in Wingspan 9 m 29 ft 6 in Height 3 25 m 10 ft 8 in Wing area 14 5 m2 156 sq ft Airfoil TsAGI R II 16 at root 65 Empty weight 1 490 kg 3 285 lb Gross weight 1 941 kg 4 279 lb Powerplant 1 Shvetsov M 63 9 cylinder supercharged air cooled radial engine 820 kW 1 100 hp Propellers 2 bladed variable pitch propellerPerformance Maximum speed 489 km h 304 mph 264 kn at 3 000 m 9 800 ft Range 700 km 430 mi 380 nmi with drop tanks Service ceiling 9 700 m 31 800 ft Rate of climb 14 7 m s 2 890 ft min Time to altitude 5 000 m 16 000 ft in 5 minutes 48 seconds Wing loading 134 kg m2 27 lb sq ft Power mass 0 43 kW kg 0 26 hp lb Armament 2 fixed forward firing 7 62 mm 0 300 in ShKAS machine guns in upper cowling 2 fixed forward firing 20 mm 0 787 in ShVAK cannons in the wings 6 unguided RS 82 rockets or up to 500 kg 1 100 lb of bombsSee also EditZveno projectAircraft of comparable role configuration and era Brewster F2A Buffalo Boeing P 26 Peashooter CAC Boomerang Fiat G 50 Macchi MC 200 Messerschmitt Bf 109 Mitsubishi 1MF10 Nakajima Ki 27 Reggiane Re 2000 Seversky P 35Related lists List of interwar military aircraft List of aircraft of World War II List of aircraft of the Spanish Republican Air ForceReferences EditNotes Edit Maslov 2008 p 76 Green William Polikarpov s Little Hawk Flying Review November 1969 a b c Liss 1966 p 10 Abanshin and Gut 1994 p 38 Leonard 1981 pp 18 22 Polikarpov Fighters Animation of the I 16 s maingear retraction cycle Animation of the I 16 s lower mainwheel door mechanics during retraction Jackson 2003 p 148 Jackson 2003 p 147 Gunston 2003 p 85 Maslov 2010 p 25 Maslov 2010 p 26 Maslov 2010 p 30 Maslov 2010 p 32 Kotelnikov p 109 Nedialkov 2011 p 141 Nedialkov p 24 25 148 Price 1975 p 78 红岩春秋 唐学锋 17 January 2019 当年设施简陋的梁山机场 没想到却是中国空军保卫重庆的第一道空中防线 上游新闻 汇聚向上的力量 www cqcb com Retrieved 15 January 2021 5 20 梁山空战 我空军击落日机7架 这是当时新闻媒体报道的数字 难免有些夸大 根据南京的中国第二历史档案馆保存的 空军战斗要报 记载 此役 我空军一共击落敌轰炸机3架 侦察机1架 其大致情况如下 1 第24队队长李文庠 分队长张光蕴 王文骅 队员彭均 李廷凯等5员 在梁山上空合力击落敌重轰炸机1架 残骸在寻觅中 2 队员陈少成在忠县上空击落敌侦察机1架 该敌机在忠县汝溪焚毁 番号为258 敌乘员3人全毙 3 队员伍国培在梁山上空击落敌重轰炸机1架 该机在忠县马家祠损毁 番号为4528 敌乘员6人全毙 4 分队长韩参在开县击落敌重轰炸机1架 敌机残骸正寻觅中 从当天中国空军的战斗要报记载来看 被击落的4架日机 只有两架是查明了具体坠落的地点 并找到了残骸 而另外两架的残骸还在 寻觅 中 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Cheung 2015 pp 67 68 The 24th PS 4th PG received a small number of the ShVAK 20mm cannon armed I 16 Type 17 fighters from the Soviets and were used to good effect intercepting 24 G3Ms and a Ki 15 C5M on 20 May 1940 NASA Technical Translation National Aeronautics and Space Administration 1959 Maslov 2010 p 68 Maslov 2010 pp 68 69 Maslov 2010 p 69 a b Maslov 2010 p 72 a b Drabkin 2007 p 142 Drabkin 2007 pp 142 43 Drabkin 2007 p 143 Thomas 2004 p 80 Stapfer 1996 p 46 Perttula Pentti FAF in Color permanent dead link saunalahti fi Retrieved 6 September 2009 Liss 1966 p 8 a b Shavrov 1985 Green 2001 pp 473 475 a b c d e Maslov M A 2008 Istrebitel I 16 Norovistyj ishak stalinskih sokolov in Russian Yauza Kollekciya EKSMO pp 55 57 ISBN 978 5 699 25660 0 S V Ivanov 2001 I 16 Boevoj Ishak stalinskih sokolov Chast 2 Vojna v vozduhe in Russian Vol 43 OOO ARS Ranshe chem nachalis ispytatelnye strelby ultraShKASa dva inzhenera Savin i Norov predstavili v 1935 g na ispytaniya eshe odin aviacionnyj pulemet SN skorostrelnostyu 2800 3000 vystrelov v minutu V 1936 g pulemet uspeshno proshel strelbovye ispytaniya a v 1937 g byl rekomendovan k serijnomu proizvodstvu Pulemetami SN nemedlenno vooruzhili istrebiteli I 16 I 16 s pulemetami SN poluchili oboznachenie tip 19 nesmotrya na to chto krome vooruzheniya samolet nichem ne otlichalsya ot I 16 tip 10 Pulemetami SN zamenili krylevye ShKASy sinhronnye pulemety ostalis prezhnimi ShKASy V nachale 1939 g zavod 21 izgotovil tri I 16 tip 19 zavodskie nomera 192111 19212 i 19213 S 17 po 26 marta samolety ispytyval zavodskoj letchik ispytatel Tomas Suzi Po rezultatam ispytanij bylo rekomendovano postroit partiyu takih samoletov No massovoe proizvodstvo poschitali necelesoobraznym Pod oboznacheniem I 16SN istrebiteli peredali v VVS Vesnoj 1939 g na vooruzhenie VVS RKKA byl prinyat aviacionnyj pulemet ultraShKAS Istrebiteli vooruzhennye ultraShKASAmi i SN prinyali uchastie v vojne s Finlyandiej zimoj 1939 1940 g g Maslov M A 2008 Istrebitel I 16 Norovistyj ishak stalinskih sokolov in Russian Yauza Kollekciya EKSMO pp 144 145 ISBN 978 5 699 25660 0 Maslov M A 2008 Istrebitel I 16 Norovistyj ishak stalinskih sokolov in Russian Yauza Kollekciya EKSMO p 76 ISBN 978 5 699 25660 0 Stapfer 1996 p 50 Peat Pages 219 to 224 Polikarpov I 16 Ishak Rata Kiwi Aircraft Images Phillip Treweek Retrieved 9 December 2016 Morss Dave Flying the Polikarpov Myriad Research Myriad Research Retrieved 9 December 2016 Airframe Dossier Polikarpov I 16 Aerial Visuals AerialVisuals ca Retrieved 9 December 2016 POLIKARPOV UTI 4 I 16 UTI Ilmailumuseo Flygmuseum in Finnish Suomen ilmailumuseo 21 May 2015 Retrieved 9 December 2016 Polikarpov I 16 Ishak Red Star Flying Wings Aviation Photography 17 March 2011 Retrieved 25 April 2022 Airframe Dossier Polikarpov I 16 24 Rata c n 2421234 c r RA 1561G Aerial Visuals AerialVisuals ca Retrieved 9 December 2016 Untitled Aviation of World War II AirPages Retrieved 9 December 2016 Untitled Aviaciya Vtoroj mirovoj in Russian AirPages Retrieved 9 December 2016 Airframe Dossier Polikarpov I 16 s n 61 white VVS Aerial Visuals AerialVisuals ca Retrieved 9 December 2016 Airframe Dossier Polikarpov I 16 Aerial Visuals AerialVisuals ca Retrieved 9 December 2016 Policarpov I 16 Mosca Rata Fundacion Infante de Orleans in Spanish Fundacion Infante de Orleans Retrieved 9 December 2016 Airframe Dossier Polikarpov I 16 24 Rata s n 39 Russian AF c n 2421039 c r EC JRK Aerial Visuals AerialVisuals ca Retrieved 9 December 2016 REGISTRO DE MATRICULA DE AERONAVES CIVILES PDF Agencia Estatal de Seguridad Aerea 1 December 2016 Archived from the original PDF on 20 December 2016 Retrieved 9 December 2016 Hangar 3 del Museo de Aeronautica y Astronautica in Spanish Ejercito del Aire Archived from the original on 18 November 2016 Retrieved 9 December 2016 Airframe Dossier Polikarpov I 16 Rata Replica Aerial Visuals AerialVisuals ca Retrieved 9 December 2016 POLIKARPOV I 16 TYPE 24 RATA Flying Heritage Collection Friends of Flying Heritage Archived from the original on 6 April 2015 Retrieved 9 December 2016 FAA REGISTRY N7459 Federal Aviation Administration U S Department of Transportation Retrieved 9 December 2016 WWII Aircraft Military Aviation Museum Military Aviation Museum Archived from the original on 9 October 2013 Retrieved 9 December 2016 Polikarpov I 16 Rata Fighter Factory Fighter Factory Fighter Factory Archived from the original on 21 May 2011 Retrieved 9 December 2016 FAA REGISTRY N1639P Federal Aviation Administration U S Department of Transportation Retrieved 9 December 2016 Airframe Dossier Polikarpov I 16 24 Rata c n 2421645 c r N30425 Aerial Visuals AerialVisuals ca Retrieved 9 December 2016 FAA REGISTRY N30425 Federal Aviation Administration U S Department of Transportation Retrieved 9 December 2016 Polikarpov I 16 Soviet Fighter New Acquisition YouTube 20 March 2019 Retrieved 24 April 2022 Lednicer David The Incomplete Guide to Airfoil Usage m selig ae illinois edu Retrieved 16 April 2019 Bibliography Edit Abanshin Michael E and Nina Gut Fighting Polikarpov Eagles of the East No 2 Lynnwood WA Aviation International 1994 ISBN 1 884909 01 9 Cheung Raymond OSPREY AIRCRAFT OF THE ACES 126 Aces of the Republic of China Air Force Oxford Bloomsbury Publishing Plc 2015 ISBN 978 14728 05614 Drabkin Artem The Red Air Force at War Barbarossa and the Retreat to Moscow Recollections of Fighter Pilots on the Eastern Front Barnsley South Yorkshire UK Pen amp Sword Military 2007 ISBN 1 84415 563 3 Gordon Yefim and Keith Dexter Polikarpov s I 16 Fighter Its Forerunners and Progeny Red Star vol 3 Earl Shilton Leicester UK Midland Publishing Ltd 2002 ISBN 1 85780 131 8 Gordon Yefim and Dmitri Khazanov Soviet Combat Aircraft of the Second World War Volume One Single Engined Fighters Earl Shilton Leicester UK Midland Publishing Ltd 1998 ISBN 1 85780 083 4 Green William and Gordon Swanborough The Great Book of Fighters St Paul Minnesota MBI Publishing 2001 ISBN 0 7603 1194 3 Green William amp Swanborough Gordon Soviet Flies in Spanish Skies Air Enthusiast Quarterly No 1 n d pp 1 16 ISSN 0143 5450 Green William and Gordon Swanborough WW2 Aircraft Fact Files Soviet Air Force Fighters Part 2 London Macdonald and Jane s Publishers Ltd 1978 ISBN 0 354 01088 3 Gunston Bill The Illustrated Directory of Fighting Aircraft of World War II London Salamander Books Limited 1988 ISBN 1 84065 092 3 Kotelnikov Vladimir R Air War Over Khalkhin Gol The Nomonhan Incident 2010 SAM Publications ISBN 978 1 906959 23 4 Kopenhagen W ed Das grosse Flugzeug Typenbuch German Stuttgart Germany Transpress 1987 ISBN 3 344 00162 0 Jackson Robert Aircraft of world war II Development Weaponry Specifications London Amber Books 2003 ISBN 978 1 85605 751 6 Leonard Herbert Les Avions de Chasse Polikarpov in French Rennes France Editions Ouest France 1981 ISBN 2 85882 322 7 Leonard Herbert Les Chasseurs Polikarpov in French Clichy France Editions Lariviere 2004 ISBN 2 914205 07 4 Lesnitchenko Vladimir November December 1999 Combat Composites Soviet Use of Mother ships to Carry Fighters 1939 1941 Air Enthusiast 84 4 21 ISSN 0143 5450 Liss Witold The Polikarpov I 16 Aircraft in Profile Number 122 Leatherhead Surrey UK Profile publications Ltd 1966 Maslov Mikhail A Polikarpov I 15 I 16 and I 153 Aces Oxford UK Osprey Publishing 2010 ISBN 978 1 84603 981 2 Maslov M A Istrebitel I 16 Norovistyj ishak stalinskih sokolov Moskva Kollekciya Yauza EKSMO 2008 Maslov M A Istrebitel I 16 Norovisty ishak stalinskih sokolov I 16 Fighter A Restive Donkey of Stalin s Falcons Moscow Russia Collection Yauza EKSMO 2008 ISBN 978 5 699 25660 0 Nedialkov Dimitar In The Skies of Nomonhan Japan verses Russia May September 1939 London Crecy Publishing Limited Second edition 2011 ISBN 978 0 859791 52 6 Peat Neville 2005 Hurricane Tim The Story of Sir Tim Wallis Hardback Dunedin Longarce Press ISBN 1 877361 17 8 Price Alfred The World War II Fighter Conflict London Macdonald and Jane s Publishers Ltd 1975 ISBN 0 356 08129 X Shavrov V B Istoriia konstruktskii samoletov v SSSR do 1938 g 3 izd in Russian Moscow Mashinostroenie 1985 ISBN 5 217 03112 3 Shavrov V B Istoriia konstruktskii samoletov v SSSR 1938 1950 gg 3 izd in Russian Moscow Mashinostroenie 1994 ISBN 5 217 00477 0 Stapfer Hans Heiri Polikarpov Fighters in Action Part 2 Aircraft in Action number 158 Carrollton TX Squadron Signal Publications Inc 1996 ISBN 0 89747 355 8 Thomas Geoffrey J KG 200 The Luftwaffe s Most Secret Unit London Hikoki Publications 2004 ISBN 1 902109 33 3 徐 Xu 露梅 Lumei 隕落 Fallen 682位空军英烈的生死档案 抗战空军英烈档案大解密 A Decryption of 682 Air Force Heroes of The War of Resistance WWII and Their Martyrdom 东城区 北京 中国 团结出版社 2016 ISBN 978 7 5126 4433 5 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Polikarpov I 16 The I 16 Fighter resource I 16 Fundacion Infante de Orleans Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Polikarpov I 16 amp oldid 1142168440, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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