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Sikorsky Ilya Muromets

The Sikorsky Ilya Muromets (Russian: Сикорский Илья Муромец) (versions S-22, S-23, S-24, S-25, S-26 and S-27) was a class of Russian pre-World War I large four-engine commercial airliners and military heavy bombers used during World War I by the Russian Empire.[1] The aircraft series was named after Ilya Muromets, a hero from Slavic mythology.[2] The series was based on the Russky Vityaz or Le Grand, the world's first four-engined aircraft, designed by Igor Sikorsky.[3] The Ilya Muromets aircraft as it appeared in 1913 was a revolutionary design, intended for commercial service with its spacious fuselage incorporating a passenger saloon and washroom on board. The Ilya Muromets was the world's first multi-engine aircraft in production and at least sixty were built.[4] During World War I, it became the first four-engine bomber to equip a dedicated strategic bombing unit.[5] This heavy bomber was unrivaled in the early stages of the war, as the Central Powers had no aircraft capable enough to rival it until much later.[6]

Ilya Muromets
Role Airliner, heavy bomber
National origin Russian Empire
Manufacturer Russo-Baltic Wagon Company
Designer Igor Sikorsky
First flight 1913
Introduction 1914
Retired 1922
Primary user Imperial Russian Air Service
Produced 1913 to 1917
Number built 85+
Developed from Sikorsky Russky Vityaz

Design and development edit

 
Russky Vityaz

The Ilya Muromets (Sikorsky S-22) was designed and constructed by Igor Sikorsky at the Russo-Baltic Carriage Factory (RBVZ) in Saint Petersburg in 1913.[7] It was based on his earlier S-21 Russky Vityaz, which started out as the twin-engined Le Grand, then as the twin tandem-engined Bolshoi Baltisky before placing all four of the Baltisky's engines in a tractor configuration along the lower wing's leading edge to create the Russky Vityaz — which had played an important role in the development of Russian aviation and the multi-engine aircraft industries of the world.

The Ilya Muromets was first conceived and built as a luxurious aircraft. It was the first aircraft to have an insulated passenger saloon, containing wicker chairs, a bedroom, a lounge, as well as the first airborne toilet. The aircraft also had heating and electrical lighting.[8] The S-22 cockpit had sufficient space allowing several persons to observe the pilot. Openings on both sides of the fuselage permitted mechanics to climb out onto the lower wings to service the engines during flight. A hatch on the left side provided an entry to the main cabin, behind the cockpit. The main cabin featured two large windows on each side. Further back was a private cabin that included a berth, a small table, and a cabinet. Lighting was provided by a wind-driven generator and heating was supplied by two long engine exhaust pipes that passed through the corners of the cabin.[4] Despite many advancements, the flight instruments on the Ilya Muromets were primitive. They included four tachometers, one per engine, a compass, a crude altimeter and airspeed indicator, two glass U-shaped tubes and a ball for bank indication, and a series of horizontal bars situated vertically on the nose of the fuselage for measuring climbs and descents.[9] Later, in the bomber variants, a drift indicator and elementary bombsight was added to aid bombing.[10]

In 1913 the Ilya Muromets No. 107 flew for the first time, and on 11 February 1914, the second prototype (factory airframe 128) took off for its first demonstration flight with 16 passengers aboard, marking a record for number of passengers carried.[11][12] From 30 June to 12 July 1914, it set a world record by making a trip from Saint Petersburg to Kiev, a distance of some 1200 km, and back. The first leg took 14 hours and 38 minutes, with one landing for fuel at Orsha, and the return one, with a fuel stop at Novosokolniki, took even less time, about 13 hours.[13] According to Sikorsky, "The 1,600 miles (2,600 km) flight proved conclusively the value of large multi-motored airplanes. The Army placed an order for ten four-engined airplanes of the Ilia Mourometz type and the factory personnel was overjoyed by this final approval of the results of two years of hard work."[14] The acclaim received by Sikorsky included Tsar Nicholas II presenting him with the Order of St. Vladimir, Fourth Degree, arranging for an exemption from the wartime draft to allow him to continue his design work, and a promise of a grant worth 100,000 rubles from the State Duma.[N 1] During an Imperial military review at Krasnoye Selo in July, Nicholas II decorated and christened the Ilya Muromets Type B Military Prototype, No. 128, the "Kievsky."[16][17]

During testing, the Ilya Muromets were fitted with both skis and pontoons in anticipation of new variants being produced. If it had not been for World War I, the Ilya Muromets would probably have started passenger flights that same year.[5]

With the beginning of World War I, Sikorsky was encouraged by the results of the proving flights to redesign the aircraft to become the "Military Ilia Mourometz, Type V, the world's first purpose-designed heavier than air bomber.[18][N 2] The new heavy bomber was slightly smaller and lighter than the Type A. Internal racks carried up to 800 kg of bombs, and positions for up to nine machine guns were added for self-defense in various locations, including the extreme tail. The Muromets (in its S-25 Geh-2 variant, March 1916) was the first aircraft in history to incorporate a tail gunner position.[20] The engines were protected with 5 mm-thick armor.[5] The military version was designed expressly for long-range flying in both bombing and reconnaissance roles.[15]

Operational history edit

 
Yosip Stanislavovich Bashko, pilot of "Ilya Muromets" based in Kiev

When WWI broke out, only two Ilya Muromets bombers were completed out of an initial production run of ten aircraft.[21] In August 1914, the Ilya Muromets was introduced to the Imperial Russian Air Service and on 10 December 1914, the Russians formed their first ten-bomber squadron, slowly increasing the number to 20 by mid-1916.[22] Operations with the heavy bombers began on 12 February 1915 with a raid on German frontline positions.[23]

German Fighter Pilots often were reluctant to attack Ilya Muromets in the air due to their defensive firepower including the unique tail gun position, and the difficulty in bringing down such a large aircraft.[15] Once engaged, small fighters also found that they were buffeted by propeller wash of the four large engines.[24]

On 12 September 1916 (Julian calendar), the Russians lost their first Ilya Muromets in a fight with four German Albatros, three of which it managed to shoot down. This was also the only loss to enemy action during the war; three others were damaged in combat, but managed to return to base to be repaired.[15]

83 Ilya Muromets bombers were built for the Russian forces between 1913 and 1918. They recorded a number of firsts in the history of military aviation, like bombing from heavy bombers, performing bomber group raids on enemy targets, night bombing, and photographic bomb damage assessment. They were also the first to develop defensive tactics for a single bomber engaged in an air combat with several enemy fighters.[25] Due to systematic weapon upgrades, the effectiveness of bomb-dropping reached 90%.[26]

The Ilya Muromets performed more than 400 sorties and dropped 65 tons of bombs during the war. By 1917, attrition from constant flying had reduced the bombing fleet substantially and only four bombers remained at the front line; the other Ilya Muromets were relegated to trainer duties.[15] The heavy bombers of other participants appeared in 1916, all resembling the Russian pioneer to a certain degree.[23] The Russian government and Sikorsky himself sold the design and production license to the British and French governments. The Germans tried to copy its design, using the fragments of the Ilya Muromets they had shot down over their territory in September 1916. By the end of 1916, the design was generally believed to be at the end of its development cycle, with ensuing modifications to individual aircraft, such as additional armor and weapons, making the aircraft too heavy and not suitable for operational use. Continual changes in the field as well as the factory led to many aircraft being redesignated as a new variant.[15] Further designs based on the original Ilya Muromets bombers included a more dedicated attack version.

Russian Revolution and aftermath edit

Following the February Revolution of 1917, the Ilya Muromets bombers continued to fly with the Russian Imperial Army but others were seized by the provisional government with pilots also defecting to the Ukrainian squadron of Hetman and General Pavlo Skoropadsky, with at least one Ilya Muromets being flown by Polish forces. The remainder of the aircraft flew with the Red Army until mid-1919.

The Ilya Muromets continued in production after the war, with only a handful being finished. From May–October 1921, the aircraft was utilized in its originally intended role of passenger transport on the Moscow-Kharkov line; six saw service as a civilian passenger airliner and mail plane.[27] After carrying 60 passengers and two tons of freight, the Ilya Muromets were considered too difficult to maintain as engines and airframes were worn out and on 10 October 1922, the airliners were retired. The last flight of an Ilya Muromets bomber took place in 1922 at the Air Shooting and Bomb-dropping School in Serpukhov.

Variants edit

 
Ilya Muromets S-23
Ilya Muromets No. 107
Experimental airliner, 1913; fitted with four 100 hp (75 kW) Argus As I engines, later refitted with two 200 hp (150 kW) Salmson 2M7 and two Argus 115 hp engines.[28]
Ilya Muromets No. 107 Hydroplane
Hydroplane modification of airframe No. 107, fitted with two 200 hp (150 kW) Salmson 2M7 and two Argus 115 hp engines.[28]
Ilya Muromets Kievsky No. 128
Experimental airliner, 1914; fitted with two Argus 140 hp engines and two Argus 125 hp engines.[28]
Ilya Muromets S-22 Type A
Unarmed trainer, one built 1913, used in Gachina Air School in 1914
Ilya Muromets S-23 Type B(eh) Bomber
Bomber. First flight: 1914, in service August 1914, original armament: one 37mm cannon, one 8 mm machine gun; six built (heavily modified).
Type B No 135, 1914; fitted with four Argus engines of 130 hp each.
Type B No 136, 1914; fitted with two Salmson engines of 200 hp each and two Salmson engines of 136 hp each.
Type B No 137, 1914; fitted with two Salmson engines of 200 hp each and two Salmson engines of 136 hp each.
Type B No 138, 1914; fitted with two Salmson engines of 200 hp each and two Salmson engines of 136 hp each.
Type B No 139, 1914; fitted with two Salmson engines of 200 hp each and two Salmson engines of 136 hp each.
Ilya Muromets S-23 V(eh) Series
Bomber, First flight 1914, fitted with four Sunbeam Crusader V-8 engines of 148 hp each
Type V No 151, 1915; fitted with four Argus engines of 140 hp each.
Type V No 159 Trainer aircraft, 1915; fitted with two Sunbeam 225 hpV-8 engines.
Type V No 167, 1915; fitted with four RBVZ-6 engines of 150 hp each.
Ilya Muromets S-24 G-1 Series
Bomber, First flight 1914; 18 built.
Ilya Muromets S-25 Series
Bomber, First flight 1915; 55 built.
Ilya Muromets S-25 G-2 "Russobalt"
Bomber, fitted with four RBVZ-6 engines of 150 hp, 170 kg bombload, five MG.
Ilya Muromets S-25 G-3 "Renobalt" Series
Bomber, fitted with two Renault engines of 220 hp each and two RBVZ-6 engines of 150 hp, 190 kg bombload, six MG
Ilya Muromets S-26 D-1 DIM Series
Bomber, First flight 1916, fitted with four Sunbeam engines of 150 hp; three built.
Ilya Muromets S-27 E (Yeh-2) Series
Bomber, First flight 1916, fitted with four Renault engines of 220 hp each; two built.[15]

Operators edit

Military edit

  Russian Empire/  Russian Republic
  Russian SFSR
  Poland
  Ukrainian State

Civilian edit

Replica edit

 
Full-scale replica of Sikorsky S-22 Ilya Muromets in Monino Air Force Museum.

One Ilya Muromets S-22 replica exists[29] in the Monino Air Force Museum near Moscow built in 1970.

Specifications (Ilya Muromets Type S-23 V) edit

Data from [citation needed]

General characteristics

  • Crew: 4-8 (max 12)
  • Length: 17.5 m (57 ft 5 in)
  • Upper wingspan: 29.8 m (97 ft 9 in)
  • Lower wingspan: 21 m (68 ft 11 in)
  • Height: 4 m (13 ft 1 in)
  • Wing area: 125 m2 (1,350 sq ft)
  • Empty weight: 3,150 kg (6,945 lb)
  • Gross weight: 4,600 kg (10,141 lb)
  • Fuel capacity: 600 kg (1,323 lb) Fuel and oil
  • Powerplant: 4 × Sunbeam Crusader V-8 water-cooled piston engines 150 PS (150 hp; 110 kW)
  • Propellers: 2-bladed fixed-pitch propellers

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 110 km/h (68 mph, 59 kn)
  • Endurance: 5 hours with 300 kg (661 lb) of bombs and armament; 10 hours with extra fuel.
  • Service ceiling: 3,000 m (9,800 ft) [30]
  • Wing loading: 36.8 kg/m2 (7.5 lb/sq ft)
  • Power/mass: 0.097 kW/kg (0.059 hp/lb)

Armament

See also edit

Related development

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ One of Sikorsky's prized possessions was a personal gift from the Tsar, a diamond-studded gold watch that arrived later in the mail, also in recognition of his achievements with the Ilya Muromets. Sikorski retained the watch throughout his lifetime.[15]
  2. ^ Sikorsky used the French transliteration of "Ilya Muromets."[19]

Citations edit

  1. ^ Woodman, Harry. "Ilya Muromets." Airfix Magazine, May 1985, p. 352.
  2. ^ Lake 2002, p. 31.
  3. ^ Sikorsky 1938, p. 95.
  4. ^ a b Sikorsky 1938, p. 96.
  5. ^ a b c Massenkov et al. 1994, p. 23.
  6. ^ Mackworth-Praed 1996, p. 202.
  7. ^ Finne, K.N. (1987). Igor Sikorsky: The Russian Years. translated and adapted by Von Hardesty; Carl J. Bobrow and Von Hardesty, eds. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press. p. 118. ISBN 0-87474-274-9.
  8. ^ "Guide to Passenger Planes." 2016-10-27 at the Wayback Machine The Aircraft Guide via AircraftToday.com. Retrieved: 25 April 2011.
  9. ^ Finne, K.N. (1987). Igor Sikorsky: The Russian Years. translated and adapted by Von Hardesty; Carl J. Bobrow and Von Hardesty, eds. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press. p. 174. ISBN 0-87474-274-9.
  10. ^ Darcey et al. 1995, p. 38.
  11. ^ Sikorsky 1938, p. 98.
  12. ^ Finne, K.N. (1987). Igor Sikorsky: The Russian Years. translated and adapted by Von Hardesty; Carl J. Bobrow and Von Hardesty, eds. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press. p. 40. ISBN 0-87474-274-9.
  13. ^ Sikorsky 1938, pp. 102–117.
  14. ^ Sikorsky, Igor (1952). The Story of the Winged-S. New York: Dodd, Mead & Company. p. 117.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g Sikorsky 2007, p. 10.
  16. ^ Finne 1987, pp. 53–55.
  17. ^ Windsock International, Vol. 6, #3, May/June 1990, p. 16.
  18. ^ Loftin, Laurence K. Jr. "Part I: The Age of Propellers, Chapter 2: Design Exploration, 1914–18, Heavy Bombers." Quest for Performance: The Evolution of Modern Aircraft. Washington, D.C.: NASA Scientific and Technical Information Branch, 2004. Retrieved: 25 April 2011.
  19. ^ Sikorsky 1938, p. 119.
  20. ^ Sergei I. Sikorsky with the Igor I. Sikorsky Historical Archives, Images of Aviation: The Sikorsky Legacy, Arcadia Publishing, 2007, Charleston SC, Chicago IL, Portsmouth NH, San Francisco CA, 128 p., ISBN 978-0-7385-4995-8
  21. ^ Darcey et al. 1995, p. 33.
  22. ^ Военно-воздушные силы // Советская военная энциклопедия (в 8 тт.) / под ред. Н. В. Огаркова. том 2. М.: Воениздат, 1976. стр.201-208
  23. ^ a b Winchester 2004, p. 224.
  24. ^ Lienhard, John H. "Sikorsky's Bomber. Episode No. 2371." Engines of our Ingenuity, 2008. Retrieved: 25 April 2011.
  25. ^ Palmer, Scott W. "The Russian Origins of Strategic Air Operations." Russia's Great War and Revolution: Western Illinois University, 15 February 2011. Retrieved: 25 April 2011.
  26. ^ "Knights of the Air: Sikorsky Superbomber." Diesel Punks, 7 October 2010. Retrieved: 25 April 2011.
  27. ^ "Early Soviet Civil Aviation." 2016-10-14 at the Wayback Machine Airlines and Airliners. Retrieved: 25 April 2011.
  28. ^ a b c Khajrulin 2018, p. 21-45
  29. ^ "Central Air Force Museum". Monino. Retrieved 28 October 2014.
  30. ^ Angelucci 1983, p. 67.

Bibliography edit

  • Angelucci, Enzo. The Rand McNally Encyclopedia of Military Aircraft, 1914–1980. San Diego, California: The Military Press, 1983. ISBN 0-517-41021-4.
  • Cochrane, Dorothy and Von Hardesty. The Aviation Careers of Igor Sikorsky. Seattle, Washington: University of Washington Press, 1989. ISBN 978-0-295-96916-9.
  • Darcey, Alan, Thomas Kulikov and Victor Durkots. The Imperial Russian Air Service: Famous Pilots and Aircraft of World War I. Mountain View, California: Flying Machine Press, 1995. ISBN 978-1-891268-07-6.
  • Delear, Frank J. Igor Sikorsky: Three Careers in Aviation (Air & Space Series, No 24). New York: Bantam, 1992. ISBN 978-0-553-29701-0
  • Durkota, Alan E., T. Darcey and V. Kulikov. The Imperial Russian Air Service: Famous Pilots and Aircraft of World War I. Boulder, Colorado: Flying Machines Press, 1995. ISBN 0-9637110-2-4.
  • Finne, K. N. Igor Sikorsky: The Russian Years. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Books, 1987. ISBN 0-87474-274-9.
  • Finne, K. N. Русские воздушные богатыри И. Сикорского (Russian Air Warriors: I. Sikorsky) (Russian). Moscow: AST, Harvest, 2005. ISBN 985-13-2878-2
  • Lake, Jon. The Great Book of Bombers: The World's Most Important Bombers from World War I to the Present Day. St. Paul, Minnesota: MBI Publishing Company, 2002. ISBN 0-7603-1347-4.
  • Mackworth-Praed, Ben. Aviation: The Pioneer Years. London: Studio Editions, 1996. ISBN 1-85170-349-7.
  • Massenkov, Vladamir I., Boris Urinovski and Vadim I. Suvorov. Russia in ICAO to the 50th Anniversary of ICAO. Moscow: 1994. No ISBN.
  • Miller, Russell. The Soviet Air Force at War. Alexandria, Virginia: Time-Life books, 1983. ISBN 0-8094-3371-0.
  • Pember, Harry. Sikorsky Aircraft: From a Vision to Reality and Beyond. Stratford, Connecticut: Sikorsky Aircraft Corporation, 1999. No ISBN.
  • Roustam-Bek-Tageev, LCol Boris. Aerial Russia: The Romance of The Giant Aeroplane. Austin, Texas: Alexander Palace Time Machine (Bob Atchison), 2011, Internet reprint of original 1917 edition.
  • Sikorsky, Igor. Story of the Winged-S: An Autobiography by Igor Sikorsky. New York: Dodd, Mead & Company, 1938. No ISBN.
  • Sikorsky, Sergei I. The Sikorsky Legacy (Images of Aviation). Charleston, South Carolina: Acadia Publishing, 2007. ISBN 978-0-7385-4995-8.
  • Taylor, John W. R. Jane's Fighting Aircraft of World War I. London: Studio Editions, Reprint 2001. ISBN 1-85170-347-0.
  • Winchester, Jim. "Sikorsky Ilya Muromets." Biplanes, Triplanes and Seaplanes (Aviation Factfile). London: Grange Books plc, 2004. ISBN 1-84013-641-3.
  • Woodman, Harry. Sikorsky Ilya Muromets Type Veh, (Windsock Datafile Special No.3 – Classics of WW1 Aviation Volume 3). Berkhamsted, Herts, UK: Albatros Productions Limited, 2000. ISBN 978-1-902207-13-1.
  • Khajrulin, M.A. (2018). Legendarnyj "Ilja Muromets". Pervyj tjazhelyj bombardirovschik (in Russian). Moscow: Jauza. ISBN 978-5-04-091056-4.

External links edit

  • WWI Russian Bombers 2018-02-25 at the Wayback Machine
  • some data on an Ilya Muromets
  • Reconstruction of an Ilya Muromets 2009-04-06 at the Wayback Machine
  • Sikorsky Ilya Muromets (Series) Bomber/Reconnaissance Aircraft
  • "Sikorsky's Stupendous Biplane". Scientific American Supplement. LXXVII (1988): 91. 7 February 1914. hdl:2027/umn.31951d00343389d.
  • "Les Aérobus: Un nouvel appareil géant de Sykorsky" [The Aerobus: A new giant aircraft from Sykorsky]. L'Aérophile (in French). 22 (6): 137–138. 15 March 1914.
  • Joanidi, J. (20 March 1914). "Der Doppeldecker "Ilija Murometz"" [The Biplane "Ilya Muromets"]. Der Motorwagen (in German). XVII (VIII): 181–182. hdl:2027/mdp.39015080016242.

sikorsky, ilya, muromets, russian, Сикорский, Илья, Муромец, versions, class, russian, world, large, four, engine, commercial, airliners, military, heavy, bombers, used, during, world, russian, empire, aircraft, series, named, after, ilya, muromets, hero, from. The Sikorsky Ilya Muromets Russian Sikorskij Ilya Muromec versions S 22 S 23 S 24 S 25 S 26 and S 27 was a class of Russian pre World War I large four engine commercial airliners and military heavy bombers used during World War I by the Russian Empire 1 The aircraft series was named after Ilya Muromets a hero from Slavic mythology 2 The series was based on the Russky Vityaz or Le Grand the world s first four engined aircraft designed by Igor Sikorsky 3 The Ilya Muromets aircraft as it appeared in 1913 was a revolutionary design intended for commercial service with its spacious fuselage incorporating a passenger saloon and washroom on board The Ilya Muromets was the world s first multi engine aircraft in production and at least sixty were built 4 During World War I it became the first four engine bomber to equip a dedicated strategic bombing unit 5 This heavy bomber was unrivaled in the early stages of the war as the Central Powers had no aircraft capable enough to rival it until much later 6 Ilya MurometsRole Airliner heavy bomberNational origin Russian EmpireManufacturer Russo Baltic Wagon CompanyDesigner Igor SikorskyFirst flight 1913Introduction 1914Retired 1922Primary user Imperial Russian Air ServiceProduced 1913 to 1917Number built 85 Developed from Sikorsky Russky Vityaz Contents 1 Design and development 2 Operational history 2 1 Russian Revolution and aftermath 3 Variants 4 Operators 4 1 Military 4 2 Civilian 5 Replica 6 Specifications Ilya Muromets Type S 23 V 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Notes 8 2 Citations 8 3 Bibliography 9 External linksDesign and development edit nbsp Russky VityazThe Ilya Muromets Sikorsky S 22 was designed and constructed by Igor Sikorsky at the Russo Baltic Carriage Factory RBVZ in Saint Petersburg in 1913 7 It was based on his earlier S 21 Russky Vityaz which started out as the twin engined Le Grand then as the twin tandem engined Bolshoi Baltisky before placing all four of the Baltisky s engines in a tractor configuration along the lower wing s leading edge to create the Russky Vityaz which had played an important role in the development of Russian aviation and the multi engine aircraft industries of the world The Ilya Muromets was first conceived and built as a luxurious aircraft It was the first aircraft to have an insulated passenger saloon containing wicker chairs a bedroom a lounge as well as the first airborne toilet The aircraft also had heating and electrical lighting 8 The S 22 cockpit had sufficient space allowing several persons to observe the pilot Openings on both sides of the fuselage permitted mechanics to climb out onto the lower wings to service the engines during flight A hatch on the left side provided an entry to the main cabin behind the cockpit The main cabin featured two large windows on each side Further back was a private cabin that included a berth a small table and a cabinet Lighting was provided by a wind driven generator and heating was supplied by two long engine exhaust pipes that passed through the corners of the cabin 4 Despite many advancements the flight instruments on the Ilya Muromets were primitive They included four tachometers one per engine a compass a crude altimeter and airspeed indicator two glass U shaped tubes and a ball for bank indication and a series of horizontal bars situated vertically on the nose of the fuselage for measuring climbs and descents 9 Later in the bomber variants a drift indicator and elementary bombsight was added to aid bombing 10 In 1913 the Ilya Muromets No 107 flew for the first time and on 11 February 1914 the second prototype factory airframe 128 took off for its first demonstration flight with 16 passengers aboard marking a record for number of passengers carried 11 12 From 30 June to 12 July 1914 it set a world record by making a trip from Saint Petersburg to Kiev a distance of some 1200 km and back The first leg took 14 hours and 38 minutes with one landing for fuel at Orsha and the return one with a fuel stop at Novosokolniki took even less time about 13 hours 13 According to Sikorsky The 1 600 miles 2 600 km flight proved conclusively the value of large multi motored airplanes The Army placed an order for ten four engined airplanes of the Ilia Mourometz type and the factory personnel was overjoyed by this final approval of the results of two years of hard work 14 The acclaim received by Sikorsky included Tsar Nicholas II presenting him with the Order of St Vladimir Fourth Degree arranging for an exemption from the wartime draft to allow him to continue his design work and a promise of a grant worth 100 000 rubles from the State Duma N 1 During an Imperial military review at Krasnoye Selo in July Nicholas II decorated and christened the Ilya Muromets Type B Military Prototype No 128 the Kievsky 16 17 During testing the Ilya Muromets were fitted with both skis and pontoons in anticipation of new variants being produced If it had not been for World War I the Ilya Muromets would probably have started passenger flights that same year 5 With the beginning of World War I Sikorsky was encouraged by the results of the proving flights to redesign the aircraft to become the Military Ilia Mourometz Type V the world s first purpose designed heavier than air bomber 18 N 2 The new heavy bomber was slightly smaller and lighter than the Type A Internal racks carried up to 800 kg of bombs and positions for up to nine machine guns were added for self defense in various locations including the extreme tail The Muromets in its S 25 Geh 2 variant March 1916 was the first aircraft in history to incorporate a tail gunner position 20 The engines were protected with 5 mm thick armor 5 The military version was designed expressly for long range flying in both bombing and reconnaissance roles 15 Operational history edit nbsp Yosip Stanislavovich Bashko pilot of Ilya Muromets based in KievWhen WWI broke out only two Ilya Muromets bombers were completed out of an initial production run of ten aircraft 21 In August 1914 the Ilya Muromets was introduced to the Imperial Russian Air Service and on 10 December 1914 the Russians formed their first ten bomber squadron slowly increasing the number to 20 by mid 1916 22 Operations with the heavy bombers began on 12 February 1915 with a raid on German frontline positions 23 German Fighter Pilots often were reluctant to attack Ilya Muromets in the air due to their defensive firepower including the unique tail gun position and the difficulty in bringing down such a large aircraft 15 Once engaged small fighters also found that they were buffeted by propeller wash of the four large engines 24 On 12 September 1916 Julian calendar the Russians lost their first Ilya Muromets in a fight with four German Albatros three of which it managed to shoot down This was also the only loss to enemy action during the war three others were damaged in combat but managed to return to base to be repaired 15 83 Ilya Muromets bombers were built for the Russian forces between 1913 and 1918 They recorded a number of firsts in the history of military aviation like bombing from heavy bombers performing bomber group raids on enemy targets night bombing and photographic bomb damage assessment They were also the first to develop defensive tactics for a single bomber engaged in an air combat with several enemy fighters 25 Due to systematic weapon upgrades the effectiveness of bomb dropping reached 90 26 The Ilya Muromets performed more than 400 sorties and dropped 65 tons of bombs during the war By 1917 attrition from constant flying had reduced the bombing fleet substantially and only four bombers remained at the front line the other Ilya Muromets were relegated to trainer duties 15 The heavy bombers of other participants appeared in 1916 all resembling the Russian pioneer to a certain degree 23 The Russian government and Sikorsky himself sold the design and production license to the British and French governments The Germans tried to copy its design using the fragments of the Ilya Muromets they had shot down over their territory in September 1916 By the end of 1916 the design was generally believed to be at the end of its development cycle with ensuing modifications to individual aircraft such as additional armor and weapons making the aircraft too heavy and not suitable for operational use Continual changes in the field as well as the factory led to many aircraft being redesignated as a new variant 15 Further designs based on the original Ilya Muromets bombers included a more dedicated attack version Russian Revolution and aftermath edit Following the February Revolution of 1917 the Ilya Muromets bombers continued to fly with the Russian Imperial Army but others were seized by the provisional government with pilots also defecting to the Ukrainian squadron of Hetman and General Pavlo Skoropadsky with at least one Ilya Muromets being flown by Polish forces The remainder of the aircraft flew with the Red Army until mid 1919 The Ilya Muromets continued in production after the war with only a handful being finished From May October 1921 the aircraft was utilized in its originally intended role of passenger transport on the Moscow Kharkov line six saw service as a civilian passenger airliner and mail plane 27 After carrying 60 passengers and two tons of freight the Ilya Muromets were considered too difficult to maintain as engines and airframes were worn out and on 10 October 1922 the airliners were retired The last flight of an Ilya Muromets bomber took place in 1922 at the Air Shooting and Bomb dropping School in Serpukhov Variants edit nbsp Ilya Muromets S 23Ilya Muromets No 107 Experimental airliner 1913 fitted with four 100 hp 75 kW Argus As I engines later refitted with two 200 hp 150 kW Salmson 2M7 and two Argus 115 hp engines 28 Ilya Muromets No 107 Hydroplane Hydroplane modification of airframe No 107 fitted with two 200 hp 150 kW Salmson 2M7 and two Argus 115 hp engines 28 Ilya Muromets Kievsky No 128 Experimental airliner 1914 fitted with two Argus 140 hp engines and two Argus 125 hp engines 28 Ilya Muromets S 22 Type A Unarmed trainer one built 1913 used in Gachina Air School in 1914 Ilya Muromets S 23 Type B eh Bomber Bomber First flight 1914 in service August 1914 original armament one 37mm cannon one 8 mm machine gun six built heavily modified Type B No 135 1914 fitted with four Argus engines of 130 hp each Type B No 136 1914 fitted with two Salmson engines of 200 hp each and two Salmson engines of 136 hp each Type B No 137 1914 fitted with two Salmson engines of 200 hp each and two Salmson engines of 136 hp each Type B No 138 1914 fitted with two Salmson engines of 200 hp each and two Salmson engines of 136 hp each Type B No 139 1914 fitted with two Salmson engines of 200 hp each and two Salmson engines of 136 hp each dd Ilya Muromets S 23 V eh Series Bomber First flight 1914 fitted with four Sunbeam Crusader V 8 engines of 148 hp eachType V No 151 1915 fitted with four Argus engines of 140 hp each Type V No 159 Trainer aircraft 1915 fitted with two Sunbeam 225 hpV 8 engines Type V No 167 1915 fitted with four RBVZ 6 engines of 150 hp each dd Ilya Muromets S 24 G 1 Series Bomber First flight 1914 18 built Ilya Muromets S 25 Series Bomber First flight 1915 55 built Ilya Muromets S 25 G 2 Russobalt Bomber fitted with four RBVZ 6 engines of 150 hp 170 kg bombload five MG Ilya Muromets S 25 G 3 Renobalt Series Bomber fitted with two Renault engines of 220 hp each and two RBVZ 6 engines of 150 hp 190 kg bombload six MG Ilya Muromets S 26 D 1 DIM Series Bomber First flight 1916 fitted with four Sunbeam engines of 150 hp three built Ilya Muromets S 27 E Yeh 2 Series Bomber First flight 1916 fitted with four Renault engines of 220 hp each two built 15 Operators editMilitary edit nbsp Russian Empire nbsp Russian RepublicImperial Russian Air Service nbsp Russian SFSRSoviet Air Forces nbsp PolandPolish Air Force nbsp Ukrainian StateUkrainian Air ForceCivilian edit Soviet Union Civil Air FleetReplica edit nbsp Full scale replica of Sikorsky S 22 Ilya Muromets in Monino Air Force Museum One Ilya Muromets S 22 replica exists 29 in the Monino Air Force Museum near Moscow built in 1970 Specifications Ilya Muromets Type S 23 V editData from citation needed General characteristicsCrew 4 8 max 12 Length 17 5 m 57 ft 5 in Upper wingspan 29 8 m 97 ft 9 in Lower wingspan 21 m 68 ft 11 in Height 4 m 13 ft 1 in Wing area 125 m2 1 350 sq ft Empty weight 3 150 kg 6 945 lb Gross weight 4 600 kg 10 141 lb Fuel capacity 600 kg 1 323 lb Fuel and oil Powerplant 4 Sunbeam Crusader V 8 water cooled piston engines 150 PS 150 hp 110 kW Propellers 2 bladed fixed pitch propellersPerformance Maximum speed 110 km h 68 mph 59 kn Endurance 5 hours with 300 kg 661 lb of bombs and armament 10 hours with extra fuel Service ceiling 3 000 m 9 800 ft 30 Wing loading 36 8 kg m2 7 5 lb sq ft Power mass 0 097 kW kg 0 059 hp lb Armament Guns Various numbers and combinations of guns at different points during the war including 12 7 mm 15 3 mm 25 mm 37 mm and 7 62 mm guns Maxim guns Lewis guns Madsen guns Colt machine guns and Leonid Kurchevsky s experimental recoilless guns among them Bombs Various loads of 50 kg 100 kg and 656 kg bombs depending on fuel armament and crew carried With three crew and two defensive machine guns a V type Ilya Muromets could carry 500 kg 1 100 lb of bombs See also editList of Russian inventionsRelated development Sikorsky Russky VityazAircraft of comparable role configuration and era Wanamaker Triplane Zeppelin Staaken R VI Zeppelin Staaken R XIV AEG R I Handley Page V 1500References editNotes edit One of Sikorsky s prized possessions was a personal gift from the Tsar a diamond studded gold watch that arrived later in the mail also in recognition of his achievements with the Ilya Muromets Sikorski retained the watch throughout his lifetime 15 Sikorsky used the French transliteration of Ilya Muromets 19 Citations edit Woodman Harry Ilya Muromets Airfix Magazine May 1985 p 352 Lake 2002 p 31 Sikorsky 1938 p 95 a b Sikorsky 1938 p 96 a b c Massenkov et al 1994 p 23 Mackworth Praed 1996 p 202 Finne K N 1987 Igor Sikorsky The Russian Years translated and adapted by Von Hardesty Carl J Bobrow and Von Hardesty eds Washington D C Smithsonian Institution Press p 118 ISBN 0 87474 274 9 Guide to Passenger Planes Archived 2016 10 27 at the Wayback Machine The Aircraft Guide via AircraftToday com Retrieved 25 April 2011 Finne K N 1987 Igor Sikorsky The Russian Years translated and adapted by Von Hardesty Carl J Bobrow and Von Hardesty eds Washington D C Smithsonian Institution Press p 174 ISBN 0 87474 274 9 Darcey et al 1995 p 38 Sikorsky 1938 p 98 Finne K N 1987 Igor Sikorsky The Russian Years translated and adapted by Von Hardesty Carl J Bobrow and Von Hardesty eds Washington D C Smithsonian Institution Press p 40 ISBN 0 87474 274 9 Sikorsky 1938 pp 102 117 Sikorsky Igor 1952 The Story of the Winged S New York Dodd Mead amp Company p 117 a b c d e f g Sikorsky 2007 p 10 Finne 1987 pp 53 55 Windsock International Vol 6 3 May June 1990 p 16 Loftin Laurence K Jr Part I The Age of Propellers Chapter 2 Design Exploration 1914 18 Heavy Bombers Quest for Performance The Evolution of Modern Aircraft Washington D C NASA Scientific and Technical Information Branch 2004 Retrieved 25 April 2011 Sikorsky 1938 p 119 Sergei I Sikorsky with the Igor I Sikorsky Historical Archives Images of Aviation The Sikorsky Legacy Arcadia Publishing 2007 Charleston SC Chicago IL Portsmouth NH San Francisco CA 128 p ISBN 978 0 7385 4995 8 Darcey et al 1995 p 33 Voenno vozdushnye sily Sovetskaya voennaya enciklopediya v 8 tt pod red N V Ogarkova tom 2 M Voenizdat 1976 str 201 208 a b Winchester 2004 p 224 Lienhard John H Sikorsky s Bomber Episode No 2371 Engines of our Ingenuity 2008 Retrieved 25 April 2011 Palmer Scott W The Russian Origins of Strategic Air Operations Russia s Great War and Revolution Western Illinois University 15 February 2011 Retrieved 25 April 2011 Knights of the Air Sikorsky Superbomber Diesel Punks 7 October 2010 Retrieved 25 April 2011 Early Soviet Civil Aviation Archived 2016 10 14 at the Wayback Machine Airlines and Airliners Retrieved 25 April 2011 a b c Khajrulin 2018 p 21 45 Central Air Force Museum Monino Retrieved 28 October 2014 Angelucci 1983 p 67 Bibliography edit Angelucci Enzo The Rand McNally Encyclopedia of Military Aircraft 1914 1980 San Diego California The Military Press 1983 ISBN 0 517 41021 4 Cochrane Dorothy and Von Hardesty The Aviation Careers of Igor Sikorsky Seattle Washington University of Washington Press 1989 ISBN 978 0 295 96916 9 Darcey Alan Thomas Kulikov and Victor Durkots The Imperial Russian Air Service Famous Pilots and Aircraft of World War I Mountain View California Flying Machine Press 1995 ISBN 978 1 891268 07 6 Delear Frank J Igor Sikorsky Three Careers in Aviation Air amp Space Series No 24 New York Bantam 1992 ISBN 978 0 553 29701 0 Durkota Alan E T Darcey and V Kulikov The Imperial Russian Air Service Famous Pilots and Aircraft of World War I Boulder Colorado Flying Machines Press 1995 ISBN 0 9637110 2 4 Finne K N Igor Sikorsky The Russian Years Washington D C Smithsonian Books 1987 ISBN 0 87474 274 9 Finne K N Russkie vozdushnye bogatyri I Sikorskogo Russian Air Warriors I Sikorsky Russian Moscow AST Harvest 2005 ISBN 985 13 2878 2 Lake Jon The Great Book of Bombers The World s Most Important Bombers from World War I to the Present Day St Paul Minnesota MBI Publishing Company 2002 ISBN 0 7603 1347 4 Mackworth Praed Ben Aviation The Pioneer Years London Studio Editions 1996 ISBN 1 85170 349 7 Massenkov Vladamir I Boris Urinovski and Vadim I Suvorov Russia in ICAO to the 50th Anniversary of ICAO Moscow 1994 No ISBN Miller Russell The Soviet Air Force at War Alexandria Virginia Time Life books 1983 ISBN 0 8094 3371 0 Pember Harry Sikorsky Aircraft From a Vision to Reality and Beyond Stratford Connecticut Sikorsky Aircraft Corporation 1999 No ISBN Roustam Bek Tageev LCol Boris Aerial Russia The Romance of The Giant Aeroplane Austin Texas Alexander Palace Time Machine Bob Atchison 2011 Internet reprint of original 1917 edition Sikorsky Igor Story of the Winged S An Autobiography by Igor Sikorsky New York Dodd Mead amp Company 1938 No ISBN Sikorsky Sergei I The Sikorsky Legacy Images of Aviation Charleston South Carolina Acadia Publishing 2007 ISBN 978 0 7385 4995 8 Taylor John W R Jane s Fighting Aircraft of World War I London Studio Editions Reprint 2001 ISBN 1 85170 347 0 Winchester Jim Sikorsky Ilya Muromets Biplanes Triplanes and Seaplanes Aviation Factfile London Grange Books plc 2004 ISBN 1 84013 641 3 Woodman Harry Sikorsky Ilya Muromets Type Veh Windsock Datafile Special No 3 Classics of WW1 Aviation Volume 3 Berkhamsted Herts UK Albatros Productions Limited 2000 ISBN 978 1 902207 13 1 Khajrulin M A 2018 Legendarnyj Ilja Muromets Pervyj tjazhelyj bombardirovschik in Russian Moscow Jauza ISBN 978 5 04 091056 4 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sikorsky S 22 Ilya Muromets WWI Russian Bombers Archived 2018 02 25 at the Wayback Machine some data on an Ilya Muromets Reconstruction of an Ilya Muromets Archived 2009 04 06 at the Wayback Machine Image of a scale model Sikorsky Ilya Muromets Series Bomber Reconnaissance Aircraft Sikorsky s Stupendous Biplane Scientific American Supplement LXXVII 1988 91 7 February 1914 hdl 2027 umn 31951d00343389d Les Aerobus Un nouvel appareil geant de Sykorsky The Aerobus A new giant aircraft from Sykorsky L Aerophile in French 22 6 137 138 15 March 1914 Joanidi J 20 March 1914 Der Doppeldecker Ilija Murometz The Biplane Ilya Muromets Der Motorwagen in German XVII VIII 181 182 hdl 2027 mdp 39015080016242 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sikorsky Ilya Muromets amp oldid 1201452607, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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