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Sukhoi Su-25

The Sukhoi Su-25 Grach (Russian: Грач (rook); NATO reporting name: Frogfoot) is a subsonic, single-seat, twin-engine jet aircraft developed in the Soviet Union by Sukhoi. It was designed to provide close air support for Soviet Ground Forces. The first prototype made its maiden flight on 22 February 1975. After testing, the aircraft went into series production in 1978 in Tbilisi in the Georgian Soviet Socialist Republic.

Su-25
A Russian Air Force Su-25
Role Close air support
National origin Soviet Union / Russia / Georgia
Design group Sukhoi
Built by TAM Management
Tbilisi Aircraft Manufacturing
Ulan-Ude Aviation Plant
First flight 22 February 1975; 47 years ago (1975-02-22)
Introduction 19 July 1981
Status In service
Primary users Russian Air Force
Ukrainian Air Force
Korean People's Army Air Force
Peruvian Air Force
See Operators for others
Produced 1978–2017
Number built Over 1,000
Variants Sukhoi Su-28

Early variants included the Su-25UB two-seat trainer, the Su-25BM for target-towing, and the Su-25K for export customers. Some aircraft were upgraded to the Su-25SM standard in 2012. The Su-25T and the Su-25TM (also known as the Su-39) were further developments, not produced in significant numbers. The Su-25, and the Su-34, were the only armoured, fixed-wing aircraft in production in 2007.[1] Su-25s are in service with Russia, other CIS members, and export customers. Production of the Su-25 ended in 2017 in Russia[2] and 2010 in Georgia.[3] Attempts continue to be made to restart production in Georgia using partially completed airframes,[4] but as of June 2022 no new deliveries have been reported.

Since entering service more than 41 years ago, the Su-25 has seen combat in several conflicts. The type was heavily involved in the Soviet–Afghan War, flying counter-insurgency missions against the Afghan Mujahideen. The Iraqi Air Force employed it against Iran during the 1980–88 Iran–Iraq War. Most Iraqi examples were later destroyed or flown to Iran in the 1991 Persian Gulf War. The Georgian Air Force used Su-25s during the Abkhazian war from 1992 to 1993. The Macedonian Air Force used Su-25s against Albanian insurgents in the 2001 Macedonian conflict and, in 2008, Georgia and Russia both used Su-25s in the Russo-Georgian War. African states, including the Ivory Coast, Chad, and Sudan have used the Su-25 in local insurgencies and civil wars. Recently, the Su-25 has seen service in the Russian intervention in the Syrian Civil War, the clashes of the 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh War, and the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine.[5]

Development

In early 1968, the Soviet Ministry of Defence decided to develop a specialised shturmovik armoured assault aircraft in order to provide close air support for the Soviet Ground Forces. The idea of creating a ground-support aircraft came about after analysing the experience of ground-attack (shturmovaya) aviation during the 1940s, 1950s, and 1960s.[6] The Soviet fighter-bombers in service or under development at the time (Su-7, Su-17, MiG-21 and MiG-23) did not meet the requirements for close air support of the army.[6] They lacked essential armour plating to protect the pilot and vital equipment from ground fire and missile hits, and their high flight speeds made it difficult for the pilot to maintain visual contact with a target. Having taken into account these problems, Pavel Sukhoi and a group of leading specialists in the Sukhoi Design Bureau started preliminary design work in a comparatively short period of time, with the assistance of leading institutes of the Ministry of the Aviation Industry and the Ministry of Defence.[7]

 
This Su-25UB of the Russian Air Force is a two-seater version intended for both combat and training.

In March 1969, a competition was announced by the Soviet Air Force that called for designs for a new battlefield close-support aircraft. Participants in the competition were the Sukhoi design bureau and the design bureaus of Yakovlev, Ilyushin and Mikoyan.[8] Sukhoi finalised its "T-8" design in late 1968, and began in work on the first two prototypes (T8-1 and T8-2) in January 1972. The T8-1, the first airframe to be assembled, was completed on 9 May 1974. Another source says November 1974. However, it did not make its first flight until 22 February 1975, after a long series of test flights by Vladimir Ilyushin. The Su-25 surpassed its main competitor in the Soviet Air Force competition, the Ilyushin Il-102, and series production was announced by the Ministry of Defence.[9][10]

During flight-testing phases of the T8-1 and T8-2 prototypes' development, the Sukhoi Design Bureau's management proposed that the series production of the Su-25 should start at Factory No. 31 in Tbilisi, Soviet Republic of Georgia, which at that time was the major manufacturing base for the MiG-21UM "Mongol-B" trainer. After negotiations and completion of all stages of the state trials, the Soviet Ministry of Aircraft Production authorised manufacture of the Su-25 at Tbilisi, allowing series production to start in 1978.[11]

In the late 1980s and early 1990s, several Su-25 variants appeared, including modernised versions, and variants for specialised roles. The most significant designs were the Su-25UB dual-seat trainer, the Su-25BM target-towing variant, and the Su-25T for antitank missions. In addition, an Su-25KM prototype was developed by Georgia in co-operation with Israeli company Elbit Systems in 2001, but so far this variant has not achieved much commercial success. As of 2007, the Su-25 was the only armoured aircraft still in production.[1]

The Russian Air Force, which operates the largest number of Su-25s, planned to upgrade older aircraft to the Su-25SM variant, but funding shortfalls had slowed the progress; by early 2007 only seven aircraft had been modified.[12]

Design

The Su-25 has a conventional aerodynamic layout with a shoulder-mounted trapezoidal wing and a traditional tailplane and rudder. Several metals are used in the construction of the airframe: 60% aluminium, 19% steel, 13.5% titanium, 2% magnesium alloy and 5.5% other materials.[13]

 

All versions of the Su-25 have a metal cantilever wing, of moderate sweep, high aspect ratio and equipped with high-lift devices. The wing consists of two cantilever sections attached to a central torsion box, forming a single unit with the fuselage. The air brakes are housed in fairings at the tip of each wing. Each wing has five hardpoints for weapons carriage, with the attachment points mounted on load-bearing ribs and spars.[14] Each wing also features a five-section leading edge slat, a two-section flap and an aileron.

The flaps are mounted by steel sliders and rollers, attached to brackets on the rear spar. The trapezoidal ailerons are near the wingtips.[15] The fuselage of the Su-25 has an ellipsoidal section and is of semi-monocoque, stressed-skin construction, arranged as a longitudinal load-bearing framework of longerons, beams and stringers, with a transverse load-bearing assembly of frames.[13] The one-piece horizontal tailplane is attached to the load-bearing frame at two mounting points.[15]

Early versions of the Su-25 were equipped with two R-95Sh non-afterburning turbojets, in compartments on either side of the rear fuselage. The engines, sub-assemblies and surrounding fuselage are cooled by air provided by the cold air intakes on top of the engine nacelles. A drainage system collects oil, hydraulic fluid residues and fuel from the engines after flight or after an unsuccessful start. The engine control systems allows independent operation of each engine.[15] The latest versions (Su-25T and TM) are equipped with improved R-195 engines.[16]

 
Nose view of the Su-25

The autocannon is in a compartment beneath the cockpit, mounted on a load-bearing beam attached to the cockpit floor and the forward fuselage support structure. The nose is fitted with distinctive twin pitot probes and hinges up for service access.[13]

Cockpit

 
Cockpit

The pilot flies the aircraft by means of a centre stick and left hand throttles. The pilot sits on a Zvezda K-36 ejection seat (similar to the Sukhoi Su-27) and has standard flight instruments. At the rear of the cockpit is a six-millimetre-thick (0.24 in) steel headrest, mounted on the rear bulkhead. The cockpit has a bathtub-shaped armoured enclosure of welded titanium sheets, with transit ports in the walls. Guide rails for the ejection seat are mounted on the rear wall of the cockpit.[13]

The canopy hinges open to the right and the pilot enters using the flip-down ladder. Once inside, the pilot sits low in the cockpit, protected by the bathtub assembly, which makes for a cramped cockpit. Visibility from the cockpit is limited, being a trade-off for improved pilot protection. Rearwards visibility is poor and a periscope is fitted on top of the canopy to compensate.[17]

A folding ladder built into the left fuselage provides access to the cockpit as well as to the top of the aircraft.

Avionics

The base model Su-25 incorporates a number of key avionics systems. It has no TV guidance but includes a distinctive nose-mounted laser rangefinder, that is thought to provide for laser-based target finding.[17][18] A DISS-7 doppler radar is used for navigation; the Su-25 can fly at night, in visual and instrument meteorological conditions.

The Su-25 often has radios installed for air-to-ground and air-to-air communications, including an SO-69 identification-friend-or-foe (IFF) transponder. The aircraft's self-defence suite includes various measures, such as flare and chaff dispensers capable of launching up to 250 flares and dipole chaff. Hostile radar uses are guarded against via an SPO-15 radar warning receiver.

An airtight avionics compartment is behind the cockpit and in front of the forward fuel tank.

The newer Su-25TM and Su-25SM models have an upgraded avionics and weapons suite, resulting in improved survivability and combat capability.[19]

Operational history

Soviet–Afghan War

The first Soviet Air Forces Su-25 unit was the 80th Assault Aviation Regiment, formed in February 1981 based at Sitalcay air base in the Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic.[20] The first eleven aircraft arrived at Sitalchay in May 1981.[21] The 200th Independent Assault Aviation Squadron was then formed within the regiment to go to Afghanistan.

On 19 July 1981, the 200th Independent Attack Squadron was reassigned to Shindand Airbase in western Afghanistan, becoming the first Su-25 unit deployed to that country. Its main task was to conduct air strikes against mountain military positions and structures controlled by the Afghan rebels.[22] Another Soviet Su-25 unit was the 368th Assault Aviation Regiment, which was formed on 12 July 1984, at Zhovtneve in Ukraine.[23] It was soon also moved east to conduct operations over Afghanistan.

Over the course of the Soviet–Afghan War, Su-25s launched 139 guided missiles of all types against Mujahideen positions. On average, each aircraft performed 360 sorties a year, a total considerably higher than that of any other combat aircraft in Afghanistan. By the end of the war, nearly 50 Su-25s were deployed at Afghan airbases, carrying out a total of 60,000 sorties. Between the first deployment in 1981 and the end of the war in 1989, 21–23 aircraft were lost in combat operations, with up to nine destroyed on the ground while parked.[22][24]

Iran–Iraq War

The Su-25 also saw combat during the Iran–Iraq War of 1980–88. The first Su-25s were commissioned by the Iraqi Air Force in 1987 and performed approximately 900 combat sorties towards the end of the war, carrying out the bulk of Iraqi air attack missions. During the most intense combat of the war, Iraqi Su-25s performed up to 15 sorties per day, each. In one recorded incident, an Iraqi Su-25 was shot down by an Iranian, Hawk surface-to-air missile, but the pilot managed to eject. This was the only confirmed, successful Iranian shootdown of an Iraqi Su-25. After the war, Saddam Hussein decorated all of the Iraqi Air Force's Su-25 pilots with the country's highest military decoration.[22]

Gulf War

 
An Iraqi Su-25 destroyed during Operation Desert Storm

During the Gulf War of 1991, the air superiority of the coalition forces was so great that the majority of Iraqi Su-25s did not even manage to get airborne. On 25 January 1991, seven Iraqi Air Force Su-25s fled from Iraq and landed in Iran.[25]

On the evening of 6 February 1991, two US Air Force F-15C Eagle fighters of the 53rd Tactical Fighter Squadron, operating from Al Kharj Air Base in Saudi Arabia, intercepted a pair of Iraqi MiG-21s and a pair of Su-25s. All four Iraqi aircraft were shot down, with both Su-25s coming down in the desert not far from the Iraqi border with Iran. This was the Iraqi Su-25s' only air combat of the war.[22]

Abkhazian War

The Georgian government used Su-25s in 1992–93 against Abkhaz separatists during the First Abkhazian War.[26] A Georgian Air Force Su-25 was shot down over Nizhnaya Eshera on 4 July 1993 by an 9K34 Strela-3 MANPADS.[27][28] Another Georgian Su-25 was shot down on 13 July 1993 with a 9K32 Strela-2 MANPADS,[29] while another Su-25 was downed by friendly fire by a ZU-23-2 on 4 July.[29] The Russian Air Force also lost an Su-25 during war, the aircraft crashed due to a pilot's mistake while providing CAS for Abkhaz forces.[29]

First Chechen War

Russian Su-25s were employed during the First Chechen War. Together with other Russian Air Force air assets, they achieved air supremacy for Russian Forces. On 29 November 1994, attacking all four Chechen military bases, Russian Su-25 from the 368th Assault Aviation Regiment (OShAP) destroyed up to 266 Chechen aircraft on the ground, mostly not airworthy.[30] The Air Force's deployed assets performed around 9,000 air sorties, with around 5,300 being strike sorties during the Chechen campaign between 1994 and 1996. The Russian 4th Air Army had 140 Sukhoi Su-17Ms, Su-24s and Su-25s in the war zone supported by an A-50 AWACS aircraft. The employed munitions were generally unguided S-5, S-8, and S-24 rockets, as well as FAB-250 and FAB-500 bombs, while only 2.3% of the strikes used precision-guided Kh-25ML missiles, KAB-500L and KAB-500KR smart bombs when weather conditions were suitable.[31] Russian forces were not able to properly take advantage of the achieved air supremacy due to obsolete air tactics that focused the Air Force on useless tasks in this type of war such as Combat Air Patrols.[32] The Russian air losses were low since no integrated air defense was fielded by the Chechens.[33]

On 4 February 1995, a Russian Su-25 was shot down by ZSU-23-4 Shilka antiaircraft fire over Belgatoi Gekhi, five kilometers southeast of Grozny. The pilot, Maj. Nikolay Bairov, ejected but died impacting the ground as his parachute did not deploy on time. Another Su-25 piloted by Lt. Col. Evgeny Derkulsky was damaged by ground fire on the same day, but managed to land at Mozdok air base, where the aircraft was repaired.[30] On 5 May 1995, another Russian Su-25 was downed near Serzhen-Yurt by 12.7 mm fire while on a low-altitude patrol. The pilot, Col. Vladimir Sarabeyev, was killed.[34]

On 4 April 1996, another Su-25 fell either to ZU-23-2 fire while either making a reconnaissance flight or attacking the village of Goiskoye. The pilot, Maj. Alexander Matvienko, ejected and was recovered by a friendly helicopter returning to the airbase in Khankala, Grozny.[35] On 5 May 1996, a two-seat Su-25UB was downed with an 9K34 Strela-3 MANPADS near the village of Mairtup while on reconnaissance. Both pilots, Col. Igor Sviryidov and Maj. Oleg Isayev, were killed in the crash. It was the fourth Su-25 shot down and fifth Russian fixed wing aircraft lost, since the start of the war in December 1994.[33][36]

Second Chechen War

Russian Air Force Su-25s were extensively used during the Second Chechen War in particular during the first phase when Russian forces were invading the self-proclaimed Chechen Republic of Ichkeria.[37] Up to seven Russian Su-25s were lost,[33] one to hostile fire: on 4 October 1999, a Su-25 was shot down by a MANPADS during a reconnaissance mission over the village of Tolstoy-Yurt killing its pilot. The wings of the aircraft were put on a pedestal in the central square in Grozny.[35][38]

Ethiopian–Eritrean War

Su-25 attack aircraft were used by the Ethiopian Air Force to strike Eritrean targets. On 15 May 2000, An Ethiopian Su-25 was shot down by an Eritrean Air Force MiG-29, killing the pilot.[39]

2001 insurgency in the Republic of Macedonia

Su-25s were used by the Macedonian Air Force during the conflict against Albanian separatists. Beginning on 24 June 2001, the aircraft made multiple attack runs against separatist positions. The most successful operation took place on 10 August 2001, in the village of Raduša, when Su-25s attacked Albanian militants who had ambushed and killed 16 Macedonian soldiers over the previous two days.[40]

War in Darfur

Sudan has used Su-25s in attacks on rebel targets and possibly civilians in Darfur.[41]

Ivorian-French clashes

During the Ivorian Civil War, Su-25s were used by government forces to attack rebel targets. On 6 November 2004, at least one Ivorian Sukhoi Su-25 attacked a unit of France's Unicorn peacekeeping forces stationed in Bouaké at 1300, killing nine soldiers, a U.S. development worker and wounding 37 soldiers.[42] Shortly afterwards, the French military retaliated by attacking the air base in Yamoussoukro and destroyed the Ivorian air force, heavily damaging the two Su-25s responsible for the attack.[43][44]

2008 Russia–Georgia war

 
A Russian Su-25

In August 2008, Su-25s were used by both Georgia and Russia during the 2008 Russia–Georgia war. Su-25s of the Georgian Air Force participated in providing air support for troops during Battle of Tskhinvali and launched bombing raids on targets in South Ossetia.[45] Russian military Su-25s struck Georgian forces in South Ossetia, and undertook air raids on targets in Georgia.[46] The Russian military officially confirmed the loss of three Su-25 aircraft to the Georgian air defense, though the Moscow Defense Brief suggests four.[47][48] The three Russian aircraft were reportedly downed by Georgian Buk-M1 air defence units.[49] Georgian Su-25s were able to operate at night.[49] In early August 2008, Russian Su-25s attacked the Tbilisi Aircraft Manufacturing plant, where the Su-25 is produced, dropping bombs on the factory's airfield.[50]

Iran

On 1 November 2012, two Iranian Su-25s fired cannon bursts at a USAF MQ-1 Predator drone 30 km (19 mi; 16 nmi) off the Iranian coast. The Iranian government has claimed that the drone violated its airspace.[51][52][53]

2014–2015 conflict in Ukraine

Ukrainian armed forces deployed aircraft over insurgent Eastern regions starting in spring 2014. On 26 May 2014, Ukrainian Su-25s supported Mi-24 helicopters during a military operation to regain control over the airport in Donetsk, during which the Su-25s fired air to ground rockets.[54] On 2 July 2014, one Ukrainian Su-25 crashed due to a technical fault.[55][56][57]

On 16 July 2014, an Su-25 was shot down, with Ukrainian officials stating that a Russian MiG-29 shot it down using a R-27T missile.[58][59] Russia denied these allegations.[60]

On 23 July 2014, two Su-25s were shot down in the Donetsk region of Ukraine. A spokesperson for the National Security and Defense Council of Ukraine said the aircraft were shot down by missiles fired from Russia.[61]

On 29 August 2014, a Ukrainian Su-25 was shot down by pro-Russian rebels. The Ukrainian authorities said the downing was due to a Russian missile without clarifying if they mean Russian made or fired by Russian forces. The pilot managed to eject safely. On the same day, pro-Russian rebels claimed the downing of up to four Su-25s.[62][63]

On 9 February 2015, the pro-Russian forces indirectly acknowledged, for the first time, with a reference to a Ukrainian media source, their use of Su-25 against Ukrainian forces during the fighting near Debaltsevo.[64]

2014 Northern Iraq offensive

On 29 June 2014, it was reported that Iraq claimed to have received the first batch of second hand Su-25s ordered from Russia in order to fight the Islamic State forces. An Iraqi defense ministry source claimed the aircraft would be in service "within three to four days", despite the fact that the Iraqis require technical help and parts to make them operational, and the fact that the Russian made aircraft are incompatible with the Iraqi Air force's inventory of American made Hellfire missiles.[65][66]

The Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps Air Force delivered seven Su-25s on 1 July 2014, the majority of which were ex-Iraqi aircraft from the Gulf War.[67] They were quickly pushed into combat, performing air raids as early as the beginning of August 2014 and later expanding their area of operation.[68][69]

Iraqi Su-25s flew the bulk of the sorties against the Islamic State, with 3562 missions between June 2014 and December 2017, by which time ISIS had lost control of all the territory it formerly controlled in Iraq. That compares to 514 sorties flown by the Iraqi fleet of F-16IQ fighters.[70]

Military intervention in Syria

In September 2015, it was reported that at least a dozen Su-25 were deployed by Russia to an airfield near Latakia, Syria, to support the Russian forces there who were taking part in the Syrian offensive against ISIL.[71] On 2 October 2015, Russian Su-24M and Su-25 attack aircraft destroyed an ISIL command post in the Idlib province, while Su-34 and Su-25 aircraft eliminated an ISIL fortified bunker in the Hama province.[citation needed] By 15 March 2016, with the scaling down of Russian presence in Syria, Russian Su-25s had performed over 1,600 sorties in Syria while dropping 6,000 bombs.[72]

On 3 February 2018 a Russian Su-25 was shot down over Idlib by rebel fighters who used a MANPADS. A Syrian militant said that the pilot, Roman Filipov, ejected safely but killed himself with a grenade to avoid capture.[73][74][75][76]

2020 Nagorno-Karabakh War

On 29 September 2020, Armenian Defense Ministry claimed that an Armenian Air Force Su-25 was shot down[77] by a Turkish Air Force F-16, killing the pilot. However Turkey denied the allegation.[78][79][80]

On 4 October 2020, an Azerbaijani Air force Su-25 aircraft was shot down, by Armenian forces, probably by a 9K33 Osa while targeting Armenian positions in Fuzuli. The pilot, Col. Zaur Nudiraliyev died in the crash. Azerbaijani officials acknowledged the loss in December 2020,[81][82] while disclosing a major role of manned aviation being hidden during the active phase of the conflict with more than 600 airstrikes by manned aviation from 27 September 2020 to 9 November 2020, with the Su-25 fleet, tasked with the critical role of suppression and destruction of the enemy air defense among others.[83]

2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine

Russian service

On 24 February 2022, Russia reported the loss of an Su-25 due to "pilot error."[84] On 1 March, a Russian Su-25SM piloted by Ruslan Rudnev was lost over Ukraine.[85][86] The next day, another Russian Su-25SM, registration number RF-91961 - Red 07, was shot down in Makariv, Ukraine.[87] On 4 March, two Russian Su-25SMs, the first with registration number RF-93026, were lost over Volnovakha, Ukraine. The second, with callsign Red 04, was lost along with its pilot.[88] Images of the aircraft wrecks were displayed on social media.[89] On 7 March, an Su-25 strike aircraft flown by Russian pilot Oleg Chervov was lost during a combat mission in Ukraine.[90][91] On 10 March, one Su-25 with registration number RF-91969 was shot down near Kyiv and the pilot killed.[92][93] On 14 March, a Russian Su-25 was damaged by enemy fire, likely MANPADs, but managed to return to its base.[94] On 24 May Ukraine claimed to have shot down retired Major General Kanamat Botashev flying an Su-25 using a Stinger missile. It was unknown if he was in service, or a private military contractor.[95] On 27 May Ukraine claimed to have shot down a retired Russian pilot, Colonel Nikolai Markov, who was reportedly flying an Su-25 over the Luhansk region.[96]

Ukrainian service

The Ukrainian Air force also operates Su-25s. On 26 February three Su-25s from the 299th Tactical Aviation Brigade were lost. "Blue 19" and "Blue 30" were shot down over the Kherson region.[97] The pilots were presumed dead. Photos of the wrecks of the two Ukrainian aircraft were published.[98][99][100] A third aircraft from the 299th was lost, but the pilot, Andrey Maksinov was captured by Russian forces.[101] Ukrainian media acknowledged that the pilot was Ukrainian.[102] The next day another Su-25, "Blue 39", piloted by Gennady Matulyak was shot down near Hlibivka Vyshgorod, Kyiv region.[103][104] On 2 March, one Su-25 from 299th Tactical Aviation Brigade piloted by Oleksandr Korpan was lost over Starokostiantyniv, Khmelnytskyi Oblast.[105][106][107] On 10 March one Su-25, "Blue 31" was shot down near Nova Kakhovka, Kherson.[108][109][110] On 14 March another Su-25 was shot down by Russian forces in Volnovakha, Donbas region. The pilot, Roman Vasyliuk, was captured by Russian forces and later released on 24 April, in a Russo-Ukrainian prisoner swap.[111][112] On 22 March, a Ukrainian Su-25, heavily damaged in combat was recorded in video.[113] On 15 April, a Ukrainian Su-25 was reportedly shot down by Russian forces in Izyum.[114] The downing of the aircraft was recorded by a military camera in thermographic mode.[115] The pilot, Captain Yegor Seredyuk, was reported as being killed near Izyum on 15 April.[116][117] Seredyuk was awarded the Hero of Ukraine order.[118] On 14 May a Su-25 from 299th Tactical Aviation Brigade piloted by Captain Serhiy Parkhomenko was shot down in Huliaipole, Zaporizhzhia Oblast and the pilot killed.[119][120]

Variants

Su-25

 
Soviet Su-25 in flight

The basic version of the aircraft was produced at Factory 31, at Tbilisi, in the Soviet Republic of Georgia. Between 1978 and 1989, 582 single-seat Su-25s were produced in Georgia, not including aircraft produced under the Su-25K export program. This variant of the aircraft represents the backbone of the Russian Air Force's Su-25 fleet, currently the largest in the world.[11] The aircraft experienced a number of accidents in operational service caused by system failures attributed to salvo firing of weapons. In the wake of these incidents, use of its main armament, the 240 mm S-24 rocket, was prohibited. In its place, the FAB-500 500 kg (1,100 lb) general-purpose high-explosive bomb became the primary armament.[11]

Su-25K

The basic Su-25 model was used as the basis for a commercial export variant, known as the Su-25K (Komercheskiy). This model was also built at Factory 31 in Tbilisi, Georgia. The aircraft differed from the Soviet Air Force version in certain minor details concerning internal equipment. A total of 180 Su-25K aircraft were built between 1984 and 1989.[11]

Su-25UB

The Su-25UB trainer (Uchebno-Boyevoy) was drawn up in 1977. The first prototype, called "T-8UB-1", was rolled out in July 1985 and its maiden flight was carried out at the Ulan-Ude factory airfield on 12 August of that year.[11] By the end of 1986, 25 Su-25UBs had been produced at Ulan-Ude before the twin-seater completed its State trials and officially cleared for service with the Soviet Air Force.[121][clarification needed]

It was intended for training and evaluation flights of active-duty pilots, and for training pilot cadets at Soviet Air Force flying schools. The performance did not differ substantially from that of the single-seater. The navigation, attack, sighting devices and weapons-control systems of the two-seater enabled it to be used for both routine training and weapons-training missions.[122]

Su-25UBK

 
Bulgarian Su-25UBK on take-off

From 1986 to 1989, in parallel with the construction of the main Su-25UB combat training variant, the Ulan-Ude plant produced the so-called "commercial" Su-25UBK, intended for export to countries that bought the Su-25K, and with similar modifications to that aircraft.[123]

Su-25UBM

The Su-25UBM is a twin seat variant that can be used as an operational trainer, but also has attack capabilities, and can be used for reconnaissance, target designation and airborne control. Its first flight was on 6 December 2008 and it was certified in December 2010. It will enter operational use with the Russian Air Force later. The variant has a Phazotron NIIR Kopyo radar and Bars-2 equipment on board. Su-25UBM's range is believed to be 1,300 km (810 mi) and it may have protection against infra-red guided missiles (IRGM), a minimal requirement on today's battle fields where IRGMs proliferate.[124]

Su-25UTG

 
Su-25UTG carrier-based trainer aircraft at Novofedorovka airbase

The Su-25UTG (Uchebno-Trenirovochnyy s Gakom) is a variant of the Su-25UB designed to train pilots in takeoff and landing on a land-based simulated carrier deck, with a sloping ski-jump section and arrester wires. The first one flew in September 1988, and approximately 10 were produced.[125] About half remained in Russian service after 1991; they were used on Russia's sole aircraft carrier, Admiral Kuznetsov. This small number of aircraft were insufficient to meet the training needs of Russia's carrier air group, so a number of Su-25UBs were converted into Su-25UTGs. These aircraft being distinguished by the alternative designation Su-25UBP (Uchebno-Boyevoy Palubny)—the adjective palubnyy meaning "deck", indicating that these aircraft have a naval function.[126] As of 2007, approximately 10 of these aircraft were operational in the Russian Navy as part of the 279th Naval Aviation Regiment of the Northern Fleet.[127] In 2021, Su-25 aircraft were also reported deployed with the 100th Independent Shipborne Fighter Aviation Regiment of the same fleet.[128]

Su-25BM

The Su-25BM (Buksirovshchik Misheney) is a target-towing variant of the Su-25 whose development began in 1986. The prototype, designated T-8BM1, successfully flew for the first time on 22 March 1990, at Tbilisi. After completion of the test phase, the aircraft was put into production.[126]

The Su-25BM target-tower was designed to provide towed target facilities for training ground forces and naval personnel in ground-to-air or naval surface-to-air missile systems. It is powered by an R-195 engine and equipped with an RSDN-10 long-range navigation system, an analogue of the Western LORAN system.[126]

Su-25T

The Su-25T (Tankovy) is a dedicated antitank version, which has been combat-tested with notable success in Chechnya.[19] The design of the aircraft is similar to the Su-25UB. The variant was converted to one-seater, with the rear seat replaced by additional avionics.[129] It has all-weather and night attack capability. In addition to the full arsenal of weapons of the standard Su-25, the Su-25T can employ the KAB-500Kr TV-guided bomb and the semi-active laser-guided Kh-25ML.[19] Its enlarged nosecone houses the Shkval optical TV and aiming system with the Prichal laser rangefinder and target designator. It can also carry Vikhr laser-guided, tube-launched missiles, which is its main antitank armament. For night operations, the low-light TV Merkuriy pod system can be carried under the fuselage. Three Su-25Ts prototypes were built in 1983–86 and 8 production aircraft were built in 1990.[130] With the introduction of a definitive Russian Air Force Su-25 upgrade programme, in the form of Stroyevoy Modernizirovannyi, the Su-25T programme was officially canceled in 2000.[131]

Su-25TM (Su-39)

 
Russian Su-25TM has been built in small numbers. Carries (from tip to fuselage) R-73, R-77, 8×Vikhr, Kh-29T, Kh-58. White dome of Kopyo radar container is seen below, while two Omul ECM pods lie beside the aircraft.

A second-generation Su-25T, the Su-25TM (also designated Su-39), has been developed with improved navigation and attack systems, and better survivability. While retaining the built-in Shkval of Su-25T, it may carry Kopyo (rus. "Spear") radar in the container under fuselage, which is used for engaging air targets (with RVV-AE/R-77 missiles) as well as ships (with Kh-31 and Kh-35 antiship missiles). The Russian Air Force has received 8 aircraft as of 2008.[129] Some of the improved avionics systems designed for T and TM variants have been included in the Su-25SM, an interim upgrade of the operational Russian Air Force Su-25, for improved survivability and combat capability.[19] The Su-25TM, as an all-inclusive upgrade programme has been replaced with the "affordable" Su-25SM programme.[131]

Su-25SM

 
A Sukhoi Su-25SM at the Celebration of the 100th anniversary of Russian Air Force

The Su-25SM (Stroyevoy Modernizirovannyi) is an "affordable" upgrade programme for the Su-25, conceived by the Russian Air Force in 2000. The programme stems from the attempted Su-25T and Su-25TM upgrades, which were evaluated and labeled as over-sophisticated and expensive. The SM upgrade incorporates avionics enhancements and airframe refurbishment to extend the Frogfoot's service life by up to 500 flight hours or 5 years.[131]

The Su-25SM's all-new PRnK-25SM "Bars" navigation/attack suite is built around the BTsVM-90 digital computer system, originally planned for the Su-25TM upgrade programme. Navigation and attack precision provided by the new suite is three times better of the baseline Su-25 and is reported to be within 15 m (49 ft) using satellite correction and 200 m (660 ft) without it.[131]

A new KA1-1-01 Head-Up Display (HUD) was added providing, among other things, double the field of view of the original ASP-17BTs-8 electro-optical sight. Other systems and components incorporated during the upgrade include a Multi-Function Display (MFD), RSBN-85 Short Range Aid to Navigation (SHORAN), ARK-35-1 Automatic Direction Finder (ADF), A-737-01 GPS/GLONASS Receiver, Karat-B-25 Flight Data Recorder (FDR), Berkut-1 Video Recording System (VRS), Banker-2 UHF/VHF communication radio, SO-96 Transponder and a L150 "Pastel" Radar Warning Receiver (RWR).[131]

The R-95sh engines have been overhauled and modified with an anti-surge system installed. The system is designed to improve the resistance of the engine to ingested powders and gases during gun and rocket salvo firing.[131]

The combination of reconditioned and new equipment, with increased automation and self-test capability has allowed for a reduction of pre- and post-flight maintenance by some 25 to 30%. Overall weight savings are around 300 kg (660 lb).[131]

Su-25SM weapon suite has been expanded with the addition of the Vympel R-73 highly agile air-to-air missile (albeit without helmet mounted cueing and only the traditional longitudinal seeker mode) and the S-13T 130 mm rockets (carried in five-round B-13 pods) with blast-fragmentation and armour-piercing warheads. Further, the Kh-25ML and Kh-29L Weapon Employment Profiles have been significantly improved, permitting some complex missile launch scenarios to be executed, such as: firing two consecutive missiles on two different targets in a single attack pass. The GSh-30-2 autocannon (250-round magazine) has received three new reduced rate-of-fire modes: 750, 375 and 188 rounds per minute. The Su-25SM was also given new BD3-25 under-wing pylons.[131]

The eventual procurement programme is expected to include between 100 and 130 kits, covering 60 to 70 percent of the Russian Air Force active single-seat fleet, as operated in the early 2000s.[131] On 21 February 2012, Air Force spokesman Col. Vladimir Drik said that Russia will continue to upgrade its Su-25 attack aircraft to Su-25SM version, which has a significantly better survivability and combat effectiveness. The Russian Air Force then had over 30 Su-25SMs in service and plans to modernize about 80 Su-25s by 2020, Drik said.[132][133] By March 2013, over 60 aircraft are to be upgraded.[133][134] In February 2013, ten new Su-25SMs were delivered to the Air Force southern base,[135][136] where operational training is being conducted.[137] During the period 2005–2015, more than 80 aircraft were upgraded.[138]

Since early 2014, the 368th Assault Aviation Regiment of the 4th Air and Air Defence Forces Army at Budyonnovsk has received advanced Su-25SMs[139] (probably 16 aircraft). Nine more were delivered in 2018,[140][141][142] eight more in early 2019[143][144][145] and four more in early 2020 plus one more in early 2021.[146][147][148]

Since 2018, the Aerospace Forces [VKS] have been receiving Su-25SM3s, and a total of 25 aircraft have already been delivered as of June 2019. Unlike the baseline Su-25 and its incrementally upgraded variant, the Su-25SM, both of which have a rather outdated Klen-PS laser target designator in the nose, the Su-25SM3 has been upgraded with the new SOLT-25 electro-optics nose module. The SOLT-25 provides 16× zoom and features a laser range finder and target designator, thermal imager, TV channels, and the ability to track moving targets in all weather up to 8 km away. In addition, the Su-25SM3 comes with the Vitebsk-25 protection suite, which integrates a set of Zakhvat forward and rearward facing missile approach warning ultraviolet sensors, the L-150-16M Pastel radar homing and warning system, two UV-26M 50 mm chaff dispensers, and a pair of wing-mounted L-370-3S radar jamming pods. Furthermore, the Su-25SM3 has been upgraded with the new PrNK-25SM-1 Bars targeting-and-navigation system and the KSS-25 communication system with Banker-8-TM-1 antenna.[149]

As a result from combat experience in Syria the Su-25SM3 has been equipped with SVP-24 navigation and bombing aids that improve the accuracy of unguided bombs.[150]

Su-25KM

The Su-25KM (Komercheski, Modernized),[151] nicknamed "Scorpion", is an Su-25 upgrade programme announced in early 2001 by the original manufacturer, Tbilisi Aircraft Manufacturing in Georgia, in partnership with Elbit Systems of Israel. The prototype aircraft made its maiden flight on 18 April 2001 at Tbilisi in full Georgian Air Force markings.[152] The aircraft uses a standard Su-25 airframe, enhanced with advanced avionics including a glass cockpit, digital map generator, helmet-mounted display, computerised weapons system, complete mission pre-plan capability, and fully redundant backup modes. Performance enhancements include a highly accurate navigation system, pinpoint weapon delivery systems, all-weather and day/night performance, NATO compatibility, state-of-the art safety and survivability features, and advanced onboard debriefing capabilities complying with international requirements.[152] It has the ability to use Israeli Opher infrared-guided bombs and Lizard laser-guided bombs, as well as the Vympel R-73 infrared-guided missile.[153]

Su-28

 
Sukhoi Su-28 non-combat jet trainer

The Sukhoi Su-28 (also designated Su-25UTUchebno-Trenirovochnyy) is an advanced basic jet trainer, built on the basis of the Su-25UB as a private initiative by the Sukhoi Design Bureau. The Su-28 is a light aircraft designed to replace the Czechoslovak Aero L-39 Albatros. Unlike the basic Su-25UB, it lacks a weapons-control system, built-in cannon, weapons hardpoints, and engine armour.[154]

Other

  • Su-25R (Razvedchik) – a tactical reconnaissance variant designed in 1978, but never built.[155]
  • Su-25U3 (Uchebnyy 3-myestny) – also known as the "Russian Troika", was a three-seat basic trainer aircraft. The project was suspended in 1991 due to lack of funding.[155]
  • Su-25U (Uchebnyy) – a trainer variant of Su-25s produced in Georgia between 1996 and 1998. Three aircraft were built in total, all for the Georgian Air Force.[155]
  • Su-25M1/Su-25UBM1 – Su-25 and Su-25UB aircraft modernized by the Ukrainian company MiGremont for the Ukrainian Air Force. Ten modernized as of 2013 (seven single-seat and three trainers). Upgrades include a new GPS receiver, a new radio, more accurate weapon delivery thanks to a new sight, and a new digital flight data recorder. Additionally, upgraded aircraft can use S-13 rockets.[156]
  • Ge-31 is an ongoing Georgian program of Tbilisi Aircraft Manufacturing aiming at producing a renewed version of Su-25 without Russian components and parts.[157]
  • T-12 ("Shturmovik-90") – a proposed successor to the Su-25. It would have utilized a twin fuselage with two cockpits; one would carry the pilot, who would also operate the plane's radar, while the other would operate the plane's weapons and fire control. The T-12's design also included a forward-swept wing and V-tail.[158]

Operators

Notable accidents

The Su-25 has been involved in the following notable aviation accidents.

  • An Su-25K of the Air Force of the Democratic Republic of the Congo disappeared in December 2006 during a routine rebasing operation and no wreckage was ever found.[159]
  • Another Congolese Su-25K crashed on 30 June 2007 during an Independence Day display, near the city of Kisangani, killing the pilot. Investigations revealed that the crash was due to an engine failure.[159]
  • An Su-25 of the Russian Air Force exploded in mid-air on 20 March 2008 during a live firing exercise over the Primorsky Krai, 143 km (89 mi) from Vladivostok, killing the pilot. Further investigations revealed that the aircraft was downed by a missile accidentally launched by a wingman. After the accident, all Russian Su-25s were grounded until the investigation was concluded.[160]

Specifications (Su-25/Su-25K, late production)

Legend
  • 1: SPM-17A cannon
  • 2: Air brakes
  • 3: Electronic countermeasures
  • 4: Laser Station Maple-PS
  • 5: Avionics
  • 6: Identification friend or foe system
  • 7: Pitot tube
  • 8: Drogue parachute
  • 9: Fuel tanks
  • 10: Main landing gear
  • 11: K-36L ejection seat
  • 12: Bulletproof glass
  • 13: Periscope
  • 14: Turbojet
  • 15: Air intake
  • 16: RSBN Short Range Navigation System
  • 17: PA-7 Pitot tube
  • 18: Front landing gear
  • 19: Canopy
  • 20: TSA-17 Sight
  • 21: Hinged ladder
  • 22: Longeron
  • 23: Flaps
  • 24: Leading edge slats
  • 25: Empennage, including rudder
  • 26: Aileron
  • 27: ASO-2V infrared countermeasures
  • 28: SPO-15 radar warning receiver
  • 29: Tail flaps
  • 30: CDD-25 hardpoints
  • 31: AAP-60 Starter engines[161]
 
Sukhoi Su-25 line drawing

Data from Jane's All The World's Aircraft 2003–2004,[162] Sukhoi,[163] deagel.com,[164] airforce-technology.com[165]

General characteristics

  • Crew: 1
  • Length: 15.53 m (50 ft 11 in) (including nose probe)
  • Wingspan: 14.36 m (47 ft 1 in)
  • Height: 4.8 m (15 ft 9 in)
  • Wing area: 33.7 m2 (363 sq ft)
  • Empty weight: 9,800 kg (21,605 lb)
  • Gross weight: 14,440 kg (31,835 lb)
  • Max takeoff weight: 19,300 kg (42,549 lb)
  • Powerplant: 2 × Soyuz/Tumansky R-195 turbojet engine, 44.18 kN (9,930 lbf) thrust each

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 975 km/h (606 mph, 526 kn)
  • Maximum speed: Mach 0.79
  • Range: 1,000 km (620 mi, 540 nmi)
  • Combat range: 750 km (470 mi, 400 nmi) at sea level with 4,400 kg (9,700 lb) of ordnance and two external fuel tanks
  • Service ceiling: 7,000 m (23,000 ft)
  • g limits: +6.5
  • Rate of climb: 58 m/s (11,400 ft/min)

Armament

Avionics

See also

Related development

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

References

Notes

Citations

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Bibliography

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  • Mladenov, Alexander (2013a). Sukhoi Su-25 Frogfoot. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 978-1-78200-359-5.
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External links

  • Su-25 at GlobalSecurity.org
  • Su-25 at Russia Military Analysis
  • at the Wayback Machine (archived 9 January 2008)

sukhoi, grach, russian, Грач, rook, nato, reporting, name, frogfoot, subsonic, single, seat, twin, engine, aircraft, developed, soviet, union, sukhoi, designed, provide, close, support, soviet, ground, forces, first, prototype, made, maiden, flight, february, . The Sukhoi Su 25 Grach Russian Grach rook NATO reporting name Frogfoot is a subsonic single seat twin engine jet aircraft developed in the Soviet Union by Sukhoi It was designed to provide close air support for Soviet Ground Forces The first prototype made its maiden flight on 22 February 1975 After testing the aircraft went into series production in 1978 in Tbilisi in the Georgian Soviet Socialist Republic Su 25A Russian Air Force Su 25Role Close air supportNational origin Soviet Union Russia GeorgiaDesign group SukhoiBuilt by TAM Management Tbilisi Aircraft Manufacturing Ulan Ude Aviation PlantFirst flight 22 February 1975 47 years ago 1975 02 22 Introduction 19 July 1981Status In servicePrimary users Russian Air ForceUkrainian Air ForceKorean People s Army Air Force Peruvian Air Force See Operators for othersProduced 1978 2017Number built Over 1 000Variants Sukhoi Su 28Early variants included the Su 25UB two seat trainer the Su 25BM for target towing and the Su 25K for export customers Some aircraft were upgraded to the Su 25SM standard in 2012 The Su 25T and the Su 25TM also known as the Su 39 were further developments not produced in significant numbers The Su 25 and the Su 34 were the only armoured fixed wing aircraft in production in 2007 1 Su 25s are in service with Russia other CIS members and export customers Production of the Su 25 ended in 2017 in Russia 2 and 2010 in Georgia 3 Attempts continue to be made to restart production in Georgia using partially completed airframes 4 but as of June 2022 no new deliveries have been reported Since entering service more than 41 years ago the Su 25 has seen combat in several conflicts The type was heavily involved in the Soviet Afghan War flying counter insurgency missions against the Afghan Mujahideen The Iraqi Air Force employed it against Iran during the 1980 88 Iran Iraq War Most Iraqi examples were later destroyed or flown to Iran in the 1991 Persian Gulf War The Georgian Air Force used Su 25s during the Abkhazian war from 1992 to 1993 The Macedonian Air Force used Su 25s against Albanian insurgents in the 2001 Macedonian conflict and in 2008 Georgia and Russia both used Su 25s in the Russo Georgian War African states including the Ivory Coast Chad and Sudan have used the Su 25 in local insurgencies and civil wars Recently the Su 25 has seen service in the Russian intervention in the Syrian Civil War the clashes of the 2020 Nagorno Karabakh War and the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine 5 Contents 1 Development 2 Design 2 1 Cockpit 2 2 Avionics 3 Operational history 3 1 Soviet Afghan War 3 2 Iran Iraq War 3 3 Gulf War 3 4 Abkhazian War 3 5 First Chechen War 3 6 Second Chechen War 3 7 Ethiopian Eritrean War 3 8 2001 insurgency in the Republic of Macedonia 3 9 War in Darfur 3 10 Ivorian French clashes 3 11 2008 Russia Georgia war 3 12 Iran 3 13 2014 2015 conflict in Ukraine 3 14 2014 Northern Iraq offensive 3 15 Military intervention in Syria 3 16 2020 Nagorno Karabakh War 3 17 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine 3 17 1 Russian service 3 17 2 Ukrainian service 4 Variants 4 1 Su 25 4 1 1 Su 25K 4 2 Su 25UB 4 2 1 Su 25UBK 4 2 2 Su 25UBM 4 2 3 Su 25UTG 4 3 Su 25BM 4 4 Su 25T 4 5 Su 25TM Su 39 4 6 Su 25SM 4 7 Su 25KM 4 8 Su 28 4 9 Other 5 Operators 6 Notable accidents 7 Specifications Su 25 Su 25K late production 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Notes 9 2 Citations 9 3 Bibliography 10 External linksDevelopmentIn early 1968 the Soviet Ministry of Defence decided to develop a specialised shturmovik armoured assault aircraft in order to provide close air support for the Soviet Ground Forces The idea of creating a ground support aircraft came about after analysing the experience of ground attack shturmovaya aviation during the 1940s 1950s and 1960s 6 The Soviet fighter bombers in service or under development at the time Su 7 Su 17 MiG 21 and MiG 23 did not meet the requirements for close air support of the army 6 They lacked essential armour plating to protect the pilot and vital equipment from ground fire and missile hits and their high flight speeds made it difficult for the pilot to maintain visual contact with a target Having taken into account these problems Pavel Sukhoi and a group of leading specialists in the Sukhoi Design Bureau started preliminary design work in a comparatively short period of time with the assistance of leading institutes of the Ministry of the Aviation Industry and the Ministry of Defence 7 This Su 25UB of the Russian Air Force is a two seater version intended for both combat and training In March 1969 a competition was announced by the Soviet Air Force that called for designs for a new battlefield close support aircraft Participants in the competition were the Sukhoi design bureau and the design bureaus of Yakovlev Ilyushin and Mikoyan 8 Sukhoi finalised its T 8 design in late 1968 and began in work on the first two prototypes T8 1 and T8 2 in January 1972 The T8 1 the first airframe to be assembled was completed on 9 May 1974 Another source says November 1974 However it did not make its first flight until 22 February 1975 after a long series of test flights by Vladimir Ilyushin The Su 25 surpassed its main competitor in the Soviet Air Force competition the Ilyushin Il 102 and series production was announced by the Ministry of Defence 9 10 During flight testing phases of the T8 1 and T8 2 prototypes development the Sukhoi Design Bureau s management proposed that the series production of the Su 25 should start at Factory No 31 in Tbilisi Soviet Republic of Georgia which at that time was the major manufacturing base for the MiG 21UM Mongol B trainer After negotiations and completion of all stages of the state trials the Soviet Ministry of Aircraft Production authorised manufacture of the Su 25 at Tbilisi allowing series production to start in 1978 11 In the late 1980s and early 1990s several Su 25 variants appeared including modernised versions and variants for specialised roles The most significant designs were the Su 25UB dual seat trainer the Su 25BM target towing variant and the Su 25T for antitank missions In addition an Su 25KM prototype was developed by Georgia in co operation with Israeli company Elbit Systems in 2001 but so far this variant has not achieved much commercial success As of 2007 update the Su 25 was the only armoured aircraft still in production 1 The Russian Air Force which operates the largest number of Su 25s planned to upgrade older aircraft to the Su 25SM variant but funding shortfalls had slowed the progress by early 2007 only seven aircraft had been modified 12 DesignThe Su 25 has a conventional aerodynamic layout with a shoulder mounted trapezoidal wing and a traditional tailplane and rudder Several metals are used in the construction of the airframe 60 aluminium 19 steel 13 5 titanium 2 magnesium alloy and 5 5 other materials 13 Su 25 at Kubinka air base All versions of the Su 25 have a metal cantilever wing of moderate sweep high aspect ratio and equipped with high lift devices The wing consists of two cantilever sections attached to a central torsion box forming a single unit with the fuselage The air brakes are housed in fairings at the tip of each wing Each wing has five hardpoints for weapons carriage with the attachment points mounted on load bearing ribs and spars 14 Each wing also features a five section leading edge slat a two section flap and an aileron The flaps are mounted by steel sliders and rollers attached to brackets on the rear spar The trapezoidal ailerons are near the wingtips 15 The fuselage of the Su 25 has an ellipsoidal section and is of semi monocoque stressed skin construction arranged as a longitudinal load bearing framework of longerons beams and stringers with a transverse load bearing assembly of frames 13 The one piece horizontal tailplane is attached to the load bearing frame at two mounting points 15 Early versions of the Su 25 were equipped with two R 95Sh non afterburning turbojets in compartments on either side of the rear fuselage The engines sub assemblies and surrounding fuselage are cooled by air provided by the cold air intakes on top of the engine nacelles A drainage system collects oil hydraulic fluid residues and fuel from the engines after flight or after an unsuccessful start The engine control systems allows independent operation of each engine 15 The latest versions Su 25T and TM are equipped with improved R 195 engines 16 Nose view of the Su 25 The autocannon is in a compartment beneath the cockpit mounted on a load bearing beam attached to the cockpit floor and the forward fuselage support structure The nose is fitted with distinctive twin pitot probes and hinges up for service access 13 Cockpit Cockpit The pilot flies the aircraft by means of a centre stick and left hand throttles The pilot sits on a Zvezda K 36 ejection seat similar to the Sukhoi Su 27 and has standard flight instruments At the rear of the cockpit is a six millimetre thick 0 24 in steel headrest mounted on the rear bulkhead The cockpit has a bathtub shaped armoured enclosure of welded titanium sheets with transit ports in the walls Guide rails for the ejection seat are mounted on the rear wall of the cockpit 13 The canopy hinges open to the right and the pilot enters using the flip down ladder Once inside the pilot sits low in the cockpit protected by the bathtub assembly which makes for a cramped cockpit Visibility from the cockpit is limited being a trade off for improved pilot protection Rearwards visibility is poor and a periscope is fitted on top of the canopy to compensate 17 A folding ladder built into the left fuselage provides access to the cockpit as well as to the top of the aircraft Avionics The base model Su 25 incorporates a number of key avionics systems It has no TV guidance but includes a distinctive nose mounted laser rangefinder that is thought to provide for laser based target finding 17 18 A DISS 7 doppler radar is used for navigation the Su 25 can fly at night in visual and instrument meteorological conditions The Su 25 often has radios installed for air to ground and air to air communications including an SO 69 identification friend or foe IFF transponder The aircraft s self defence suite includes various measures such as flare and chaff dispensers capable of launching up to 250 flares and dipole chaff Hostile radar uses are guarded against via an SPO 15 radar warning receiver An airtight avionics compartment is behind the cockpit and in front of the forward fuel tank The newer Su 25TM and Su 25SM models have an upgraded avionics and weapons suite resulting in improved survivability and combat capability 19 Operational historyFurther information Operational history of the Sukhoi Su 25 Soviet Afghan War Main article List of Soviet aircraft losses during the Soviet Afghan War The first Soviet Air Forces Su 25 unit was the 80th Assault Aviation Regiment formed in February 1981 based at Sitalcay air base in the Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic 20 The first eleven aircraft arrived at Sitalchay in May 1981 21 The 200th Independent Assault Aviation Squadron was then formed within the regiment to go to Afghanistan On 19 July 1981 the 200th Independent Attack Squadron was reassigned to Shindand Airbase in western Afghanistan becoming the first Su 25 unit deployed to that country Its main task was to conduct air strikes against mountain military positions and structures controlled by the Afghan rebels 22 Another Soviet Su 25 unit was the 368th Assault Aviation Regiment which was formed on 12 July 1984 at Zhovtneve in Ukraine 23 It was soon also moved east to conduct operations over Afghanistan Over the course of the Soviet Afghan War Su 25s launched 139 guided missiles of all types against Mujahideen positions On average each aircraft performed 360 sorties a year a total considerably higher than that of any other combat aircraft in Afghanistan By the end of the war nearly 50 Su 25s were deployed at Afghan airbases carrying out a total of 60 000 sorties Between the first deployment in 1981 and the end of the war in 1989 21 23 aircraft were lost in combat operations with up to nine destroyed on the ground while parked 22 24 Iran Iraq War The Su 25 also saw combat during the Iran Iraq War of 1980 88 The first Su 25s were commissioned by the Iraqi Air Force in 1987 and performed approximately 900 combat sorties towards the end of the war carrying out the bulk of Iraqi air attack missions During the most intense combat of the war Iraqi Su 25s performed up to 15 sorties per day each In one recorded incident an Iraqi Su 25 was shot down by an Iranian Hawk surface to air missile but the pilot managed to eject This was the only confirmed successful Iranian shootdown of an Iraqi Su 25 After the war Saddam Hussein decorated all of the Iraqi Air Force s Su 25 pilots with the country s highest military decoration 22 Gulf War An Iraqi Su 25 destroyed during Operation Desert Storm During the Gulf War of 1991 the air superiority of the coalition forces was so great that the majority of Iraqi Su 25s did not even manage to get airborne On 25 January 1991 seven Iraqi Air Force Su 25s fled from Iraq and landed in Iran 25 On the evening of 6 February 1991 two US Air Force F 15C Eagle fighters of the 53rd Tactical Fighter Squadron operating from Al Kharj Air Base in Saudi Arabia intercepted a pair of Iraqi MiG 21s and a pair of Su 25s All four Iraqi aircraft were shot down with both Su 25s coming down in the desert not far from the Iraqi border with Iran This was the Iraqi Su 25s only air combat of the war 22 Abkhazian War The Georgian government used Su 25s in 1992 93 against Abkhaz separatists during the First Abkhazian War 26 A Georgian Air Force Su 25 was shot down over Nizhnaya Eshera on 4 July 1993 by an 9K34 Strela 3 MANPADS 27 28 Another Georgian Su 25 was shot down on 13 July 1993 with a 9K32 Strela 2 MANPADS 29 while another Su 25 was downed by friendly fire by a ZU 23 2 on 4 July 29 The Russian Air Force also lost an Su 25 during war the aircraft crashed due to a pilot s mistake while providing CAS for Abkhaz forces 29 First Chechen War Main article First Chechen War Russian Su 25s were employed during the First Chechen War Together with other Russian Air Force air assets they achieved air supremacy for Russian Forces On 29 November 1994 attacking all four Chechen military bases Russian Su 25 from the 368th Assault Aviation Regiment OShAP destroyed up to 266 Chechen aircraft on the ground mostly not airworthy 30 The Air Force s deployed assets performed around 9 000 air sorties with around 5 300 being strike sorties during the Chechen campaign between 1994 and 1996 The Russian 4th Air Army had 140 Sukhoi Su 17Ms Su 24s and Su 25s in the war zone supported by an A 50 AWACS aircraft The employed munitions were generally unguided S 5 S 8 and S 24 rockets as well as FAB 250 and FAB 500 bombs while only 2 3 of the strikes used precision guided Kh 25ML missiles KAB 500L and KAB 500KR smart bombs when weather conditions were suitable 31 Russian forces were not able to properly take advantage of the achieved air supremacy due to obsolete air tactics that focused the Air Force on useless tasks in this type of war such as Combat Air Patrols 32 The Russian air losses were low since no integrated air defense was fielded by the Chechens 33 On 4 February 1995 a Russian Su 25 was shot down by ZSU 23 4 Shilka antiaircraft fire over Belgatoi Gekhi five kilometers southeast of Grozny The pilot Maj Nikolay Bairov ejected but died impacting the ground as his parachute did not deploy on time Another Su 25 piloted by Lt Col Evgeny Derkulsky was damaged by ground fire on the same day but managed to land at Mozdok air base where the aircraft was repaired 30 On 5 May 1995 another Russian Su 25 was downed near Serzhen Yurt by 12 7 mm fire while on a low altitude patrol The pilot Col Vladimir Sarabeyev was killed 34 On 4 April 1996 another Su 25 fell either to ZU 23 2 fire while either making a reconnaissance flight or attacking the village of Goiskoye The pilot Maj Alexander Matvienko ejected and was recovered by a friendly helicopter returning to the airbase in Khankala Grozny 35 On 5 May 1996 a two seat Su 25UB was downed with an 9K34 Strela 3 MANPADS near the village of Mairtup while on reconnaissance Both pilots Col Igor Sviryidov and Maj Oleg Isayev were killed in the crash It was the fourth Su 25 shot down and fifth Russian fixed wing aircraft lost since the start of the war in December 1994 33 36 Second Chechen War Main articles Second Chechen War and List of Russian aircraft losses in the Second Chechen War Russian Air Force Su 25s were extensively used during the Second Chechen War in particular during the first phase when Russian forces were invading the self proclaimed Chechen Republic of Ichkeria 37 Up to seven Russian Su 25s were lost 33 one to hostile fire on 4 October 1999 a Su 25 was shot down by a MANPADS during a reconnaissance mission over the village of Tolstoy Yurt killing its pilot The wings of the aircraft were put on a pedestal in the central square in Grozny 35 38 Ethiopian Eritrean War Main article Ethiopian Eritrean War Su 25 attack aircraft were used by the Ethiopian Air Force to strike Eritrean targets On 15 May 2000 An Ethiopian Su 25 was shot down by an Eritrean Air Force MiG 29 killing the pilot 39 2001 insurgency in the Republic of Macedonia Main article 2001 insurgency in the Republic of Macedonia Su 25s were used by the Macedonian Air Force during the conflict against Albanian separatists Beginning on 24 June 2001 the aircraft made multiple attack runs against separatist positions The most successful operation took place on 10 August 2001 in the village of Radusa when Su 25s attacked Albanian militants who had ambushed and killed 16 Macedonian soldiers over the previous two days 40 War in Darfur Main article War in Darfur Sudan has used Su 25s in attacks on rebel targets and possibly civilians in Darfur 41 Ivorian French clashes Main articles 2004 French Ivorian clashes and First Ivorian Civil War During the Ivorian Civil War Su 25s were used by government forces to attack rebel targets On 6 November 2004 at least one Ivorian Sukhoi Su 25 attacked a unit of France s Unicorn peacekeeping forces stationed in Bouake at 1300 killing nine soldiers a U S development worker and wounding 37 soldiers 42 Shortly afterwards the French military retaliated by attacking the air base in Yamoussoukro and destroyed the Ivorian air force heavily damaging the two Su 25s responsible for the attack 43 44 2008 Russia Georgia war Main article Russo Georgian War A Russian Su 25 In August 2008 Su 25s were used by both Georgia and Russia during the 2008 Russia Georgia war Su 25s of the Georgian Air Force participated in providing air support for troops during Battle of Tskhinvali and launched bombing raids on targets in South Ossetia 45 Russian military Su 25s struck Georgian forces in South Ossetia and undertook air raids on targets in Georgia 46 The Russian military officially confirmed the loss of three Su 25 aircraft to the Georgian air defense though the Moscow Defense Brief suggests four 47 48 The three Russian aircraft were reportedly downed by Georgian Buk M1 air defence units 49 Georgian Su 25s were able to operate at night 49 In early August 2008 Russian Su 25s attacked the Tbilisi Aircraft Manufacturing plant where the Su 25 is produced dropping bombs on the factory s airfield 50 Iran On 1 November 2012 two Iranian Su 25s fired cannon bursts at a USAF MQ 1 Predator drone 30 km 19 mi 16 nmi off the Iranian coast The Iranian government has claimed that the drone violated its airspace 51 52 53 2014 2015 conflict in Ukraine Main articles 2014 pro Russian unrest in Ukraine and List of Ukrainian aircraft losses during the Ukrainian crisis Ukrainian armed forces deployed aircraft over insurgent Eastern regions starting in spring 2014 On 26 May 2014 Ukrainian Su 25s supported Mi 24 helicopters during a military operation to regain control over the airport in Donetsk during which the Su 25s fired air to ground rockets 54 On 2 July 2014 one Ukrainian Su 25 crashed due to a technical fault 55 56 57 On 16 July 2014 an Su 25 was shot down with Ukrainian officials stating that a Russian MiG 29 shot it down using a R 27T missile 58 59 Russia denied these allegations 60 On 23 July 2014 two Su 25s were shot down in the Donetsk region of Ukraine A spokesperson for the National Security and Defense Council of Ukraine said the aircraft were shot down by missiles fired from Russia 61 On 29 August 2014 a Ukrainian Su 25 was shot down by pro Russian rebels The Ukrainian authorities said the downing was due to a Russian missile without clarifying if they mean Russian made or fired by Russian forces The pilot managed to eject safely On the same day pro Russian rebels claimed the downing of up to four Su 25s 62 63 On 9 February 2015 the pro Russian forces indirectly acknowledged for the first time with a reference to a Ukrainian media source their use of Su 25 against Ukrainian forces during the fighting near Debaltsevo 64 2014 Northern Iraq offensive Main article Northern Iraq offensive June 2014 On 29 June 2014 it was reported that Iraq claimed to have received the first batch of second hand Su 25s ordered from Russia in order to fight the Islamic State forces An Iraqi defense ministry source claimed the aircraft would be in service within three to four days despite the fact that the Iraqis require technical help and parts to make them operational and the fact that the Russian made aircraft are incompatible with the Iraqi Air force s inventory of American made Hellfire missiles 65 66 The Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps Air Force delivered seven Su 25s on 1 July 2014 the majority of which were ex Iraqi aircraft from the Gulf War 67 They were quickly pushed into combat performing air raids as early as the beginning of August 2014 and later expanding their area of operation 68 69 Iraqi Su 25s flew the bulk of the sorties against the Islamic State with 3562 missions between June 2014 and December 2017 by which time ISIS had lost control of all the territory it formerly controlled in Iraq That compares to 514 sorties flown by the Iraqi fleet of F 16IQ fighters 70 Military intervention in Syria Main article Military intervention against ISIL In September 2015 it was reported that at least a dozen Su 25 were deployed by Russia to an airfield near Latakia Syria to support the Russian forces there who were taking part in the Syrian offensive against ISIL 71 On 2 October 2015 Russian Su 24M and Su 25 attack aircraft destroyed an ISIL command post in the Idlib province while Su 34 and Su 25 aircraft eliminated an ISIL fortified bunker in the Hama province citation needed By 15 March 2016 with the scaling down of Russian presence in Syria Russian Su 25s had performed over 1 600 sorties in Syria while dropping 6 000 bombs 72 On 3 February 2018 a Russian Su 25 was shot down over Idlib by rebel fighters who used a MANPADS A Syrian militant said that the pilot Roman Filipov ejected safely but killed himself with a grenade to avoid capture 73 74 75 76 2020 Nagorno Karabakh War Main article 2020 Nagorno Karabakh War On 29 September 2020 Armenian Defense Ministry claimed that an Armenian Air Force Su 25 was shot down 77 by a Turkish Air Force F 16 killing the pilot However Turkey denied the allegation 78 79 80 On 4 October 2020 an Azerbaijani Air force Su 25 aircraft was shot down by Armenian forces probably by a 9K33 Osa while targeting Armenian positions in Fuzuli The pilot Col Zaur Nudiraliyev died in the crash Azerbaijani officials acknowledged the loss in December 2020 81 82 while disclosing a major role of manned aviation being hidden during the active phase of the conflict with more than 600 airstrikes by manned aviation from 27 September 2020 to 9 November 2020 with the Su 25 fleet tasked with the critical role of suppression and destruction of the enemy air defense among others 83 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine Main articles 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine and List of aircraft losses during the Russo Ukrainian War Russian service On 24 February 2022 Russia reported the loss of an Su 25 due to pilot error 84 On 1 March a Russian Su 25SM piloted by Ruslan Rudnev was lost over Ukraine 85 86 The next day another Russian Su 25SM registration number RF 91961 Red 07 was shot down in Makariv Ukraine 87 On 4 March two Russian Su 25SMs the first with registration number RF 93026 were lost over Volnovakha Ukraine The second with callsign Red 04 was lost along with its pilot 88 Images of the aircraft wrecks were displayed on social media 89 On 7 March an Su 25 strike aircraft flown by Russian pilot Oleg Chervov was lost during a combat mission in Ukraine 90 91 On 10 March one Su 25 with registration number RF 91969 was shot down near Kyiv and the pilot killed 92 93 On 14 March a Russian Su 25 was damaged by enemy fire likely MANPADs but managed to return to its base 94 On 24 May Ukraine claimed to have shot down retired Major General Kanamat Botashev flying an Su 25 using a Stinger missile It was unknown if he was in service or a private military contractor 95 On 27 May Ukraine claimed to have shot down a retired Russian pilot Colonel Nikolai Markov who was reportedly flying an Su 25 over the Luhansk region 96 Ukrainian service The Ukrainian Air force also operates Su 25s On 26 February three Su 25s from the 299th Tactical Aviation Brigade were lost Blue 19 and Blue 30 were shot down over the Kherson region 97 The pilots were presumed dead Photos of the wrecks of the two Ukrainian aircraft were published 98 99 100 A third aircraft from the 299th was lost but the pilot Andrey Maksinov was captured by Russian forces 101 Ukrainian media acknowledged that the pilot was Ukrainian 102 The next day another Su 25 Blue 39 piloted by Gennady Matulyak was shot down near Hlibivka Vyshgorod Kyiv region 103 104 On 2 March one Su 25 from 299th Tactical Aviation Brigade piloted by Oleksandr Korpan was lost over Starokostiantyniv Khmelnytskyi Oblast 105 106 107 On 10 March one Su 25 Blue 31 was shot down near Nova Kakhovka Kherson 108 109 110 On 14 March another Su 25 was shot down by Russian forces in Volnovakha Donbas region The pilot Roman Vasyliuk was captured by Russian forces and later released on 24 April in a Russo Ukrainian prisoner swap 111 112 On 22 March a Ukrainian Su 25 heavily damaged in combat was recorded in video 113 On 15 April a Ukrainian Su 25 was reportedly shot down by Russian forces in Izyum 114 The downing of the aircraft was recorded by a military camera in thermographic mode 115 The pilot Captain Yegor Seredyuk was reported as being killed near Izyum on 15 April 116 117 Seredyuk was awarded the Hero of Ukraine order 118 On 14 May a Su 25 from 299th Tactical Aviation Brigade piloted by Captain Serhiy Parkhomenko was shot down in Huliaipole Zaporizhzhia Oblast and the pilot killed 119 120 VariantsSu 25 Soviet Su 25 in flight The basic version of the aircraft was produced at Factory 31 at Tbilisi in the Soviet Republic of Georgia Between 1978 and 1989 582 single seat Su 25s were produced in Georgia not including aircraft produced under the Su 25K export program This variant of the aircraft represents the backbone of the Russian Air Force s Su 25 fleet currently the largest in the world 11 The aircraft experienced a number of accidents in operational service caused by system failures attributed to salvo firing of weapons In the wake of these incidents use of its main armament the 240 mm S 24 rocket was prohibited In its place the FAB 500 500 kg 1 100 lb general purpose high explosive bomb became the primary armament 11 Su 25K The basic Su 25 model was used as the basis for a commercial export variant known as the Su 25K Komercheskiy This model was also built at Factory 31 in Tbilisi Georgia The aircraft differed from the Soviet Air Force version in certain minor details concerning internal equipment A total of 180 Su 25K aircraft were built between 1984 and 1989 11 Su 25UB The Su 25UB trainer Uchebno Boyevoy was drawn up in 1977 The first prototype called T 8UB 1 was rolled out in July 1985 and its maiden flight was carried out at the Ulan Ude factory airfield on 12 August of that year 11 By the end of 1986 25 Su 25UBs had been produced at Ulan Ude before the twin seater completed its State trials and officially cleared for service with the Soviet Air Force 121 clarification needed It was intended for training and evaluation flights of active duty pilots and for training pilot cadets at Soviet Air Force flying schools The performance did not differ substantially from that of the single seater The navigation attack sighting devices and weapons control systems of the two seater enabled it to be used for both routine training and weapons training missions 122 Su 25UBK Bulgarian Su 25UBK on take off From 1986 to 1989 in parallel with the construction of the main Su 25UB combat training variant the Ulan Ude plant produced the so called commercial Su 25UBK intended for export to countries that bought the Su 25K and with similar modifications to that aircraft 123 Su 25UBM The Su 25UBM is a twin seat variant that can be used as an operational trainer but also has attack capabilities and can be used for reconnaissance target designation and airborne control Its first flight was on 6 December 2008 and it was certified in December 2010 It will enter operational use with the Russian Air Force later The variant has a Phazotron NIIR Kopyo radar and Bars 2 equipment on board Su 25UBM s range is believed to be 1 300 km 810 mi and it may have protection against infra red guided missiles IRGM a minimal requirement on today s battle fields where IRGMs proliferate 124 Su 25UTG Su 25UTG carrier based trainer aircraft at Novofedorovka airbase The Su 25UTG Uchebno Trenirovochnyy s Gakom is a variant of the Su 25UB designed to train pilots in takeoff and landing on a land based simulated carrier deck with a sloping ski jump section and arrester wires The first one flew in September 1988 and approximately 10 were produced 125 About half remained in Russian service after 1991 they were used on Russia s sole aircraft carrier Admiral Kuznetsov This small number of aircraft were insufficient to meet the training needs of Russia s carrier air group so a number of Su 25UBs were converted into Su 25UTGs These aircraft being distinguished by the alternative designation Su 25UBP Uchebno Boyevoy Palubny the adjective palubnyy meaning deck indicating that these aircraft have a naval function 126 As of 2007 approximately 10 of these aircraft were operational in the Russian Navy as part of the 279th Naval Aviation Regiment of the Northern Fleet 127 In 2021 Su 25 aircraft were also reported deployed with the 100th Independent Shipborne Fighter Aviation Regiment of the same fleet 128 Su 25BM The Su 25BM Buksirovshchik Misheney is a target towing variant of the Su 25 whose development began in 1986 The prototype designated T 8BM1 successfully flew for the first time on 22 March 1990 at Tbilisi After completion of the test phase the aircraft was put into production 126 The Su 25BM target tower was designed to provide towed target facilities for training ground forces and naval personnel in ground to air or naval surface to air missile systems It is powered by an R 195 engine and equipped with an RSDN 10 long range navigation system an analogue of the Western LORAN system 126 Su 25T The Su 25T Tankovy is a dedicated antitank version which has been combat tested with notable success in Chechnya 19 The design of the aircraft is similar to the Su 25UB The variant was converted to one seater with the rear seat replaced by additional avionics 129 It has all weather and night attack capability In addition to the full arsenal of weapons of the standard Su 25 the Su 25T can employ the KAB 500Kr TV guided bomb and the semi active laser guided Kh 25ML 19 Its enlarged nosecone houses the Shkval optical TV and aiming system with the Prichal laser rangefinder and target designator It can also carry Vikhr laser guided tube launched missiles which is its main antitank armament For night operations the low light TV Merkuriy pod system can be carried under the fuselage Three Su 25Ts prototypes were built in 1983 86 and 8 production aircraft were built in 1990 130 With the introduction of a definitive Russian Air Force Su 25 upgrade programme in the form of Stroyevoy Modernizirovannyi the Su 25T programme was officially canceled in 2000 131 Su 25TM Su 39 Russian Su 25TM has been built in small numbers Carries from tip to fuselage R 73 R 77 8 Vikhr Kh 29T Kh 58 White dome of Kopyo radar container is seen below while two Omul ECM pods lie beside the aircraft A second generation Su 25T the Su 25TM also designated Su 39 has been developed with improved navigation and attack systems and better survivability While retaining the built in Shkval of Su 25T it may carry Kopyo rus Spear radar in the container under fuselage which is used for engaging air targets with RVV AE R 77 missiles as well as ships with Kh 31 and Kh 35 antiship missiles The Russian Air Force has received 8 aircraft as of 2008 129 Some of the improved avionics systems designed for T and TM variants have been included in the Su 25SM an interim upgrade of the operational Russian Air Force Su 25 for improved survivability and combat capability 19 The Su 25TM as an all inclusive upgrade programme has been replaced with the affordable Su 25SM programme 131 Su 25SM A Sukhoi Su 25SM at the Celebration of the 100th anniversary of Russian Air Force The Su 25SM Stroyevoy Modernizirovannyi is an affordable upgrade programme for the Su 25 conceived by the Russian Air Force in 2000 The programme stems from the attempted Su 25T and Su 25TM upgrades which were evaluated and labeled as over sophisticated and expensive The SM upgrade incorporates avionics enhancements and airframe refurbishment to extend the Frogfoot s service life by up to 500 flight hours or 5 years 131 The Su 25SM s all new PRnK 25SM Bars navigation attack suite is built around the BTsVM 90 digital computer system originally planned for the Su 25TM upgrade programme Navigation and attack precision provided by the new suite is three times better of the baseline Su 25 and is reported to be within 15 m 49 ft using satellite correction and 200 m 660 ft without it 131 A new KA1 1 01 Head Up Display HUD was added providing among other things double the field of view of the original ASP 17BTs 8 electro optical sight Other systems and components incorporated during the upgrade include a Multi Function Display MFD RSBN 85 Short Range Aid to Navigation SHORAN ARK 35 1 Automatic Direction Finder ADF A 737 01 GPS GLONASS Receiver Karat B 25 Flight Data Recorder FDR Berkut 1 Video Recording System VRS Banker 2 UHF VHF communication radio SO 96 Transponder and a L150 Pastel Radar Warning Receiver RWR 131 The R 95sh engines have been overhauled and modified with an anti surge system installed The system is designed to improve the resistance of the engine to ingested powders and gases during gun and rocket salvo firing 131 The combination of reconditioned and new equipment with increased automation and self test capability has allowed for a reduction of pre and post flight maintenance by some 25 to 30 Overall weight savings are around 300 kg 660 lb 131 Su 25SM weapon suite has been expanded with the addition of the Vympel R 73 highly agile air to air missile albeit without helmet mounted cueing and only the traditional longitudinal seeker mode and the S 13T 130 mm rockets carried in five round B 13 pods with blast fragmentation and armour piercing warheads Further the Kh 25ML and Kh 29L Weapon Employment Profiles have been significantly improved permitting some complex missile launch scenarios to be executed such as firing two consecutive missiles on two different targets in a single attack pass The GSh 30 2 autocannon 250 round magazine has received three new reduced rate of fire modes 750 375 and 188 rounds per minute The Su 25SM was also given new BD3 25 under wing pylons 131 The eventual procurement programme is expected to include between 100 and 130 kits covering 60 to 70 percent of the Russian Air Force active single seat fleet as operated in the early 2000s 131 On 21 February 2012 Air Force spokesman Col Vladimir Drik said that Russia will continue to upgrade its Su 25 attack aircraft to Su 25SM version which has a significantly better survivability and combat effectiveness The Russian Air Force then had over 30 Su 25SMs in service and plans to modernize about 80 Su 25s by 2020 Drik said 132 133 By March 2013 over 60 aircraft are to be upgraded 133 134 In February 2013 ten new Su 25SMs were delivered to the Air Force southern base 135 136 where operational training is being conducted 137 During the period 2005 2015 more than 80 aircraft were upgraded 138 Since early 2014 the 368th Assault Aviation Regiment of the 4th Air and Air Defence Forces Army at Budyonnovsk has received advanced Su 25SMs 139 probably 16 aircraft Nine more were delivered in 2018 140 141 142 eight more in early 2019 143 144 145 and four more in early 2020 plus one more in early 2021 146 147 148 Since 2018 the Aerospace Forces VKS have been receiving Su 25SM3s and a total of 25 aircraft have already been delivered as of June 2019 Unlike the baseline Su 25 and its incrementally upgraded variant the Su 25SM both of which have a rather outdated Klen PS laser target designator in the nose the Su 25SM3 has been upgraded with the new SOLT 25 electro optics nose module The SOLT 25 provides 16 zoom and features a laser range finder and target designator thermal imager TV channels and the ability to track moving targets in all weather up to 8 km away In addition the Su 25SM3 comes with the Vitebsk 25 protection suite which integrates a set of Zakhvat forward and rearward facing missile approach warning ultraviolet sensors the L 150 16M Pastel radar homing and warning system two UV 26M 50 mm chaff dispensers and a pair of wing mounted L 370 3S radar jamming pods Furthermore the Su 25SM3 has been upgraded with the new PrNK 25SM 1 Bars targeting and navigation system and the KSS 25 communication system with Banker 8 TM 1 antenna 149 As a result from combat experience in Syria the Su 25SM3 has been equipped with SVP 24 navigation and bombing aids that improve the accuracy of unguided bombs 150 Su 25KM The Su 25KM Komercheski Modernized 151 nicknamed Scorpion is an Su 25 upgrade programme announced in early 2001 by the original manufacturer Tbilisi Aircraft Manufacturing in Georgia in partnership with Elbit Systems of Israel The prototype aircraft made its maiden flight on 18 April 2001 at Tbilisi in full Georgian Air Force markings 152 The aircraft uses a standard Su 25 airframe enhanced with advanced avionics including a glass cockpit digital map generator helmet mounted display computerised weapons system complete mission pre plan capability and fully redundant backup modes Performance enhancements include a highly accurate navigation system pinpoint weapon delivery systems all weather and day night performance NATO compatibility state of the art safety and survivability features and advanced onboard debriefing capabilities complying with international requirements 152 It has the ability to use Israeli Opher infrared guided bombs and Lizard laser guided bombs as well as the Vympel R 73 infrared guided missile 153 Su 28 Sukhoi Su 28 non combat jet trainer The Sukhoi Su 28 also designated Su 25UT Uchebno Trenirovochnyy is an advanced basic jet trainer built on the basis of the Su 25UB as a private initiative by the Sukhoi Design Bureau The Su 28 is a light aircraft designed to replace the Czechoslovak Aero L 39 Albatros Unlike the basic Su 25UB it lacks a weapons control system built in cannon weapons hardpoints and engine armour 154 Other Su 25R Razvedchik a tactical reconnaissance variant designed in 1978 but never built 155 Su 25U3 Uchebnyy 3 myestny also known as the Russian Troika was a three seat basic trainer aircraft The project was suspended in 1991 due to lack of funding 155 Su 25U Uchebnyy a trainer variant of Su 25s produced in Georgia between 1996 and 1998 Three aircraft were built in total all for the Georgian Air Force 155 Su 25M1 Su 25UBM1 Su 25 and Su 25UB aircraft modernized by the Ukrainian company MiGremont for the Ukrainian Air Force Ten modernized as of 2013 seven single seat and three trainers Upgrades include a new GPS receiver a new radio more accurate weapon delivery thanks to a new sight and a new digital flight data recorder Additionally upgraded aircraft can use S 13 rockets 156 Ge 31 is an ongoing Georgian program of Tbilisi Aircraft Manufacturing aiming at producing a renewed version of Su 25 without Russian components and parts 157 T 12 Shturmovik 90 a proposed successor to the Su 25 It would have utilized a twin fuselage with two cockpits one would carry the pilot who would also operate the plane s radar while the other would operate the plane s weapons and fire control The T 12 s design also included a forward swept wing and V tail 158 OperatorsMain article List of Sukhoi Su 25 operatorsNotable accidentsSee also Lists of accidents and incidents involving military aircraft The Su 25 has been involved in the following notable aviation accidents An Su 25K of the Air Force of the Democratic Republic of the Congo disappeared in December 2006 during a routine rebasing operation and no wreckage was ever found 159 Another Congolese Su 25K crashed on 30 June 2007 during an Independence Day display near the city of Kisangani killing the pilot Investigations revealed that the crash was due to an engine failure 159 An Su 25 of the Russian Air Force exploded in mid air on 20 March 2008 during a live firing exercise over the Primorsky Krai 143 km 89 mi from Vladivostok killing the pilot Further investigations revealed that the aircraft was downed by a missile accidentally launched by a wingman After the accident all Russian Su 25s were grounded until the investigation was concluded 160 Specifications Su 25 Su 25K late production 1 2 3 4 5 6 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31Legend1 SPM 17A cannon 2 Air brakes 3 Electronic countermeasures 4 Laser Station Maple PS 5 Avionics 6 Identification friend or foe system 7 Pitot tube 8 Drogue parachute 9 Fuel tanks 10 Main landing gear 11 K 36L ejection seat 12 Bulletproof glass 13 Periscope 14 Turbojet 15 Air intake 16 RSBN Short Range Navigation System 17 PA 7 Pitot tube 18 Front landing gear 19 Canopy 20 TSA 17 Sight 21 Hinged ladder 22 Longeron 23 Flaps 24 Leading edge slats 25 Empennage including rudder 26 Aileron 27 ASO 2V infrared countermeasures 28 SPO 15 radar warning receiver 29 Tail flaps 30 CDD 25 hardpoints 31 AAP 60 Starter engines 161 Sukhoi Su 25 line drawing Data from Jane s All The World s Aircraft 2003 2004 162 Sukhoi 163 deagel com 164 airforce technology com 165 General characteristicsCrew 1 Length 15 53 m 50 ft 11 in including nose probe Wingspan 14 36 m 47 ft 1 in Height 4 8 m 15 ft 9 in Wing area 33 7 m2 363 sq ft Empty weight 9 800 kg 21 605 lb Gross weight 14 440 kg 31 835 lb Max takeoff weight 19 300 kg 42 549 lb Powerplant 2 Soyuz Tumansky R 195 turbojet engine 44 18 kN 9 930 lbf thrust eachPerformance Maximum speed 975 km h 606 mph 526 kn Maximum speed Mach 0 79 Range 1 000 km 620 mi 540 nmi Combat range 750 km 470 mi 400 nmi at sea level with 4 400 kg 9 700 lb of ordnance and two external fuel tanks Service ceiling 7 000 m 23 000 ft g limits 6 5 Rate of climb 58 m s 11 400 ft min Armament Guns 1 30 mm Gryazev Shipunov GSh 30 2 autocannon with 250 rounds SPPU 22 gun pods for 2 23 mm Gryazev Shipunov GSh 23 autocannons with 260 rounds Hardpoints 11 hardpoints with a capacity of up to 4 400 kg 9 700 lb of stores with provisions to carry combinations of Rockets UB 16 rocket pods for S 5 rockets UB 32A rocket pods for S 5 rockets B 8M1 rocket pods for S 8 rockets S 13 S 24 S 25 Missiles Air to air missiles K 13A R 60 R 73E Air to surface missiles Kh 23 Kh 25ML Kh 29L 9K121 Vikhr Anti radiation missiles Kh 28 Bombs BETAB 500 concrete penetrating bomb 166 FAB 250 general purpose bomb FAB 500 GP bomb FAN 500 bomb 166 KAB 500KR TV guided bomb 167 ZAB 500 incendiary bomb 166 Other ASO 2V decoy dispensers chaff and flare Su 25s in Syria have been pictured with four rows of ASO 2V decoy dispensers chaff and flare along the tailcone s upper surface aft of the vertical stabiliser 168 169 Avionics Phazotron Kopyo radarSee also Aviation portalRelated development Sukhoi Su 28Aircraft of comparable role configuration and era Fairchild Republic A 10 Thunderbolt II Ilyushin Il 102 Northrop YA 9 IAR 93 Soko J 22 OraoReferencesNotes 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Archived from the original on 21 October 2020 Retrieved 17 October 2020 Esir dusmemek ucun Su 25 doyus teyyaresini dusmen sengerine cirpan sehid polkovnik Zaur Nudireliyev VIDEO in Azerbaijani 27 December 2020 Archived from the original on 22 January 2021 Retrieved 16 January 2021 Armenian air defenses shot down Azerbaijani Su 25 during Karabakh conflict pilot was killed media Al Masdar News 27 December 2020 Archived from the original on 22 January 2021 Retrieved 16 January 2021 Herk Hans van Combat missions of the Azerbaijani Air Force in the Second Karabakh War scramble nl Archived from the original on 21 January 2021 Retrieved 16 January 2021 Russian Defense Ministry says it has destroyed dozens of Ukrainian military facilities and lost one fighter jet MarketWatch Retrieved 24 February 2022 via Associated Press Ili my ili nacisty V Ukraine ubit polkovnik VKS RF Migworld in Russian 25 March 2022 V Samare prostilis s zemlyakom geroicheski pogibshim v hode specoperacii po zashite DNR i LNR Ob etom soobshaet Rambler News Rambler in Russian Vijskovo istorichnij muzej Kiyeva popovnivsya ulamkami rosijskogo shturmovika mil in ua in Ukrainian 1 May 2022 Ukrainian defenders destroy one more enemy Su 25 together with pilot Ukrinform 4 March 2022 Russian Forces Now Occupy Europe s Largest Nuclear Plant In Ukraine The Drive 4 March 2022 Earlier today the Ukrainian Ministry of Defense published a photo of the wreckage of a Russian Aerospace Forces Su 25 Frogfoot ground attack aircraft a type that has apparently already seen extensive use with both sides during the conflict Unconfirmed reports suggest that a Russian Mi 8 helicopter that may have arrived on the scene of the crash to assist was in turn brought down by Ukrainian air defenses At this stage this is only speculation however Nuzhno zavershit nachatoe delo Kommersant in Russian 17 March 2022 Oleg Chervov was buried at the memorial to military pilots on the Alley of Heroes of the Komintern cemetery in Voronezh In the upper part of the monument to Major Filipov there is a Su 25 attack aircraft directed into the sky Oleg Chervov also flew on the same plane V Voronezhe pohoronili zamkomandira aviapolka pogibshego vo vremya specoperacii na Ukraine Novosti Voronezha Voronezh News in Russian 16 March 2022 ASN Wikibase Occurrence 276346 Aviation Safety Network 10 March 2022 ZSU zbili rosijskij Su 25SM litak identifikuvali mil in ua in Ukrainian 10 March 2022 Watch Russian Sukhoi Su 25 aircraft safely lands after being hit by Ukrainian MANPADS Wion News 16 March 2022 63 Year Old Retired Russian Fighter Pilot Shot Down In Su 25 Over Ukraine 24 May 2022 Ukraine war Second Russian pensioner pilot is shot down and killed TDPel Media 27 May 2022 Dramatic Video Shows Ukrainian Su 25 Crashing During Attack On Russian Convoy At The End Of February The Aviatonist 18 March 2022 Ukraine Claims It Has Been Resupplied With Air To Air Missiles The Drive 27 February 2022 Russia shoots down Ukraine Su 25 fighter jet HS Military 27 February 2022 ASN 275988 Aviation Safety Network 27 February 2022 On further inspection these images actual show remains of 2 different Ukraine Air Force Su 25 Frogfoot Blue 19 Blue Ranenyj ukrainskij pilot popal v plen propagandisty RF zapisali s nim video Pravda Ukraine in Ukrainian 3 April 2022 Ukrainian pilot captured by Russian invaders and may be used for propaganda Ukrinform 4 March 2022 ASN Occurrence 276607 Aviation Safety Network 17 March 2022 Pilot ZSU Matulyak zmig vidvesti padayuchij litak vid naselenogo punktu chim vryatuvav zhittya soten lyudej na Kiyivshini FOTOreportazh in Ukrainian 18 March 2022 Archived from the original on 18 March 2022 He died for Ukraine Let s honor the moment of silence of Captain Alexander Korpan video photo in Ukrainian 29 April 2022 Z PRAPOROM TA ChORNIMI HORUGVAMI U PIDGAJCYaH PROShAYuTSYa IZ GEROYeM YaKIJ ZAGINUV U VIJNI in Ukrainian 7 March 2022 Na Ternopilshini pohovali lotchika udarnoyi aviaciyi in Ukrainian 10 March 2022 Video Ukrayna Savas Ucagi Dusuruldu in Turkish 10 March 2022 ASN Occurrence 276364 Aviation Safety Network 10 March 2022 Cooper Tom 11 March 2022 As a Ukrainian Tupolev Tu 141 drone crashes in Croatia Moscow says it destroyed 90 of the Ukrainian Air Bases But The Pentagon says that 90 of the Ukrainian Air Force is intact The Aviation Geek Club Certain is only that the Ukrainians lost another Su 25 Blue 31 was shot down yesterday afternoon Ukrayinskogo pilota Romana Vasilyuka zvilneno z polonuVIJSKOVI in Ukrainian 25 April 2022 Zbili vorozhi PPO nad Volnovahoyu ukrayinskogo pilota Romana Vasilyuka zvilnili z polonu 26 TV Ukraine in Ukrainian 25 April 2022 Agir Hasar Alan Ukrayna Su 25 Savas Ucagi Bos Araziye Acil Inis Yapti in Turkish 22 March 2022 Russia says it launched mass strikes on Ukrainian military overnight Reuters 18 April 2022 Aviation Safety 277529 Aviation Safety Network 18 April 2022 Tetyana Seredyuk Zhodni nagorodi ne povernut meni cholovika a donechci tata Yegor zasluzhiv zvannya Geroya Ukrayini yak nihto inshij ArmyInform in Ukrainian 2 May 2022 20 kvitnya zemlya Yemilchinshini prijnyala na vichnij spochinok she odnogo Geroya in Ukrainian Grigoriev Seredyuk Tsyurik Tsyupak Martsenyuk five more Heroes of Ukraine posthumously 24 April 2022 U Vinnici viddali ostannyu shanu lotchiku shturmoviku Sergiyu Parhomenku in Ukrainian 18 May 2022 Bojovi litaki v nebi nad Vinniceyu viddali ostannyu shanu molodomu lotchiku shturmoviku Sergiyu Parhomenku Army Inform in Ukrainian 18 May 2022 Gordon and Dawes 2004 p 54 Gordon and Dawes 2004 pp 50 51 Gordon and Dawes 2004 p 56 Karnozov Vladimir Sukhoi s Su 25UBM completes state acceptance trials Archived 23 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine FlightGlobal 20 December 2010 Retrieved 30 June 2011 Gordon and Dawes 2004 p 59 a b c Gordon and Dawes 2004 pp 60 71 Russian Military Analysis on Su 25 Archived 26 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine warfare ru Retrieved 18 June 2007 MiG 29K fighter from Russian Navy 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Berlin Springer 2008 ISBN 978 3 540 77067 1 Bedretdinov Ilʹdar 2002 Shturmovik Su 25 i ego modifikacii The Su 25 and its modifications in Russian 2nd ed Moscow Bedretdinov i Ko ISBN 978 5 901668 01 6 Donald David The Pocket Guide to Military Aircraft and the World s Airforces Archived 18 October 2015 at the Wayback Machine London Hamlyn 2004 ISBN 978 0 681 03185 2 Donald David and Daniel J March Sukhoi Su 25 Frogfoot Modern Battlefield Warplanes London AIRtime Publishing 2004 ISBN 1 880588 76 5 Eden Paul ed The Encyclopedia of Modern Military Aircraft London Amber Books 2004 ISBN 1 904687 84 9 Frawley Gerald Sukhoi Su 25 The International Directory of Military Aircraft 2002 2003 Fishwick Act Aerospace Publications 2002 ISBN 1 875671 55 2 Gordon Yefim 2003 Sukhoi Su 25 New York IP Media Inc 2005 ISBN 1 932525 02 5 Gordon Yefim July 2007 Sukhoi Su 25 The Soviet Union s Tank Buster Midland Publishing 2008 ISBN 978 1 85780 254 2 Gordon Yefim and Alan Dawes Sukhoi Su 25 Frogfoot Close Air Support Aircraft London Airlife 2004 ISBN 1 84037 353 9 Jackson Paul Jane s All The World s Aircraft 2003 2004 Coulsdon UK Jane s Information Group 2003 ISBN 0 7106 2537 5 Mladenov Alexander 2013a Sukhoi Su 25 Frogfoot Oxford Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 78200 359 5 Wilson Stewart Combat Aircraft since 1945 Fyshwick Australia Aerospace Publications 2000 ISBN 1 875671 50 1 External links Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sukhoi Su 25 category Su 25K at Sukhoi org Su 25 at GlobalSecurity org Su 25 at Russia Military Analysis Su 25UB Combat Trainer at the Wayback Machine archived 9 January 2008 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sukhoi Su 25 amp oldid 1124430771, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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