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Sukhoi Su-7

The Sukhoi Su-7 (NATO designation name: Fitter-A) is a swept wing, supersonic fighter aircraft developed by the Soviet Union in 1955. Originally, it was designed as a tactical, low-level dogfighter, but was not successful in this role. On the other hand, the soon-introduced Su-7B series became the main Soviet fighter-bomber and ground-attack aircraft of the 1960s. The Su-7 was rugged in its simplicity, but its Lyulka AL-7 engine had such high fuel consumption that it seriously limited the aircraft's payload, as even short-range missions required that at least two hardpoints be used to carry drop tanks rather than ordnance.[1]

Su-7
A Polish Su-7BKL photographed in 1991. This particular aircraft belonged to the 3rd Fighter-Bomber Aviation Regiment before being retired in December 1989 after 18 years of service.
Role Fighter and fighter-bomber / ground-attack aircraft
National origin Soviet Union
Manufacturer Sukhoi
First flight 7 September 1955
Introduction 1959
Status In limited service with the Korean People's Army Air Force
Primary users Soviet Air Forces (historical)
Produced 1957–1972
Number built 1,847
Developed into Sukhoi Su-17

Design and development

Original Su-7 fighters

On 14 May 1953, after Joseph Stalin's death, the Sukhoi OKB was reopened[2] and by the summer, it began work on a swept-wing front-line[N 1] fighter. The first prototype, designated S-1, was designed to use the new Lyulka AL-7 turbojet engine. It was the first Soviet aircraft to utilize the all-moving tailplane and a translating centerbody, a movable inlet cone in the air intake for managing airflow to the engine at supersonic speeds.[3] The aircraft also had a wing sweep of 60°, irreversible hydraulically boosted controls, and an ejection seat of Sukhoi’s own design.[2]

The S-1 first flew on 7 September 1955 with A. G. Kochetkov at the controls. Fitted with an afterburning version of the AL-7 engine after the first eleven flights, the prototype set a Soviet speed record of 2,170 km/h (1,170 kn, 1,350 mph, Mach 2.04) in April 1956.[3] The prototype was intended to be armed with three 37 mm Nudelman N-37 cannons and 32 spin-stabilized 57 mm (2.25 in) unguided rockets in a ventral tray.[3] The second prototype, S-2, introduced some aerodynamic refinements. Testing was complicated by the unreliable engine, and S-1 was lost in a crash on 23 November 1956, killing its pilot I. N. Sokolov.[2] Only 132 have been produced between 1957 and 1960, and the aircraft entered service as Su-7 in 1959.

Su-7B fighter-bomber

On 31 July 1958, Soviet tactical aviation (Frontovaya Aviatsiya,[N 1] фронтовая авиация) tasked Sukhoi with developing a ground-attack variant of the Su-7, which could replace the scrapped Ilyushin Il-40. The resulting prototype, S-22, incorporated structural refinements for high-speed, low-altitude operations. It first flew in March 1959, and entered service in 1961 as the Su-7B.[3]

Operationally, Su-7s were hampered by a high landing speed of 340–360 km/h,[4] as dictated by the thin, highly-swept wing. Combined with poor visibility from the cockpit, and lack of an instrument landing system, it made operations very difficult, especially in poor weather or on poor airfields.[5] In 1961–1962, Sukhoi experimented with blown flaps on S-25 but the benefit was too small to warrant implementation. JATO rockets tested on S-22-4 proved more useful and were incorporated into the Su-7BKL. Attempts to improve takeoff and landing performance eventually resulted in the Sukhoi Su-17.

Su-7A fighter

The front-line[N 1] fighter version saw limited operational use in the Far East from 1958, but by 1959, a decision was made to proceed with production of the MiG-21, and less than 200 units were deployed. The Su-7A was retired in 1965.[2] They never saw combat.

Su-7B fighter-bomber

 
Su-7s of the Polish Air Force.

The Su-7B and its variants became the main Soviet ground-attack aircraft of the 1960s. They were also widely exported (691 planes,[2] including some trainers). However, the very short combat radius and need for long runways limited the Su-7's operational usefulness. On the other hand, despite its notoriously heavy controls, the Su-7 was popular with pilots for its docile flight characteristics, simple controls and considerable speed even at low altitudes. It also had a reputation for easy maintenance.

In 1977–1986 the Su-7s remaining in Soviet service were replaced by Su-17s and MiG-27s.

Operational history

Egypt

 
Egyptian Su-7BMK displayed in the Egyptian Military Museum in Cairo Citadel.

The Su-7 saw combat with Egypt in the 1967 Six-Day War, the subsequent War of Attrition, and saw use in the Yom Kippur War by the Egyptians to attack Israeli ground forces.

India

The Indian Air Force (IAF) used the Su-7 extensively in the 1971 war with Pakistan. Six squadrons, totaling 140 aircraft, flew almost 1,500 offensive sorties during the war,[4] and undertook the bulk of the daytime attack missions. The IAF managed to retain a very high operational tempo with its Su-7s, peaking at a sortie rate of six per pilot per day.[4] Fourteen Su-7s were lost during the war, mostly due to anti-aircraft fire.[4] After the war, it was found that the aircraft had high survivability, being able to fly home safely despite receiving heavy damage. For example, Wing Commander H. S. Mangat's Su-7 was badly damaged by a PL-2 missile fired by a Pakistan Air Force F-6. The impact was so severe that half the rudder was missing, the elevators, ailerons, and flaps were severely damaged, and half the missile was stuck in the chute pipe.[4] [6] The pilot made it back to his base. The death of at least one Indian pilot can be attributed, at least indirectly, to poor cockpit design. A pilot set his seating at a dangerous position "because he found the bombsight and the front gun sight easier to operate" while in that position, and was killed on ejection.[7]

Indian Su-7BMKs shot down at least two Shenyang F-6s in the 1971 war,[4] while losing three Su-7s to F-6s according to Pakistani sources.[8]

Variants

 
S-26 on display at Monino
 
Su-7BKL landing gear with the unique skid, and a UB-16 57 mm rocket launcher
 
Two-seat trainer variant Su-7UMK (NATO designation: Moujik)

A total of 1,847 Su-7 and its variants were built.[2]

Su-7
First production version. The only production version that was a tactical air superiority fighter. Factory designation S-2. Manufactured 1957–1960 with 132 built. Remained in operational service until 1965.
Su-7B
The first ground-attack version, factory designation S-22. Manufactured 1960–1962 with 431 built.[9]
Su-7BM
Upgraded AL-7F-1 engine, upgraded fuel system with external piping on either side of the fuselage spine, fuel tanks installed in the wings, "wet" underwing hardpoints for carrying external fuel tanks, capable of carrying tactical nuclear bombs. Manufactured 1963–1965 with 290 built.[9]
Su-7BKL
Rough field-capable variant with skids fixed to the sides of the main landing gear, provision for two SPRD-110 JATO rockets of 29.4 kN (13,300 lbf) thrust, and twin brake parachutes. Introduced in 1965, factory designation S-22KL. Manufactured 1965–1972 with 267 built.[9]
Su-7BMK
A simplified export version of the Su-7BM. Manufactured 1967–1971 with 441 built.[9]
Su-7U (NATO Moujik)
Two-seat trainer version of the Su-7B with reduced fuel capacity. First flight 25 October 1965. Manufactured 1966–1972 in parallel with the export version, designated Su-7UMK.
Su-7UM (NATO Moujik)
Two-seat training version of the Su-7BM.
Su-7UMK (NATO Moujik)
Two-seat training version of the Su-7BMK. All Su-7 trainers amounted to 411 built.[9]
Su-7IG
Experimental variable geometry wing aircraft which was developed into Sukhoi Su-17.
100LDU Control Configured Vehicle
A Su-7U modified with canards and a longitudinal stability augmentation system. It was designed as a testbed for a fly-by-wire system for the Sukhoi T-4. It was later used in 1973–1974 during the development of the Su-27's fly-by-wire system.

OKB-51 designations

S-1
(Strelovidnoye [krylo] – swept wings) OKB-51 designation for the first prototype of the Su-7 / Su-9 family.
S-2
OKB-51 designation for the first production version of the Su-7.
S-22
OKB-51 designation for the Su-7B production aircraft.
S-22-2
OKB-51 designation for the prototype of the Su-7BM.
S-22M
OKB-51 designation for the Su-7BM production aircraft.
S-22KL
OKB-51 designation for the Su-7BKL production aircraft, incorporating the short field equipment tested on the S-22-4.
S-23
As a precursor to the S-22-4 tests, the S-23 was tested with a pure ski undercarriage and with skis on the main legs only
S-22-4
An S-22 tested with wheel / ski undercarriage, brake parachute and SPRD-110 JATO boosters for rough/unpaved field operations.
S-25
This aircraft was used for Boundary Layer Control (BLC) tests, with compressor bleed air blown over the leading edges to reduce takeoff length.
S-25T
A Su-7 fitted with the Boundary Layer Control system, rigged especially for use in a full-scale wind tunnel.
S-26
A continuation of the S-22-4 testing with wheel/ski undercarriage, double brake parachute and JATO boosters (The S-26 survives on display at the Russian Air Force Museum, Monino).
S-22MK
A simplified export version of the Su-7BKL, designated Su-7BMK
U-22
A belated trainer version with two seats in tandem in an extended nose based on the Su-7BM.
U-22MK
OKB-51 designation for the export version of the Su-7U, designated Su-7UMK by the Soviet Air Force
S-3
A projected interceptor version of the S-2, with "Izumrud" radar and avionic equipment in a reconfigured nose section.
S-41
OKB-51 designation for an experimental version of the S-1/S-2 with a lengthened nose and area-ruled rear fuselage.
T-1
A delta-wing tactical fighter project, based on the S-2, cancelled with the prototype nearly complete.
T-3
A delta-winged interceptor version of the S-2, developed in parallel to the S-3 and T-1. This would eventually lead to the T-43 prototype of the Su-9 interceptor.

Operators

Military operators of the Su-7
 
Blue = Current Dark Red = Former

Current operators

  North Korea

Former operators

  Afghanistan

  • Afghan Air Force – 24 Su-7BMK and 16 Su-7U trainers, were delivered to Afghanistan from 1972. Constant fighting, a high accident rate in the high altitude and poor maintenance caused substantial attrition. An additional 79 used replacements from Soviet stocks were supplied during the 1980s. None remain in service.

  Algeria

  Czechoslovakia

  • Czechoslovak Air Force – the Czechoslovak Air Force was the first foreign operator of the Su-7 in 1963. Totals included 64 Su-7BM, 31 Su-7BKL and Su-7U. During operations service, 30 aircraft were lost in accidents. The remaining aircraft were phased out in 1990.

  Egypt

  • Egyptian Air Force – The first batch of 14 Su-7BMK was destroyed during the Six-Day War. From 1967–1972, Egypt received an additional 185 Su-7BMK/SU-7UMK. Those which survived the October War with Israel were retired in the mid-1980s.

  India

 
Indian Air Force Sukhoi Su-7 preserved at the Indian Air Force Academy Museum
  • Indian Air Force – 140 were delivered in 1968, equipping six squadrons. An additional 14 attrition replacements were provided. The last aircraft were retired in 1986.[11]

  Iraq

  • Iraqi Air Force – The first contract for up to 34 Su-7BMK was signed in 1965,[12] with deliveries starting in the spring of 1967.[13] An additional order for 20 Su-7BMK was signed in July 1967.[14] No longer in service.

  Poland

  • Polish Air Force – operated 6 Su-7BM, 33 Su-7BKŁ and 8 Su-7U from July 1964 until June 1990; no longer in service.

  Soviet Union

  Syria

  • Syrian Air Force – Shortly after the Six-Day War of 1967, Syria received 25 Su-7s. In the October War of 1973, Syria lost most of the aircraft supplied. After 1973, The Soviet Union resupplied Syria with 35 more aircraft. By the mid 1980s, the Su-7 had been transferred to the reserves, and by the 1990s were decommissioned.

Specifications (Su-7BKL)

 
3-view drawing of Sukhoi Su-7

Data from Green,[3] Sukhoi[2]

General characteristics

  • Crew: 1
  • Length: 16.8 m (55 ft 1 in)
  • Wingspan: 9.31 m (30 ft 7 in)
  • Height: 4.99 m (16 ft 4 in)
  • Wing area: 34 m2 (370 sq ft)
  • Airfoil: root: TsAGI SR-3S (5.9%); tip: TsAGI SR-3S (4.7%)[15]
  • Empty weight: 8,940 kg (19,709 lb)
  • Gross weight: 13,570 kg (29,917 lb)
  • Max takeoff weight: 15,210 kg (33,532 lb)
  • Fuel capacity: 3,220 kg (7,099 lb)
  • Powerplant: 1 × Lyulka AL-7F-1 afterburning turbojet, 66.6 kN (15,000 lbf) thrust dry, 94.1 kN (21,200 lbf) with afterburner

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 1,150 km/h (710 mph, 620 kn) / 0.94 at sea level
2,150 km/h (1,340 mph; 1,160 kn) / M1.74 at high altitude
  • Range: 1,650 km (1,030 mi, 890 nmi)
  • Service ceiling: 17,600 m (57,700 ft)
  • Rate of climb: 160 m/s (31,000 ft/min)
  • Wing loading: 434.8 kg/m2 (89.1 lb/sq ft)
  • Thrust/weight: 0.71

Armament

See also

Related development

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists

References

Notes

  1. ^ a b c In Soviet terminology, the front-line fighter (frontovoi istrebitel, фронтовой истребитель; also called frontal or tactical fighter) is the one that is intended to be operationally deployed within fronts for use over the battlefield, as opposed to interceptor aircraft deployed by Soviet Air Defence Forces (PVO).

Citations

  1. ^ Wheeler 1992, p. 143.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g "Sukhoi Su-7." 2009-06-07 at the Wayback Machine Sukhoi Company Museum. Retrieved: 28 January 2011
  3. ^ a b c d e Green, William and Gordon Swanborough. The Great Book of Fighters. St. Paul, Minnesota: MBI Publishing, 2001. ISBN 0-7603-1194-3.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Rakshak, Bharat. "A whale of a fighter: Su-7 in IAF service." 2009-12-30 at the Wayback Machine bharat-rakshak.com. Retrieved: 28 January 2011.
  5. ^ Nijboer and Patterson 2003, pp. 174–177.
  6. ^ The chute pipe is the section of the engine intake located just before the turbine
  7. ^ Dikshit, Mohan B. "To Err is Human Case Reports of Two Military Aircraft Accidents." SQU Med J, Volume 10, Issue 1, 2010, pp. 120–125.
  8. ^ . www.defencejournal.com. Archived from the original on 2003-01-03.
  9. ^ a b c d e Goebel, Greg. "Sukhoi Su-7." Aviation Vectors, 1 August 2009. Retrieved: 28 January 2011.
  10. ^ Cooper, Tom; Grandolini, Albert (2018). Showdown in Western Sahara, Volume 1: Air Warfare over the Last African Colony, 1945-1975. Warwick, UK: Helion & Company Publishing. p. 49. ISBN 978-1-912390-35-9.
  11. ^ Rakshak, Bharat. "Su-7." 2009-12-30 at the Wayback Machine IAF History. Retrieved; 28 January 2011.
  12. ^ Sipos & Cooper 2020, p. 60
  13. ^ Sipos & Cooper 2020, p. 63
  14. ^ Sipos & Cooper 2020, p. 74
  15. ^ Lednicer, David. "The Incomplete Guide to Airfoil Usage". m-selig.ae.illinois.edu. Retrieved 16 April 2019.
  16. ^ www.3ebra.com, IT-Bureau Zebra -. . www.sukhoi.org. Archived from the original on 2017-09-25. Retrieved 2017-09-25.

Bibliography

  • Gordon, Yefim (2004). Sukhoi Su-7/-17/-20-22: Soviet Fighter and Fighter-Bomber Family. Hinckley, UK: Midland Publishing. ISBN 1-85780-108-3.
  • Nijboer, Donald and Dan Patterson. Cockpits of the Cold War. Eden Prairie, Ontario: The Boston Mills Press, 2003. ISBN 1-55046-405-1.
  • Singh, Pushpindar Chopra (September 1982). "A Whale of a Fighter...The Su-7 in IAF Service". Air International. Vol. 23, no. 3. pp. 133–140, 152–154. ISSN 0306-5634.
  • Sipos, Milos; Cooper, Tom (2020). Wings of Iraq, Volume 1: The Iraqi Air Force, 1931-1970. Warwick, UK: Helion & Company Publishing. ISBN 978-1-913118-74-7.
  • Wheeler, Barry C. The Hamlyn Guide to Military Aircraft Markings. London: Chancellor Press, 1992. ISBN 1-85152-582-3.

External links

  • Su-7 from Global Security
  • Su-7 from Global Aircraft
  • Su-7 from Military Factory
  • Su-7 BKL walkaround

sukhoi, world, mixed, power, prototype, 1944, nato, designation, name, fitter, swept, wing, supersonic, fighter, aircraft, developed, soviet, union, 1955, originally, designed, tactical, level, dogfighter, successful, this, role, other, hand, soon, introduced,. For the World War II mixed power prototype see Sukhoi Su 7 1944 The Sukhoi Su 7 NATO designation name Fitter A is a swept wing supersonic fighter aircraft developed by the Soviet Union in 1955 Originally it was designed as a tactical low level dogfighter but was not successful in this role On the other hand the soon introduced Su 7B series became the main Soviet fighter bomber and ground attack aircraft of the 1960s The Su 7 was rugged in its simplicity but its Lyulka AL 7 engine had such high fuel consumption that it seriously limited the aircraft s payload as even short range missions required that at least two hardpoints be used to carry drop tanks rather than ordnance 1 Su 7A Polish Su 7BKL photographed in 1991 This particular aircraft belonged to the 3rd Fighter Bomber Aviation Regiment before being retired in December 1989 after 18 years of service Role Fighter and fighter bomber ground attack aircraftNational origin Soviet UnionManufacturer SukhoiFirst flight 7 September 1955Introduction 1959Status In limited service with the Korean People s Army Air ForcePrimary users Soviet Air Forces historical Indian Air Force historical North Korean Air ForceProduced 1957 1972Number built 1 847Developed into Sukhoi Su 17 Contents 1 Design and development 1 1 Original Su 7 fighters 1 2 Su 7B fighter bomber 1 3 Su 7A fighter 1 4 Su 7B fighter bomber 2 Operational history 2 1 Egypt 2 2 India 3 Variants 3 1 OKB 51 designations 4 Operators 4 1 Current operators 4 2 Former operators 5 Specifications Su 7BKL 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Notes 7 2 Citations 7 3 Bibliography 8 External linksDesign and development EditOriginal Su 7 fighters Edit On 14 May 1953 after Joseph Stalin s death the Sukhoi OKB was reopened 2 and by the summer it began work on a swept wing front line N 1 fighter The first prototype designated S 1 was designed to use the new Lyulka AL 7 turbojet engine It was the first Soviet aircraft to utilize the all moving tailplane and a translating centerbody a movable inlet cone in the air intake for managing airflow to the engine at supersonic speeds 3 The aircraft also had a wing sweep of 60 irreversible hydraulically boosted controls and an ejection seat of Sukhoi s own design 2 The S 1 first flew on 7 September 1955 with A G Kochetkov at the controls Fitted with an afterburning version of the AL 7 engine after the first eleven flights the prototype set a Soviet speed record of 2 170 km h 1 170 kn 1 350 mph Mach 2 04 in April 1956 3 The prototype was intended to be armed with three 37 mm Nudelman N 37 cannons and 32 spin stabilized 57 mm 2 25 in unguided rockets in a ventral tray 3 The second prototype S 2 introduced some aerodynamic refinements Testing was complicated by the unreliable engine and S 1 was lost in a crash on 23 November 1956 killing its pilot I N Sokolov 2 Only 132 have been produced between 1957 and 1960 and the aircraft entered service as Su 7 in 1959 Su 7B fighter bomber Edit On 31 July 1958 Soviet tactical aviation Frontovaya Aviatsiya N 1 frontovaya aviaciya tasked Sukhoi with developing a ground attack variant of the Su 7 which could replace the scrapped Ilyushin Il 40 The resulting prototype S 22 incorporated structural refinements for high speed low altitude operations It first flew in March 1959 and entered service in 1961 as the Su 7B 3 Operationally Su 7s were hampered by a high landing speed of 340 360 km h 4 as dictated by the thin highly swept wing Combined with poor visibility from the cockpit and lack of an instrument landing system it made operations very difficult especially in poor weather or on poor airfields 5 In 1961 1962 Sukhoi experimented with blown flaps on S 25 but the benefit was too small to warrant implementation JATO rockets tested on S 22 4 proved more useful and were incorporated into the Su 7BKL Attempts to improve takeoff and landing performance eventually resulted in the Sukhoi Su 17 Su 7A fighter Edit The front line N 1 fighter version saw limited operational use in the Far East from 1958 but by 1959 a decision was made to proceed with production of the MiG 21 and less than 200 units were deployed The Su 7A was retired in 1965 2 They never saw combat Su 7B fighter bomber Edit Su 7s of the Polish Air Force The Su 7B and its variants became the main Soviet ground attack aircraft of the 1960s They were also widely exported 691 planes 2 including some trainers However the very short combat radius and need for long runways limited the Su 7 s operational usefulness On the other hand despite its notoriously heavy controls the Su 7 was popular with pilots for its docile flight characteristics simple controls and considerable speed even at low altitudes It also had a reputation for easy maintenance In 1977 1986 the Su 7s remaining in Soviet service were replaced by Su 17s and MiG 27s Operational history EditEgypt Edit Egyptian Su 7BMK displayed in the Egyptian Military Museum in Cairo Citadel The Su 7 saw combat with Egypt in the 1967 Six Day War the subsequent War of Attrition and saw use in the Yom Kippur War by the Egyptians to attack Israeli ground forces India Edit The Indian Air Force IAF used the Su 7 extensively in the 1971 war with Pakistan Six squadrons totaling 140 aircraft flew almost 1 500 offensive sorties during the war 4 and undertook the bulk of the daytime attack missions The IAF managed to retain a very high operational tempo with its Su 7s peaking at a sortie rate of six per pilot per day 4 Fourteen Su 7s were lost during the war mostly due to anti aircraft fire 4 After the war it was found that the aircraft had high survivability being able to fly home safely despite receiving heavy damage For example Wing Commander H S Mangat s Su 7 was badly damaged by a PL 2 missile fired by a Pakistan Air Force F 6 The impact was so severe that half the rudder was missing the elevators ailerons and flaps were severely damaged and half the missile was stuck in the chute pipe 4 6 The pilot made it back to his base The death of at least one Indian pilot can be attributed at least indirectly to poor cockpit design A pilot set his seating at a dangerous position because he found the bombsight and the front gun sight easier to operate while in that position and was killed on ejection 7 Indian Su 7BMKs shot down at least two Shenyang F 6s in the 1971 war 4 while losing three Su 7s to F 6s according to Pakistani sources 8 Variants Edit S 26 on display at Monino Su 7BKL landing gear with the unique skid and a UB 16 57 mm rocket launcher Two seat trainer variant Su 7UMK NATO designation Moujik A total of 1 847 Su 7 and its variants were built 2 Su 7 First production version The only production version that was a tactical air superiority fighter Factory designation S 2 Manufactured 1957 1960 with 132 built Remained in operational service until 1965 Su 7B The first ground attack version factory designation S 22 Manufactured 1960 1962 with 431 built 9 Su 7BM Upgraded AL 7F 1 engine upgraded fuel system with external piping on either side of the fuselage spine fuel tanks installed in the wings wet underwing hardpoints for carrying external fuel tanks capable of carrying tactical nuclear bombs Manufactured 1963 1965 with 290 built 9 Su 7BKL Rough field capable variant with skids fixed to the sides of the main landing gear provision for two SPRD 110 JATO rockets of 29 4 kN 13 300 lbf thrust and twin brake parachutes Introduced in 1965 factory designation S 22KL Manufactured 1965 1972 with 267 built 9 Su 7BMK A simplified export version of the Su 7BM Manufactured 1967 1971 with 441 built 9 Su 7U NATO Moujik Two seat trainer version of the Su 7B with reduced fuel capacity First flight 25 October 1965 Manufactured 1966 1972 in parallel with the export version designated Su 7UMK Su 7UM NATO Moujik Two seat training version of the Su 7BM Su 7UMK NATO Moujik Two seat training version of the Su 7BMK All Su 7 trainers amounted to 411 built 9 Su 7IG Experimental variable geometry wing aircraft which was developed into Sukhoi Su 17 100LDU Control Configured Vehicle A Su 7U modified with canards and a longitudinal stability augmentation system It was designed as a testbed for a fly by wire system for the Sukhoi T 4 It was later used in 1973 1974 during the development of the Su 27 s fly by wire system OKB 51 designations Edit S 1 Strelovidnoye krylo swept wings OKB 51 designation for the first prototype of the Su 7 Su 9 family S 2 OKB 51 designation for the first production version of the Su 7 S 22 OKB 51 designation for the Su 7B production aircraft S 22 2 OKB 51 designation for the prototype of the Su 7BM S 22M OKB 51 designation for the Su 7BM production aircraft S 22KL OKB 51 designation for the Su 7BKL production aircraft incorporating the short field equipment tested on the S 22 4 S 23 As a precursor to the S 22 4 tests the S 23 was tested with a pure ski undercarriage and with skis on the main legs only S 22 4 An S 22 tested with wheel ski undercarriage brake parachute and SPRD 110 JATO boosters for rough unpaved field operations S 25 This aircraft was used for Boundary Layer Control BLC tests with compressor bleed air blown over the leading edges to reduce takeoff length S 25T A Su 7 fitted with the Boundary Layer Control system rigged especially for use in a full scale wind tunnel S 26 A continuation of the S 22 4 testing with wheel ski undercarriage double brake parachute and JATO boosters The S 26 survives on display at the Russian Air Force Museum Monino S 22MK A simplified export version of the Su 7BKL designated Su 7BMK U 22 A belated trainer version with two seats in tandem in an extended nose based on the Su 7BM U 22MK OKB 51 designation for the export version of the Su 7U designated Su 7UMK by the Soviet Air Force S 3 A projected interceptor version of the S 2 with Izumrud radar and avionic equipment in a reconfigured nose section S 41 OKB 51 designation for an experimental version of the S 1 S 2 with a lengthened nose and area ruled rear fuselage T 1 A delta wing tactical fighter project based on the S 2 cancelled with the prototype nearly complete T 3 A delta winged interceptor version of the S 2 developed in parallel to the S 3 and T 1 This would eventually lead to the T 43 prototype of the Su 9 interceptor Operators EditMilitary operators of the Su 7 Blue Current Dark Red FormerCurrent operators Edit North KoreaNorth Korean Air Force received at least 28 Su 7BMK 7UMK in 1971 The aircraft were ordered in 1969 Former operators Edit Afghanistan Afghan Air Force 24 Su 7BMK and 16 Su 7U trainers were delivered to Afghanistan from 1972 Constant fighting a high accident rate in the high altitude and poor maintenance caused substantial attrition An additional 79 used replacements from Soviet stocks were supplied during the 1980s None remain in service Algeria Algerian Air Force 40 Su 7BMK 10 Czechoslovakia Czechoslovak Air Force the Czechoslovak Air Force was the first foreign operator of the Su 7 in 1963 Totals included 64 Su 7BM 31 Su 7BKL and Su 7U During operations service 30 aircraft were lost in accidents The remaining aircraft were phased out in 1990 Egypt Egyptian Air Force The first batch of 14 Su 7BMK was destroyed during the Six Day War From 1967 1972 Egypt received an additional 185 Su 7BMK SU 7UMK Those which survived the October War with Israel were retired in the mid 1980s India Indian Air Force Sukhoi Su 7 preserved at the Indian Air Force Academy Museum Indian Air Force 140 were delivered in 1968 equipping six squadrons An additional 14 attrition replacements were provided The last aircraft were retired in 1986 11 Iraq Iraqi Air Force The first contract for up to 34 Su 7BMK was signed in 1965 12 with deliveries starting in the spring of 1967 13 An additional order for 20 Su 7BMK was signed in July 1967 14 No longer in service Poland Polish Air Force operated 6 Su 7BM 33 Su 7BKL and 8 Su 7U from July 1964 until June 1990 no longer in service Soviet Union Soviet Air Force Syria Syrian Air Force Shortly after the Six Day War of 1967 Syria received 25 Su 7s In the October War of 1973 Syria lost most of the aircraft supplied After 1973 The Soviet Union resupplied Syria with 35 more aircraft By the mid 1980s the Su 7 had been transferred to the reserves and by the 1990s were decommissioned Specifications Su 7BKL Edit 3 view drawing of Sukhoi Su 7 Data from Green 3 Sukhoi 2 General characteristicsCrew 1 Length 16 8 m 55 ft 1 in Wingspan 9 31 m 30 ft 7 in Height 4 99 m 16 ft 4 in Wing area 34 m2 370 sq ft Airfoil root TsAGI SR 3S 5 9 tip TsAGI SR 3S 4 7 15 Empty weight 8 940 kg 19 709 lb Gross weight 13 570 kg 29 917 lb Max takeoff weight 15 210 kg 33 532 lb Fuel capacity 3 220 kg 7 099 lb Powerplant 1 Lyulka AL 7F 1 afterburning turbojet 66 6 kN 15 000 lbf thrust dry 94 1 kN 21 200 lbf with afterburnerPerformance Maximum speed 1 150 km h 710 mph 620 kn 0 94 at sea level2 150 km h 1 340 mph 1 160 kn M1 74 at high altitude dd dd dd Range 1 650 km 1 030 mi 890 nmi Service ceiling 17 600 m 57 700 ft Rate of climb 160 m s 31 000 ft min Wing loading 434 8 kg m2 89 1 lb sq ft Thrust weight 0 71Armament Guns 2 30 mm Nudelman Rikhter NR 30 autocannons 70 rounds per gun 140 rounds total Hardpoints 4 under wing amp 2 under fuselage stations for 2 000 kg 4 400 lb of disposable stores 16 2 reserved for 2 300 L 510 imp gal 610 US gal drop tanks with provisions to carry combinations of Rockets UB 16 57U rocket pods for S 5 rockets Bombs FAB 250 general purpose bomb FAB 500 GP bomb FAB 750 GP bomb 8U69 nuclear bombSee also Edit Aviation portalRelated development Su 17 Su 20 Su 22 Sukhoi Su 9 Sukhoi Su 11Aircraft of comparable role configuration and era Dassault Mirage IIIE HAL HF 24 Marut Hawker Hunter Nanchang Q 5 Republic F 105 ThunderchiefRelated lists List of military aircraft of the Soviet Union and the CISReferences EditNotes Edit a b c In Soviet terminology the front line fighter frontovoi istrebitel frontovoj istrebitel also called frontal or tactical fighter is the one that is intended to be operationally deployed within fronts for use over the battlefield as opposed to interceptor aircraft deployed by Soviet Air Defence Forces PVO Citations Edit Wheeler 1992 p 143 a b c d e f g Sukhoi Su 7 Archived 2009 06 07 at the Wayback Machine Sukhoi Company Museum Retrieved 28 January 2011 a b c d e Green William and Gordon Swanborough The Great Book of Fighters St Paul Minnesota MBI Publishing 2001 ISBN 0 7603 1194 3 a b c d e f Rakshak Bharat A whale of a fighter Su 7 in IAF service Archived 2009 12 30 at the Wayback Machine bharat rakshak com Retrieved 28 January 2011 Nijboer and Patterson 2003 pp 174 177 The chute pipe is the section of the engine intake located just before the turbine Dikshit Mohan B To Err is Human Case Reports of Two Military Aircraft Accidents SQU Med J Volume 10 Issue 1 2010 pp 120 125 Final Salute to F 6 www defencejournal com Archived from the original on 2003 01 03 a b c d e Goebel Greg Sukhoi Su 7 Aviation Vectors 1 August 2009 Retrieved 28 January 2011 Cooper Tom Grandolini Albert 2018 Showdown in Western Sahara Volume 1 Air Warfare over the Last African Colony 1945 1975 Warwick UK Helion amp Company Publishing p 49 ISBN 978 1 912390 35 9 Rakshak Bharat Su 7 Archived 2009 12 30 at the Wayback Machine IAF History Retrieved 28 January 2011 Sipos amp Cooper 2020 p 60 Sipos amp Cooper 2020 p 63 Sipos amp Cooper 2020 p 74 Lednicer David The Incomplete Guide to Airfoil Usage m selig ae illinois edu Retrieved 16 April 2019 www 3ebra com IT Bureau Zebra Sukhoi Company JSC Airplanes Museum Su 7 Specifications www sukhoi org Archived from the original on 2017 09 25 Retrieved 2017 09 25 Bibliography Edit Gordon Yefim 2004 Sukhoi Su 7 17 20 22 Soviet Fighter and Fighter Bomber Family Hinckley UK Midland Publishing ISBN 1 85780 108 3 Nijboer Donald and Dan Patterson Cockpits of the Cold War Eden Prairie Ontario The Boston Mills Press 2003 ISBN 1 55046 405 1 Singh Pushpindar Chopra September 1982 A Whale of a Fighter The Su 7 in IAF Service Air International Vol 23 no 3 pp 133 140 152 154 ISSN 0306 5634 Sipos Milos Cooper Tom 2020 Wings of Iraq Volume 1 The Iraqi Air Force 1931 1970 Warwick UK Helion amp Company Publishing ISBN 978 1 913118 74 7 Wheeler Barry C The Hamlyn Guide to Military Aircraft Markings London Chancellor Press 1992 ISBN 1 85152 582 3 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sukhoi Su 7 Su 7 from Global Security Su 7 from Global Aircraft Su 7 from Military Factory Su 7 BKL walkaround Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sukhoi Su 7 amp oldid 1132613421, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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