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NAMC YS-11

The NAMC YS-11 is a turboprop airliner designed and built by the Nihon Aircraft Manufacturing Corporation (NAMC), a Japanese consortium. It was the only post-war airliner to be wholly designed and manufactured in Japan until the development of the Mitsubishi SpaceJet during the 2010s, roughly 50 years later. [1][2]

YS-11
A Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force YS-11M in 2013
Role Turboprop airliner
National origin Japan
Manufacturer Nihon Aircraft Manufacturing Corporation
First flight 30 August 1962
Introduction 30 March 1965, for All Nippon Airways (first passenger flight with Japan Air Commuter in 1965)
Status
  • In limited service
  • Retired from military service 2021 (Japan Air Self-Defense Force)
Produced 1962–1974
Number built 182

Development of the YS-11 can be largely attributed to Japan's Ministry of International Trade and Industry (MITI), which had encouraged Japanese aircraft companies to collaborate on the development of a short-haul airliner as early as 1954. In 1959, NAMC was formed to design and produce an aircraft to satisfy MITI's requirements, dubbed the YS-11. On 30 August 1962, the first prototype performed its maiden flight. Deliveries commenced on 30 March 1965, and commercial operations began the following month. The majority of orders for the type were issued from various Japanese airlines. While sales to such customers were swift in the YS-11's initial years of availability, this limited market soon became saturated, leading to a slump in demand.

Production of the type came to an end in 1974 as a result of efforts to increase sales to international clients, including the creation of the better YS-11A variation. In the end, the YS-11 had shown that Japan was capable of building an airliner, but NAMC had racked up a huge debt, and the type is generally regarded as a commercial failure. Large numbers of the type continued to be in service until 2006, at which point tighter Japanese aircraft regulations imposed by the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism necessitated either the withdrawal or refitting of all YS-11s. By 2018, only a single example reportedly remained in commercial service.

Development and design edit

Origins edit

During the mid-to-late 1950s, the Japanese Ministry of International Trade and Industry (MITI) identified a requirement for a short-haul airliner to replace Douglas DC-3s flying on Japan's domestic routes, and encouraged companies in Japan's aircraft industry to collaborate to develop and produce a domestic airliner to meet this need. Towards this purpose, in May 1957, the Commercial Transport Design Research Association was established and the availability of government subsidies guaranteed. From the government's viewpoint, the development of such an airliner was viewed as a key initiative towards the post-war revival of the nation's aircraft companies, which came in addition to the serious ambition to become a major international competitor in the global airliner business.[3] Furthermore, while this requirement had been conceived primarily in a commercial context, there was an early recognition of the value for multiple branches of the Japanese Defense Agency (JDA) to be readily able to adopt the type as well; as a philosophy, this not only extended to the prospective airliner itself, but the various technologies involved in its development and manufacture.[4]

 
A wind tunnel model of the YS-11

In response to this encouragement, during 1957, a joint venture between Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Kawasaki Heavy Industries, Fuji Heavy Industries, Shin Meiwa, Showa Aircraft Industry Company and Japan Aircraft Industry Company was established for the purpose of developing and manufacturing the envisioned airliner. Two years later, this partnership was formalised as the Nihon Aeroplane Manufacturing Company (NAMC).[5][6] The ownership of NAMC was initially divided between the Japanese government, which held 54% of the shares, while the constituent aircraft manufacturers held an 18% stake and several components/materials suppliers owned 11%; the remaining shares were small stakes belonging to various banks, insurance companies, and stock firms who chose to invest in the programme. However, NAMC was essentially a "paper company", being reliant upon both personnel and infrastructure provided by its constituent manufacturers.[4][7]

NAMC designed a low-winged twin-turboprop-engined monoplane, capable of seating up to 60 passengers, dubbed the YS-11.[8] Amongst the design team was Jiro Horikoshi, who had previously been the designer of the famed wartime Mitsubishi A6M Zero fighter.[9] Another prominent engineer on the project was Teruo Tojo, the second son of Prime Minister Hideki Tojo, who later became chairman of Mitsubishi Motors.[4] The twin-engined YS-11 was projected as delivering similar operational performance to the four-engined British-built Vickers Viscount, while possessing 50% greater capacity than the similarly configured Dutch-built Fokker F27 Friendship. MITI supervised the pricing of the aircraft in order to ensure that it was competitive with the American-built Martin 4-0-4.[4]

Although the tentative aircraft was mainly designed and manufactured in Japan, the engine selected to power the airliner was the 2,275 kW (3,050 ehp) Rolls-Royce Dart RDa.10/1 powerplant, which was both developed and produced by British-based company Rolls-Royce.[10] Furthermore, according to author Stephen C Mercado, due to the lack of available domestic technology at the time, several of the key aircraft systems, such as cabin pressurization, were copied from foreign sources; such information was gleaned from a combination of Japanese airlines, trading companies and diplomats.[4] Throughout the YS-11's production lifetime, its electronic equipment, avionics, mechanical and fuselage components were supplied by a combination of Japanese companies and foreign suppliers.[4]

Name edit

The “YS” of the YS-11 comes from a combination of the first letter sounds of the two Japanese words yusō (transport) and sekkei (design), which refer to the Association for Research on Transport Aircraft Design (Yusōki sekkei kenkyū kyōkai). Meanwhile, the first “1” of the “11” refers to the various engine candidates considered for the YS-11; the Rolls-Royce Dart RDa.10/1, which was the engine selected, had been designated “number 1.” The second “1” refers to the aircraft specification plan selected for the YS-11, which had been one among many plans that differed by wing placement and size. There had also been a “plan 0” at one point.

A catchphrase developed around the public reveal of the YS-11 mockup, which was “Let’s meet on the 11th at Sugita in Yokohama.” Here, Yokohama represented the “Y,” the Sugita neighborhood stood for the “S,” and the 11th referred both to the plane and to the date of the public reveal (December 11, 1958). Because of this, it became common to read the “11” in “YS-11” as “eleven” (jūichi in Japanese). For those involved in designing the plane, meanwhile, the designation had originally been pronounced “YS-one-one” (or YS ichi ichi).

Into flight edit

On 30 August 1962, the first prototype performed its maiden flight from Nagoya Airport; it was soon followed by the second prototype, flying on 28 December 1962. Early flight testing revealed several issues to troubleshoot, including poor steering, excessive vibration and noise.[11] There was also an acute lack of safety during sideways maneuvers; the wake of the propeller produced abnormal forces that inclined the aircraft to the right; all of the rudders were ineffective; and the maneuverability was worst of all. These problems produced a tailspin during the flight test, and were the direct cause of a crash. This was known as the “three rudder problem.”

In one prestigious early flight of the type, All Nippon Airways used a YS-11 to carry the Olympic torch in the run-up to the 1964 Summer Olympics in Tokyo.[12] It received its Japanese Type certificate on 25 August 1964, while American Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) certification followed on 9 September 1965.[10][11] Prior to applying for certification, the FAA had been involved in the programme at NAMC's invitation, performing informal project reviews so that defects could be identified and eliminated early on.[4]

During the late 1960s, a lack of significant international sales led to the programme incurring persistent losses, the outstanding debt eventually growing to $600 million.[2] Due to the organisation of the programme, the aircraft manufacturers themselves did not have any of this debt apportioned to themselves, NAMC being held solely responsible; Mercado criticised this approach as it meant there was no incentive for the individual companies to make cost savings while simultaneously guarantee profit to them on every plane produced.[4] Furthermore, it had been alleged that some participants saw the YS-11 as only a training programme to develop their employees' skills, rather than a serious commercial initiative; some participants chose to rotate large numbers of staff in and out of the project for brief periods before re-tasking them to work on internal projects.[4]

Mercado claims that the programme's operational mindset was closer to that of a military project than a commercial one, while a preoccupation with government-issued performance criteria obstructed considerations towards the actual desires of the commercial operators, such as operating costs and cabin configuration, that the YS-11 was marketed towards.[4] As this was Japan's first, and for a long time only, post-war airliner, NAMC lacked any staff with experience in marketing towards airlines, a disadvantage against the salesmen of rival airframers. This failure to address a crucial factor in acquiring new customers has been attributed as a major contributing cause of the programme's poor commercial reception.[13]

The end of the YS-11 programme was precipitated by the 1971 Smithsonian Agreement, which led to an appreciation in the value of the Japanese yen and the resulting impact upon the nation's economy.[4] By this point, it was clear that there was little chance that the YS-11 could ever come close to breaking even.[4] These myriad factors contributed to the decision for production to be terminated after the completion of 182 aircraft. On 11 May 1973, the last YS-11 was delivered to the Japanese Maritime Self-Defence Force (JMSDF).[14]

Operational history edit

On 23 October 1964, the first production YS-11 conducted its first flight; it was delivered to its customer on 30 March 1965. During April 1965, initial airline operations commenced with launch customer Toa Airways.[10] By 1968, the YS-11 programme accounted for about half of all aircraft production taking place in Japan that year.[4] Early deliveries were mainly made to Japanese airlines, but orders for the type slowed drastically after the satisfaction of the outstanding needs of the Japanese commuter airlines for which the aircraft had been designed. Initial attempts were made to market the airliner towards various countries across Southeast Asia; at one point, the Japanese government was allegedly encouraging such sales as a form of war reparations.[4]

Seeking to make the aircraft more attractive to the highly active North American market, NAMC decided to develop the YS-11A, a new variant which possessed a higher gross weight. During 1966, a lease agreement was signed between NAMC and Hawaiian Air Lines, a move which was hailed as the "first step" in the programme's new America-focused campaign.[4] While a number of aircraft would be sold internationally, these were often at a loss as the sales price had been set so low, deliberately as to undercut competing airliners, but paid little heed to production costs; this deficit led to losses mounting more rapidly than anticipated.[4]

A major customer for the YS-11 was the American operator Piedmont Airlines, who had been seeking the optimal modern airliner to serve their existing routes, which mostly comprised a number of small, mountainous airports. After evaluating numerous aircraft around the world, the company determined that the Japanese airliner was the most suitable; according to Piedmont's president, Thomas H Davis: "The YS‐11 was the only one we could find which would do it on an economical basis".[3] During October 1967, Piedmont Airlines ordered a batch of ten YS-11A-200s along with an option for an additional ten aircraft for $22.5 million.[15] The company was so impressed by its performance, it both exercised the option for ten aircraft and purchased an additional YS-11, operating a combined fleet of 21 YS-11s by mid-1970.[3][16] Piedmont would be the type's largest international operator; ultimately, no other airline would place another order of this scale.[4]

End of production edit

Commercial sales of the YS-11 began to stall without a stable structure in place for sales. Especially outside of Japan, the YS-11 was forced to compete with other country's models with long-term low deferred interest payments. Nor was it rare for NAMC to have to sell the YS-11 at a discount, as this was Japan's first commercial airliner since the end of World War II, and had no proven track record. Additionally, it was also said that there was mismanagement of the program's cost management, as initial estimates had neglected to include the cost advertising or company administration. Moreover, because multiple companies were involved with the aircraft manufacturing, it was unclear who held ultimate responsibility, nor could the price of delivered parts be reduced. An increase in former government employees appointed to the company began to spread a culture of bureaucracy, making necessary drastic management reforms impossible and further increasing the program's deficit.

In particular, there was deficit in sales activities outside of Japan that were a result of fundamental problems in NAMC's administrative activities in the United States, as indicated by the Japanese government Board of Audit;[17] this is to say nothing of the unforeseen loss due to a less favorable currency exchange that resulted after the American government switched to a floating exchange rate in 1971. When Jenks Caldwell of Charlotte Aircraft Corporation, a sales dealer of used aircraft and aviation parts headquartered in North Carolina, expressed a strong desire to become a sales agent in the United States through a modification of YS-11A, NAMC signed an exclusive agency contract with his company to manage sales for North America, Latin America and Spain. However, Charlotte Aircraft did not actually carry out the promised activities, and when a sales agreement with Piedmont Airlines was concluded with Mitsui, Charlotte Aircraft demanded damages under their status as exclusive dealer, and Piedmont Airlines and Cruzeiro do Sul handed over 33 used aircraft traded in for YS-11 to Charlotte Aircraft; Japan's Board of Audit complained these actions were unfair.[17] This event became a problem in the Diet, and the managing director of NAMC resigned. NAMC had no experience of selling passenger planes, and so it concluded a contract with Charlotte Aircraft without conducting an investigation into the company's trustworthiness or business practices, nor without creating a clause in the event Charlotte Aircraft refused to conduct sales. When the contract with Charlotte Aircraft was terminated, NAMC was forced to pay 23,000,000 yen and turn over used aircraft.

In addition, any requests for a reduction in sales price or delayed payments by airlines had to be reviewed by governmental organizations like the Ministry of Finance or the Ministry of International Trade and Industry. It was said that there were many instances of contracts that could not be concluded due to the absence of the various ministry's approval.

By 1994, 112 YS-11s remained in service; the lengthy service life of the type, despite the short manufacturing lifespan, has been hailed by some officials as evidence of the type being successful in some respect.[4] The YS-11 was slowly phased out by Japanese airlines up until the early 2000s, at which point the withdrawal rate spiked in response to new directives issued by the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism that required all commercial aircraft in Japan to be fitted with a Traffic Collision Avoidance System (TCAS); any aircraft lacking TCAS were forced to cease operations at the end of 2006. Reportedly, equipping a YS-11 with TCAS had been estimated as costing around ¥100 million (about US$1 million), such a refit was deemed economically unsound. Those aircraft that remained in a flight-worthy condition were typically sold to foreign companies. On 30 September 2006, Japan Air Commuter Flight 3806 marked the final flight of a YS-11 within Japan's commercial aviation industry.[18]

In 2007, the YS-11 was added to the Mechanical Engineering Heritage of Japan as item number 13. As of 2014, fifteen were operated by the Japanese military, and two in Mexico.[19] As of 2017, only eight remained in service with the Japan Air Self-Defense Force, which were being used for flight checks and other ancillary purposes.[12] As of August 2020, two aircraft remain in commercial service in South America and Africa.[20] As of March 2021, the Japan Air Self-Defense Force retired the YS-11 after 57 years of service.[21]

In popular culture edit

In railroad journals, YS-11 was linked to the 0 Series Shinkansen, another Japanese-made form of transportation that debuted around the time of the 1964 Olympics. Additionally, the Shinkansen and the YS-11 were both developed by individuals who were involved with the creation of military aircraft (this was to be expected with an airplane like the YS-11, but men like Migi Tadanao and Matsudaira Tadashi were also involved with the Shinkansen).[22][better source needed]

Variants edit

YS-11
YS-11-100
Initial production variant. 23,500 kg (51,810 lb) gross weight. 48 built.[15]
YS-11A-200
Increased gross weight (24,500 kg (54,010 lb) passenger airliner.[15]
YS-11A-300
Combi version of YS-11-200, fitted with large cargo door and capable of carrying both passengers and freight.[15]
YS-11A-400
Pure cargo version of -200, used only by Japanese defence forces.[15]
YS-11A-500
Passenger airliner with further increased (25,000 kg (55,110 lb)) gross weight produced from 1970.[23]
YS-11A-600
Combi version of -500.[24]
YS-11E
JASDF "Super YS" powered by T64-IHI-10J.

Customer variants edit

  • YS-11-101: TOA Domestic Airlines
  • YS-11-102: All Nippon Airways
  • YS-11-103: Japan Air Self Defense Force
  • YS-11-104: Japan Civil Aviation Bureau
  • YS-11-105: Japan Air Self Defense Force
  • YS-11-106: Japan Domestic Airlines
  • YS-11-107: Filipinas Orient Airways
  • YS-11-108: Japan Domestic Airlines
  • YS-11-109: Japan Domestic Airlines
  • YS-11-110: Japan Civil Aviation Bureau
  • YS-11-111: All Nippon Airways
  • YS-11-113: Japan Maritime Self Defense Force
  • YS-11-114: TOA Airways
  • YS-11-115: Aeronautic College
  • YS-11-116: Filipinas Orient Airways
  • YS-11-117: Hawaiian Airlines
  • YS-11-118: Japan Civil Aviation Bureau
  • YS-11-120: LANSA
  • YS-11-121: Filipinas Orient Airways
  • YS-11-124: Japan Domestic Airlines
  • YS-11-125: Cruzeiro do Sul
  • YS-11-128: Austral (later Austral Líneas Aéreas)
  • YS-11-129: TOA Airways
  • YS-11A-201: NAMC
  • YS-11A-202: Cruzeiro do Sul
  • YS-11A-205: Piedmont Airlines
  • YS-11A-206: Japan Maritime Self Defense Force
  • YS-11A-207: Japan Maritime Safety Agency
  • YS-11A-208: All Nippon Airways
  • YS-11A-209: Southwest Air Lines
  • YS-11A-211: VASP
  • YS-11A-212: VASP
  • YS-11A-213: All Nippon Airways
  • YS-11A-214: Southwest Air Lines
  • YS-11A-217: Japan Domestic Airlines
  • YS-11A-218: Japan Air Self Defense Force
  • YS-11A-219: China Airlines
  • YS-11A-220: Olympic Airways
  • YS-11A-222: TOA Airways
  • YS-11A-223: All Nippon Airways
  • YS-11A-227: Japan Domestic Airlines / TOA Airways
  • YS-11A-301: Korean Air Lines
  • YS-11A-305: Japan Air Self Defense Force
  • YS-11A-306: Transair
  • YS-11A-307: Japan Domestic Airlines
  • YS-11A-309: Aerotransportes Litoral Argentino (later Austral Líneas Aéreas)
  • YS-11A-310: Korean Air Lines
  • YS-11A-313: TOA Airways
  • YS-11A-314: Air Afrique
  • YS-11A-321: Air Gabon
  • YS-11A-402: Japan Air Self Defense Force
  • YS-11A-404: Japan Maritime Self Defense Force
  • YS-11A-500: Piedmont Airlines
  • YS-11A-523: Philippine Civil Aeronautics Administration
  • YS-11A-621: Trans Gabon
  • YS-11A-623: Pelita Air Service
  • YS-11A-624: Japan Maritime Self Defense Force
  • YS-11A-626: Reeve Aleutian Airways

Operators edit

 
Phuket Air YS-11A-200 (2005)
 
An Asian Spirit YS-11 in the Philippines (2007)
 
All Nippon Airways (1990)
 
YS-11 at Baguio City, Philippines (2006)
 
Mid Pacific Air NAMC YS-11A-659 at Honolulu International Airport in Hawaii (1982)
 
Piedmont Airlines YS-11A at Washington National Airport with the U.S. Capitol in the background (1972)
 
Air Caribbean YS-11 (1999)
 
NAMC YS-11A of Austral Líneas Aéreas at Aeroparque Jorge Newbery (1972)
 
Mey-Air YS-11 (1971)

Civil operators edit

Former and present operators of the NAMC YS-11 include:

  Argentina

  Aruba

  Brazil

  Brunei

  • BIMP - EAGA Air Alliance

  Canada

  Democratic Republic of the Congo

  • Societe Generale d'Alimentation

  Egypt

  • Pyramid Airlines

  Gabon

  Gambia

  • Gambia AW

  Greece

  Indonesia

  Ivory Coast

  Japan

  Mexico

  • Aerolitoral
  • Aerodan Cargo
  • Gacela Air Cargo
  • AeroSierra
  • ALCON Servicios Aereos

  Peru

  Philippines

  South Korea

  Taiwan

  Tanzania

  • Air Star Zanzibar

  Trinidad and Tobago

  Thailand

  United Arab Emirates

  • Global Air Cargo
 
An Airlink International Airways NAMC YS-11 at Ninoy Aquino International Airport.

  United States

Former military operators edit

 
NAMC YS-11A of the Greek Air Force (1993)
 
YS-11P Special painting for the 50th anniversary (2008)
 
YS-11EA (2010)
 
YS-11EB (2011)
  Greece
  Japan

JSDF delivery breakdown: JASDF
2 YS-11EA for Electronic Warfare
4 YS-11EB for ELINT
3 YS-11FC for Flight Checker
1 YS-11NT for Navigation Trainer
3 YS-11P for Passenger/VIP Transport

JMSDF
2 YS-11M for Freighter
2 YS-11M-A for Freighter
6 YS-11T-A for MPA trainer[26]

Accidents and incidents edit

There have been over twenty hull loss accidents involving YS-11 aircraft.

Aircraft on display edit

Brazil
Greece
  • 2137 (Hellenic Air Force) - YS-11A-220 at the Elefsis Heritage Park[citation needed]
Japan
 
A NAMC YS-11 on display at Philippine Air Force Aerospace Museum (2017)
Philippines
Thailand
United States

Specifications (YS-11A-200) edit

 
A JAC NAMC YS-11 (2003)
 
Cockpit

Data from The Observers Book of Aircraft,[69][failed verification] Jane's all the World's Aircraft 1970–71[70]

General characteristics

  • Crew: 2
  • Capacity: 64 passengers / 6,604 kg (14,559 lb)
  • Length: 26.3 m (86 ft 3 in)
  • Wingspan: 32 m (105 ft 0 in)
  • Height: 8.98 m (29 ft 6 in)
  • Wing area: 94.83 m2 (1,020.7 sq ft)
  • Aspect ratio: 10.8
  • Airfoil: root: NACA 64A-218; tip: NACA 64A-412[71]
  • Empty weight: 15,396 kg (33,942 lb) operating weight, empty
  • Max takeoff weight: 24,500 kg (54,013 lb)
  • Maximum landing weight: 24,000 kg (52,911 lb)
  • Powerplant: 2 × Rolls-Royce Dart Mk.542-10K turboprop engines, 2,250 kW (3,020 hp) each
  • Propellers: 4-bladed constant-speed fully-feathering reversible propellers

Performance

  • Cruise speed: 469 km/h (291 mph, 253 kn) maximum at 4,575 m (15,010 ft)
  • Economical cruising speed: 452 km/h (281 mph; 244 kn) at 6,100 m (20,013 ft)
  • Stall speed: 140 km/h (87 mph, 76 kn) at MLW, flaps down
  • Never exceed speed: 546 km/h (339 mph, 295 kn) below 4,695 m (15,404 ft)
Mach0.601 above 4,695 m (15,404 ft)
  • Range: 2,110 km (1,310 mi, 1,140 nmi) max fuel without centre-section bag tanks, no reserves
1,090 km (680 mi; 590 nmi) with max payload, no reserves
3,215 km (1,998 mi; 1,736 nmi) max fuel with centre-section bag tanks, no reserves
  • Service ceiling: 6,982 m (22,907 ft)
  • Service ceiling, one engine: 2,740 m (8,990 ft)
  • Rate of climb: 6.2 m/s (1,220 ft/min)
  • Wing loading: 258 kg/m2 (53 lb/sq ft)
  • Power/mass: 0.25 kW/kg (0.15 hp/lb)
  • Take-off distance to 10 m (33 ft): 1,110 m (3,642 ft)
  • Landing distance from 15 m (49 ft): 660 m (2,165 ft) at MLW

Avionics
various weather radars

See also edit

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists

References edit

Citations edit

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  2. ^ a b Anselmo, Joe. "Milestone for the MRJ." Aviation Week & Space Technology, 24 October 2014. Accessed: 25 October 2014.
  3. ^ a b c "The YS‐11 Solves a Problem for Piedmont." New York Times, 31 May 1970.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Mercado, Steven C. (September 1995). . www.jpri.org. Archived from the original on 28 October 2019. Retrieved 16 January 2018.
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  6. ^ Taylor 1966, p. 107.
  7. ^ Odagiri, Odagiri and Akira 1996, pp. 224-225.
  8. ^ Odagiri, Odagiri and Akira 1996, p. 224.
  9. ^ "Jiro Horikoshi, 78, Dies in Tokyo; Designer of Zero Fighter Aircraft."New York Times, 12 January 1982. Retrieved: 8 September 2016.
  10. ^ a b c Endres 1996, p. 23.
  11. ^ a b Odagiri, Odagiri and Akira 1996, p. 225.
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Bibliography edit

  • Endres, Günter. "NAMC YS-11: The Japanese Commuter". Air International. No. July 1996. pp. 22–27. ISSN 0306-5634.
  • Lehman, William. "US Airways." Arcadia Publishing, 2013. ISBN 0-7385-9623-X
  • Odagiri, Hiroyuki., Goto Odagiri and Akira Gotō. "Technology and Industrial Development in Japan." Clarendon Press, 1996. ISBN 0-1982-8802-6
  • Taylor, John W. R. (1966). Jane's All The World's Aircraft 1966–67. London: Sampson Low, Marston & Company.

External links edit

  • YS-11 photographs by Tony Hara
  • Shimizu, Kaho (27 November 2007). "Japan zeroes in on homegrown jetliner". The Japan Times.

namc, help, expand, this, article, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, japanese, september, 2015, click, show, important, translation, instructions, view, machine, translated, version, japanese, article, machine, translation, like, deepl, goo. You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Japanese September 2015 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the Japanese article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 3 809 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Japanese Wikipedia article at ja YS 11 see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated ja YS 11 to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation The NAMC YS 11 is a turboprop airliner designed and built by the Nihon Aircraft Manufacturing Corporation NAMC a Japanese consortium It was the only post war airliner to be wholly designed and manufactured in Japan until the development of the Mitsubishi SpaceJet during the 2010s roughly 50 years later 1 2 YS 11A Japan Maritime Self Defense Force YS 11M in 2013Role Turboprop airlinerNational origin JapanManufacturer Nihon Aircraft Manufacturing CorporationFirst flight 30 August 1962Introduction 30 March 1965 for All Nippon Airways first passenger flight with Japan Air Commuter in 1965 Status In limited serviceRetired from military service 2021 Japan Air Self Defense Force Produced 1962 1974Number built 182Development of the YS 11 can be largely attributed to Japan s Ministry of International Trade and Industry MITI which had encouraged Japanese aircraft companies to collaborate on the development of a short haul airliner as early as 1954 In 1959 NAMC was formed to design and produce an aircraft to satisfy MITI s requirements dubbed the YS 11 On 30 August 1962 the first prototype performed its maiden flight Deliveries commenced on 30 March 1965 and commercial operations began the following month The majority of orders for the type were issued from various Japanese airlines While sales to such customers were swift in the YS 11 s initial years of availability this limited market soon became saturated leading to a slump in demand Production of the type came to an end in 1974 as a result of efforts to increase sales to international clients including the creation of the better YS 11A variation In the end the YS 11 had shown that Japan was capable of building an airliner but NAMC had racked up a huge debt and the type is generally regarded as a commercial failure Large numbers of the type continued to be in service until 2006 at which point tighter Japanese aircraft regulations imposed by the Ministry of Land Infrastructure Transport and Tourism necessitated either the withdrawal or refitting of all YS 11s By 2018 only a single example reportedly remained in commercial service Contents 1 Development and design 1 1 Origins 1 2 Name 1 3 Into flight 2 Operational history 2 1 End of production 3 In popular culture 4 Variants 4 1 Customer variants 5 Operators 5 1 Civil operators 5 2 Former military operators 6 Accidents and incidents 7 Aircraft on display 8 Specifications YS 11A 200 9 See also 10 References 10 1 Citations 10 2 Bibliography 11 External linksDevelopment and design editOrigins edit During the mid to late 1950s the Japanese Ministry of International Trade and Industry MITI identified a requirement for a short haul airliner to replace Douglas DC 3s flying on Japan s domestic routes and encouraged companies in Japan s aircraft industry to collaborate to develop and produce a domestic airliner to meet this need Towards this purpose in May 1957 the Commercial Transport Design Research Association was established and the availability of government subsidies guaranteed From the government s viewpoint the development of such an airliner was viewed as a key initiative towards the post war revival of the nation s aircraft companies which came in addition to the serious ambition to become a major international competitor in the global airliner business 3 Furthermore while this requirement had been conceived primarily in a commercial context there was an early recognition of the value for multiple branches of the Japanese Defense Agency JDA to be readily able to adopt the type as well as a philosophy this not only extended to the prospective airliner itself but the various technologies involved in its development and manufacture 4 nbsp A wind tunnel model of the YS 11In response to this encouragement during 1957 a joint venture between Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Kawasaki Heavy Industries Fuji Heavy Industries Shin Meiwa Showa Aircraft Industry Company and Japan Aircraft Industry Company was established for the purpose of developing and manufacturing the envisioned airliner Two years later this partnership was formalised as the Nihon Aeroplane Manufacturing Company NAMC 5 6 The ownership of NAMC was initially divided between the Japanese government which held 54 of the shares while the constituent aircraft manufacturers held an 18 stake and several components materials suppliers owned 11 the remaining shares were small stakes belonging to various banks insurance companies and stock firms who chose to invest in the programme However NAMC was essentially a paper company being reliant upon both personnel and infrastructure provided by its constituent manufacturers 4 7 NAMC designed a low winged twin turboprop engined monoplane capable of seating up to 60 passengers dubbed the YS 11 8 Amongst the design team was Jiro Horikoshi who had previously been the designer of the famed wartime Mitsubishi A6M Zero fighter 9 Another prominent engineer on the project was Teruo Tojo the second son of Prime Minister Hideki Tojo who later became chairman of Mitsubishi Motors 4 The twin engined YS 11 was projected as delivering similar operational performance to the four engined British built Vickers Viscount while possessing 50 greater capacity than the similarly configured Dutch built Fokker F27 Friendship MITI supervised the pricing of the aircraft in order to ensure that it was competitive with the American built Martin 4 0 4 4 Although the tentative aircraft was mainly designed and manufactured in Japan the engine selected to power the airliner was the 2 275 kW 3 050 ehp Rolls Royce Dart RDa 10 1 powerplant which was both developed and produced by British based company Rolls Royce 10 Furthermore according to author Stephen C Mercado due to the lack of available domestic technology at the time several of the key aircraft systems such as cabin pressurization were copied from foreign sources such information was gleaned from a combination of Japanese airlines trading companies and diplomats 4 Throughout the YS 11 s production lifetime its electronic equipment avionics mechanical and fuselage components were supplied by a combination of Japanese companies and foreign suppliers 4 Name edit The YS of the YS 11 comes from a combination of the first letter sounds of the two Japanese words yusō transport and sekkei design which refer to the Association for Research on Transport Aircraft Design Yusōki sekkei kenkyu kyōkai Meanwhile the first 1 of the 11 refers to the various engine candidates considered for the YS 11 the Rolls Royce Dart RDa 10 1 which was the engine selected had been designated number 1 The second 1 refers to the aircraft specification plan selected for the YS 11 which had been one among many plans that differed by wing placement and size There had also been a plan 0 at one point A catchphrase developed around the public reveal of the YS 11 mockup which was Let s meet on the 11th at Sugita in Yokohama Here Yokohama represented the Y the Sugita neighborhood stood for the S and the 11th referred both to the plane and to the date of the public reveal December 11 1958 Because of this it became common to read the 11 in YS 11 as eleven juichi in Japanese For those involved in designing the plane meanwhile the designation had originally been pronounced YS one one or YS ichi ichi Into flight edit On 30 August 1962 the first prototype performed its maiden flight from Nagoya Airport it was soon followed by the second prototype flying on 28 December 1962 Early flight testing revealed several issues to troubleshoot including poor steering excessive vibration and noise 11 There was also an acute lack of safety during sideways maneuvers the wake of the propeller produced abnormal forces that inclined the aircraft to the right all of the rudders were ineffective and the maneuverability was worst of all These problems produced a tailspin during the flight test and were the direct cause of a crash This was known as the three rudder problem In one prestigious early flight of the type All Nippon Airways used a YS 11 to carry the Olympic torch in the run up to the 1964 Summer Olympics in Tokyo 12 It received its Japanese Type certificate on 25 August 1964 while American Federal Aviation Administration FAA certification followed on 9 September 1965 10 11 Prior to applying for certification the FAA had been involved in the programme at NAMC s invitation performing informal project reviews so that defects could be identified and eliminated early on 4 During the late 1960s a lack of significant international sales led to the programme incurring persistent losses the outstanding debt eventually growing to 600 million 2 Due to the organisation of the programme the aircraft manufacturers themselves did not have any of this debt apportioned to themselves NAMC being held solely responsible Mercado criticised this approach as it meant there was no incentive for the individual companies to make cost savings while simultaneously guarantee profit to them on every plane produced 4 Furthermore it had been alleged that some participants saw the YS 11 as only a training programme to develop their employees skills rather than a serious commercial initiative some participants chose to rotate large numbers of staff in and out of the project for brief periods before re tasking them to work on internal projects 4 Mercado claims that the programme s operational mindset was closer to that of a military project than a commercial one while a preoccupation with government issued performance criteria obstructed considerations towards the actual desires of the commercial operators such as operating costs and cabin configuration that the YS 11 was marketed towards 4 As this was Japan s first and for a long time only post war airliner NAMC lacked any staff with experience in marketing towards airlines a disadvantage against the salesmen of rival airframers This failure to address a crucial factor in acquiring new customers has been attributed as a major contributing cause of the programme s poor commercial reception 13 The end of the YS 11 programme was precipitated by the 1971 Smithsonian Agreement which led to an appreciation in the value of the Japanese yen and the resulting impact upon the nation s economy 4 By this point it was clear that there was little chance that the YS 11 could ever come close to breaking even 4 These myriad factors contributed to the decision for production to be terminated after the completion of 182 aircraft On 11 May 1973 the last YS 11 was delivered to the Japanese Maritime Self Defence Force JMSDF 14 Operational history editOn 23 October 1964 the first production YS 11 conducted its first flight it was delivered to its customer on 30 March 1965 During April 1965 initial airline operations commenced with launch customer Toa Airways 10 By 1968 the YS 11 programme accounted for about half of all aircraft production taking place in Japan that year 4 Early deliveries were mainly made to Japanese airlines but orders for the type slowed drastically after the satisfaction of the outstanding needs of the Japanese commuter airlines for which the aircraft had been designed Initial attempts were made to market the airliner towards various countries across Southeast Asia at one point the Japanese government was allegedly encouraging such sales as a form of war reparations 4 Seeking to make the aircraft more attractive to the highly active North American market NAMC decided to develop the YS 11A a new variant which possessed a higher gross weight During 1966 a lease agreement was signed between NAMC and Hawaiian Air Lines a move which was hailed as the first step in the programme s new America focused campaign 4 While a number of aircraft would be sold internationally these were often at a loss as the sales price had been set so low deliberately as to undercut competing airliners but paid little heed to production costs this deficit led to losses mounting more rapidly than anticipated 4 A major customer for the YS 11 was the American operator Piedmont Airlines who had been seeking the optimal modern airliner to serve their existing routes which mostly comprised a number of small mountainous airports After evaluating numerous aircraft around the world the company determined that the Japanese airliner was the most suitable according to Piedmont s president Thomas H Davis The YS 11 was the only one we could find which would do it on an economical basis 3 During October 1967 Piedmont Airlines ordered a batch of ten YS 11A 200s along with an option for an additional ten aircraft for 22 5 million 15 The company was so impressed by its performance it both exercised the option for ten aircraft and purchased an additional YS 11 operating a combined fleet of 21 YS 11s by mid 1970 3 16 Piedmont would be the type s largest international operator ultimately no other airline would place another order of this scale 4 End of production edit Commercial sales of the YS 11 began to stall without a stable structure in place for sales Especially outside of Japan the YS 11 was forced to compete with other country s models with long term low deferred interest payments Nor was it rare for NAMC to have to sell the YS 11 at a discount as this was Japan s first commercial airliner since the end of World War II and had no proven track record Additionally it was also said that there was mismanagement of the program s cost management as initial estimates had neglected to include the cost advertising or company administration Moreover because multiple companies were involved with the aircraft manufacturing it was unclear who held ultimate responsibility nor could the price of delivered parts be reduced An increase in former government employees appointed to the company began to spread a culture of bureaucracy making necessary drastic management reforms impossible and further increasing the program s deficit In particular there was deficit in sales activities outside of Japan that were a result of fundamental problems in NAMC s administrative activities in the United States as indicated by the Japanese government Board of Audit 17 this is to say nothing of the unforeseen loss due to a less favorable currency exchange that resulted after the American government switched to a floating exchange rate in 1971 When Jenks Caldwell of Charlotte Aircraft Corporation a sales dealer of used aircraft and aviation parts headquartered in North Carolina expressed a strong desire to become a sales agent in the United States through a modification of YS 11A NAMC signed an exclusive agency contract with his company to manage sales for North America Latin America and Spain However Charlotte Aircraft did not actually carry out the promised activities and when a sales agreement with Piedmont Airlines was concluded with Mitsui Charlotte Aircraft demanded damages under their status as exclusive dealer and Piedmont Airlines and Cruzeiro do Sul handed over 33 used aircraft traded in for YS 11 to Charlotte Aircraft Japan s Board of Audit complained these actions were unfair 17 This event became a problem in the Diet and the managing director of NAMC resigned NAMC had no experience of selling passenger planes and so it concluded a contract with Charlotte Aircraft without conducting an investigation into the company s trustworthiness or business practices nor without creating a clause in the event Charlotte Aircraft refused to conduct sales When the contract with Charlotte Aircraft was terminated NAMC was forced to pay 23 000 000 yen and turn over used aircraft In addition any requests for a reduction in sales price or delayed payments by airlines had to be reviewed by governmental organizations like the Ministry of Finance or the Ministry of International Trade and Industry It was said that there were many instances of contracts that could not be concluded due to the absence of the various ministry s approval By 1994 112 YS 11s remained in service the lengthy service life of the type despite the short manufacturing lifespan has been hailed by some officials as evidence of the type being successful in some respect 4 The YS 11 was slowly phased out by Japanese airlines up until the early 2000s at which point the withdrawal rate spiked in response to new directives issued by the Ministry of Land Infrastructure Transport and Tourism that required all commercial aircraft in Japan to be fitted with a Traffic Collision Avoidance System TCAS any aircraft lacking TCAS were forced to cease operations at the end of 2006 Reportedly equipping a YS 11 with TCAS had been estimated as costing around 100 million about US 1 million such a refit was deemed economically unsound Those aircraft that remained in a flight worthy condition were typically sold to foreign companies On 30 September 2006 Japan Air Commuter Flight 3806 marked the final flight of a YS 11 within Japan s commercial aviation industry 18 In 2007 the YS 11 was added to the Mechanical Engineering Heritage of Japan as item number 13 As of 2014 update fifteen were operated by the Japanese military and two in Mexico 19 As of 2017 update only eight remained in service with the Japan Air Self Defense Force which were being used for flight checks and other ancillary purposes 12 As of August 2020 update two aircraft remain in commercial service in South America and Africa 20 As of March 2021 update the Japan Air Self Defense Force retired the YS 11 after 57 years of service 21 In popular culture editIn railroad journals YS 11 was linked to the 0 Series Shinkansen another Japanese made form of transportation that debuted around the time of the 1964 Olympics Additionally the Shinkansen and the YS 11 were both developed by individuals who were involved with the creation of military aircraft this was to be expected with an airplane like the YS 11 but men like Migi Tadanao and Matsudaira Tadashi were also involved with the Shinkansen 22 better source needed Variants editYS 11 YS 11 100 Initial production variant 23 500 kg 51 810 lb gross weight 48 built 15 YS 11A 200 Increased gross weight 24 500 kg 54 010 lb passenger airliner 15 YS 11A 300 Combi version of YS 11 200 fitted with large cargo door and capable of carrying both passengers and freight 15 YS 11A 400 Pure cargo version of 200 used only by Japanese defence forces 15 YS 11A 500 Passenger airliner with further increased 25 000 kg 55 110 lb gross weight produced from 1970 23 YS 11A 600 Combi version of 500 24 YS 11E JASDF Super YS powered by T64 IHI 10J Customer variants edit YS 11 101 TOA Domestic Airlines YS 11 102 All Nippon Airways YS 11 103 Japan Air Self Defense Force YS 11 104 Japan Civil Aviation Bureau YS 11 105 Japan Air Self Defense Force YS 11 106 Japan Domestic Airlines YS 11 107 Filipinas Orient Airways YS 11 108 Japan Domestic Airlines YS 11 109 Japan Domestic Airlines YS 11 110 Japan Civil Aviation Bureau YS 11 111 All Nippon Airways YS 11 113 Japan Maritime Self Defense Force YS 11 114 TOA Airways YS 11 115 Aeronautic College YS 11 116 Filipinas Orient Airways YS 11 117 Hawaiian Airlines YS 11 118 Japan Civil Aviation Bureau YS 11 120 LANSA YS 11 121 Filipinas Orient Airways YS 11 124 Japan Domestic Airlines YS 11 125 Cruzeiro do Sul YS 11 128 Austral later Austral Lineas Aereas YS 11 129 TOA Airways YS 11A 201 NAMC YS 11A 202 Cruzeiro do Sul YS 11A 205 Piedmont Airlines YS 11A 206 Japan Maritime Self Defense Force YS 11A 207 Japan Maritime Safety Agency YS 11A 208 All Nippon Airways YS 11A 209 Southwest Air Lines YS 11A 211 VASP YS 11A 212 VASP YS 11A 213 All Nippon Airways YS 11A 214 Southwest Air Lines YS 11A 217 Japan Domestic Airlines YS 11A 218 Japan Air Self Defense Force YS 11A 219 China Airlines YS 11A 220 Olympic Airways YS 11A 222 TOA Airways YS 11A 223 All Nippon Airways YS 11A 227 Japan Domestic Airlines TOA Airways YS 11A 301 Korean Air Lines YS 11A 305 Japan Air Self Defense Force YS 11A 306 Transair YS 11A 307 Japan Domestic Airlines YS 11A 309 Aerotransportes Litoral Argentino later Austral Lineas Aereas YS 11A 310 Korean Air Lines YS 11A 313 TOA Airways YS 11A 314 Air Afrique YS 11A 321 Air Gabon YS 11A 402 Japan Air Self Defense Force YS 11A 404 Japan Maritime Self Defense Force YS 11A 500 Piedmont Airlines YS 11A 523 Philippine Civil Aeronautics Administration YS 11A 621 Trans Gabon YS 11A 623 Pelita Air Service YS 11A 624 Japan Maritime Self Defense Force YS 11A 626 Reeve Aleutian AirwaysOperators edit nbsp Phuket Air YS 11A 200 2005 nbsp An Asian Spirit YS 11 in the Philippines 2007 nbsp All Nippon Airways 1990 nbsp YS 11 at Baguio City Philippines 2006 nbsp Mid Pacific Air NAMC YS 11A 659 at Honolulu International Airport in Hawaii 1982 nbsp Piedmont Airlines YS 11A at Washington National Airport with the U S Capitol in the background 1972 nbsp Air Caribbean YS 11 1999 nbsp NAMC YS 11A of Austral Lineas Aereas at Aeroparque Jorge Newbery 1972 nbsp Mey Air YS 11 1971 Civil operators edit Former and present operators of the NAMC YS 11 include nbsp Argentina Aerolineas Argentinas Aerotransportes Litoral Argentino Austral Lineas Aereas nbsp Aruba Air Aruba nbsp Brazil Cruzeiro do Sul VASP nbsp Brunei BIMP EAGA Air Alliance nbsp Canada Norcanair Transair Ltd nbsp Democratic Republic of the Congo Societe Generale d Alimentation nbsp Egypt Pyramid Airlines nbsp Gabon Trans Gabon Airlines Gabon Express Gabon Express Cargo nbsp Gambia Gambia AW nbsp Greece Olympic Airways nbsp Indonesia Bouraq Indonesia Airlines Pelita Air Service Mandala Airlines Merpati Nusantara Airlines nbsp Ivory Coast Air Afrique nbsp Japan Air Nippon All Nippon Airways Japan Air Lines Japan Air System Japan Domestic Airlines Japan TransOcean Air Toa Airways Toa Domestic Airlines Nihon Kinkyori Airlines Southwest Air Lines Japan nbsp Mexico Aerolitoral Aerodan Cargo Gacela Air Cargo AeroSierra ALCON Servicios Aereos nbsp Peru Lineas Aereas Nacionales S A nbsp Philippines Philippine Airlines Air Philippines Air Link International Airways Airlink International Aviation College 2GO Aboitiz Air Asian Spirit Aero Majestic Airways South Phoenix Airways nbsp South Korea Korean Air Korean Air Cargo nbsp Taiwan China Airlines nbsp Tanzania Air Star Zanzibar nbsp Trinidad and Tobago Air Caribbean nbsp Thailand Phuket Air Air Phoenix nbsp United Arab Emirates Global Air Cargo nbsp An Airlink International Airways NAMC YS 11 at Ninoy Aquino International Airport nbsp United States American Eagle Continental Express Piedmont Airlines Simmons Airlines Reeve Aleutian Airways Provincetown Boston Airlines Pinehurst Airlines MPAC Midwest Air Charter Airborne Express Far West Airlines Fort Worth Airlines Hawaiian Airlines Pacific Southwest Airlines Mid Pacific Air Tauk Tours United States Postal ServiceFormer military operators edit nbsp NAMC YS 11A of the Greek Air Force 1993 nbsp YS 11P Special painting for the 50th anniversary 2008 nbsp YS 11EA 2010 nbsp YS 11EB 2011 nbsp GreeceGreek Air Force 6 ex Olympic Airways YS 11A aircraft were supplied in 1981 25 nbsp JapanJapan Air Self Defense Force 401st Tactical Airlift Squadron 1969 1989 402nd Tactical Airlift Squadron 1968 2001 403rd Tactical Airlift Squadron YS 11P 1978 2017 Flight Check Squadron YS 11FC 2021 Electronic Warfare Squadron YS 11EA Electronic Intelligence Squadron YS 11EB Japan Maritime Self Defense Force Air Transport Squadron 61 YS 11M M A 1971 2014 Japan Coast Guard 1969 2011 JSDF delivery breakdown JASDF 2 YS 11EA for Electronic Warfare 4 YS 11EB for ELINT 3 YS 11FC for Flight Checker 1 YS 11NT for Navigation Trainer 3 YS 11P for Passenger VIP TransportJMSDF 2 YS 11M for Freighter 2 YS 11M A for Freighter 6 YS 11T A for MPA trainer 26 Accidents and incidents editThere have been over twenty hull loss accidents involving YS 11 aircraft 13 November 1966 All Nippon Airways Flight 533 crashed into the sea near Matsuyama Japan with the loss of all five crew and 45 passengers 27 20 October 1969 All Nippon Airways Flight 104 overran the runway at Miyazaki Airport Japan All four crew and 49 passengers survived 28 11 December 1969 a Korean Air flight from Gangneung to Seoul was hijacked and flown to Sǒndǒk Airfield near Wonsan 29 The aircraft was damaged on landing and written off 30 The aircraft its crew and seven passengers are still held in North Korean territory 31 12 August 1970 China Airlines Flight 206 crashed into Yuan Mountain on approach to Taipei Taiwan Two crew and 12 passengers were killed 32 1 April 1971 a Merpati Nusantara Airlines YS 11 made a wheels up landing at Kemayoran Airport Jakarta Indonesia while on a training flight 33 3 July 1971 Toa Domestic Airlines Flight 63 flew into Yokotsu Mountain while on approach to Hakodate Airport Japan All four crew and 64 passengers were killed the worst loss of life in an accident involving the YS 11 34 7 November 1971 A VASP YS 11 was destroyed by fire after a candle was lit inside when the aircraft was being guarded overnight after being bogged down at Aragarcas Airport in Aragarcas Brazil Both guards were killed 35 12 April 1972 a VASP flight between Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro crashed 50 kilometres 31 mi north of Rio de Janeiro All four crew and 21 passengers were killed 36 37 18 October 1972 a Cruzeiro do Sul YS 11 overshot the runway at Congonhas Airport Sao Paulo and was damaged beyond repair 38 21 October 1972 an Olympic Airlines YS 11 en route from Corfu Kerkyra to Athens crashed into the sea in Voula whilst attempting an approach to Ellinikon International Airport Athens in a heavy storm One crew member the co pilot and 36 passengers were killed while the captain the two stewardesses and 16 passengers survived 39 23 October 1973 a VASP YS 11 overran the runway at Santos Dumont Airport Rio de Janeiro after a rejected take off and ended up in Guanabara Bay Eight passengers were killed 40 41 5 March 1974 a Pacific Southwest Airlines YS 11 crash landed in the desert 14 kilometres 8 7 mi east of Borrego Springs California while on a training flight Aircraft was written off 42 6 November 1974 a Reeve Aleutian Airways YS 11 was written off in a hangar fire at Anchorage Alaska 43 28 May 1975 TOA Domestic Airlines Flight 621 was damaged beyond repair in a landing accident at Osaka International Airport when a tyre burst and the aircraft departed the runway 44 23 November 1976 Olympic Airways Flight 830 an Olympic Airlines YS 11 flew into mountain Metaxas near the village of Servia in Kozani Greece in low clouds and almost zero visibility All four crew and 46 passengers were killed 45 29 April 1977 a Cruzeiro YS 11 departed the runway on landing at Ministro Victor Konder International Airport Navegantes Brazil 46 17 July 1977 a Philippine Airlines YS 11 ditched on approach to Mactan Cebu International Airport after an engine failure 47 11 March 1983 Nihon Kinkyori Airlines Flight 497 undershot the runway at Nakashibetsu Airport Japan 48 13 January 1987 a Mid Pacific Air YS 11 force landed in a field at Remington Indiana after both engines were mismanaged 49 10 January 1988 TOA Domestic Airlines Flight 670 overran the runway at Miho Yonago Airport Yonago Japan after a rejected take off and ended up in the sea Aircraft had not been de iced prior to take off 50 15 March 1989 a Mid Pacific Air YS 11 undershot the runway at Purdue University Airport Lafayette Indiana due to loss of pitch control caused by icing on the tail The aircraft was on a positioning flight both crew members were killed 51 6 March 1992 an Airborne Express YS 11 made a wheels up landing at Airborne Airpark Wilmington Ohio while on a training flight due to pilot error 52 24 June 1996 an Air Philippines YS 11 struck a ground power unit while taxiing at Naga Airport Naga City Aircraft was destroyed in the subsequent fire 53 16 February 2000 Air Nippon Flight 354 departed the runway at Okadama Airport Sapporo Japan and collided with a bank of snow 54 3 November 2001 a YS 11 being prepared for delivery to an airline in Burundi was destroyed by a fire caused by a stray firework at London Southend Airport 55 11 September 2005 Phuket Airlines Flight 326 skids off the runway at Mae Sot Airport Thailand 56 2 January 2008 Asian Spirit Flight 321 suffered an undercarriage collapse on landing at Masbate Airport Philippines 57 28 September 2009 Japanese Maritime Self Defense Force YS 11M A serial number 9044 overran the runway upon landing at Ozuki Air Field and was substantially damaged 58 Aircraft on display editBrazil2080 YS 11A 200 on static display as a restaurant in Tijucas Santa Catarina 59 Greece2137 Hellenic Air Force YS 11A 220 at the Elefsis Heritage Park citation needed JapanJA8611 YS 11 prototype at the Museum of Aeronautical Science in Narita Chiba 60 61 JA8731 YS 11A 213 at the Kakamigahara Aerospace Museum citation needed JA8732 YS 11A 213 at the Tokorozawa Aviation Memorial Park in Tokorozawa Saitama 62 63 JA8733 YS 11A 213 at Saga Airport citation needed JA8734 YS 11A 500R at Tajima Airport in Toyooka Hyogo Prefecture 64 JA8743 YS 11A 213 at Sanuki Kodomono Kuni amusement park near Takamatsu Airport citation needed JA8766 YS 11A 227 at Misawa Aviation amp Science Museum citation needed JA8809 YS 11A 202 at the Michinoku Traditional Wooden Boat Museum citation needed 52 1152 JASDF at the Aichi Museum of Flight in Komaki Aichi Prefecture 65 JA8160 The first mass produced YS 11 has been in storage at Haneda Airport since 1999 where it has been maintained and kept airworthy by the National Museum of Nature and Science and is occasionally available for public viewing 12 nbsp A NAMC YS 11 on display at Philippine Air Force Aerospace Museum 2017 PhilippinesRP 77 YS 11A 523 at the Philippine Air Force Aerospace Museum in Manila National Capital 66 ThailandHS APA YS 11A 227 at Jesada Technik Museum citation needed HS KCU YS 11A 213 at Nong Khor citation needed United StatesP4 KFD YS 11 120 on static display at the Grissom Air Museum near Peru Indiana 67 68 Specifications YS 11A 200 edit nbsp A JAC NAMC YS 11 2003 nbsp CockpitData from The Observers Book of Aircraft 69 failed verification Jane s all the World s Aircraft 1970 71 70 General characteristicsCrew 2 Capacity 64 passengers 6 604 kg 14 559 lb Length 26 3 m 86 ft 3 in Wingspan 32 m 105 ft 0 in Height 8 98 m 29 ft 6 in Wing area 94 83 m2 1 020 7 sq ft Aspect ratio 10 8 Airfoil root NACA 64A 218 tip NACA 64A 412 71 Empty weight 15 396 kg 33 942 lb operating weight empty Max takeoff weight 24 500 kg 54 013 lb Maximum landing weight 24 000 kg 52 911 lb Powerplant 2 Rolls Royce Dart Mk 542 10K turboprop engines 2 250 kW 3 020 hp each Propellers 4 bladed constant speed fully feathering reversible propellersPerformance Cruise speed 469 km h 291 mph 253 kn maximum at 4 575 m 15 010 ft Economical cruising speed 452 km h 281 mph 244 kn at 6 100 m 20 013 ft Stall speed 140 km h 87 mph 76 kn at MLW flaps down Never exceed speed 546 km h 339 mph 295 kn below 4 695 m 15 404 ft Mach0 601 above 4 695 m 15 404 ft dd dd dd Range 2 110 km 1 310 mi 1 140 nmi max fuel without centre section bag tanks no reserves1 090 km 680 mi 590 nmi with max payload no reserves 3 215 km 1 998 mi 1 736 nmi max fuel with centre section bag tanks no reserves dd dd dd Service ceiling 6 982 m 22 907 ft Service ceiling one engine 2 740 m 8 990 ft Rate of climb 6 2 m s 1 220 ft min Wing loading 258 kg m2 53 lb sq ft Power mass 0 25 kW kg 0 15 hp lb Take off distance to 10 m 33 ft 1 110 m 3 642 ft Landing distance from 15 m 49 ft 660 m 2 165 ft at MLWAvionics various weather radarsSee also editAircraft of comparable role configuration and era An 24 An 26 Avro 748 BAe ATP Convair 580 Convair 600 640 Fokker F27 Friendship Handley Page Dart Herald Vickers ViscountRelated lists List of civil aircraftReferences editCitations edit Mecham Michael Anselmo Joe 17 March 2008 Mitsubishi Leads Japanese Aircraft Resurgence PDF Aviation Week amp Space Technology Archived from the original PDF on 25 October 2014 Retrieved 25 October 2014 a b Anselmo Joe Milestone for the MRJ Aviation Week amp Space Technology 24 October 2014 Accessed 25 October 2014 a b c The YS 11 Solves a Problem for Piedmont New York Times 31 May 1970 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Mercado Steven C September 1995 The YS 11 Project and Japan s Aerospace Potential www jpri org Archived from the original on 28 October 2019 Retrieved 16 January 2018 Endres 1996 p 22 Taylor 1966 p 107 Odagiri Odagiri and Akira 1996 pp 224 225 Odagiri Odagiri and Akira 1996 p 224 Jiro Horikoshi 78 Dies in Tokyo Designer of Zero Fighter Aircraft New York Times 12 January 1982 Retrieved 8 September 2016 a b c Endres 1996 p 23 a b Odagiri Odagiri and Akira 1996 p 225 a b c Kudo Ryuji 8 September 2017 YS 11 a symbol of recovery from war expensively gathering dust The Asahi Shimbun Archived from the original on 26 November 2018 Retrieved 16 January 2018 Odagiri Odagiri and Akira 1996 pp 225 226 Endres 1996 pp 26 27 a b c d e Endres 1996 p 24 Lehman 2013 p 61 a b Shōwa 44 nendo kessan kensa hōkoku Dokusen hanbai dairiten keiyaku no teiyaku oyobi kaijo no shochi ga futōna mono Board of Audit Japan in Japanese Retrieved September 4 2020 Farewell to the wings of YS 11 permanent dead link Yomiuri Online Yomiuri Shimbun Hoyle Craig 24 October 2014 Big in Japan Tokyo s Top 10 aircraft projects Flightglobal Reed Business Information World Airliner Census 2020 Flightglobal com August 2020 Retrieved 2021 11 30 Japan Air Self Defense Force commemorates last flight of storied YS11 aircraft Mainichi Shimbun 2021 03 19 Retrieved 2021 11 30 magazine Shinkansen 0 kei densha tokushu zasshi date 1999 Endres 1996 pp 24 26 Endres 1996 p 26 Historical Aircraft NAMC YS 11A haf gr Retrieved 30 September 2016 Kawasaki XP 1 As YS 11 Replacement Airliners net military aviation and space forum Accident description JA8658 Aviation Safety Network Retrieved 20 February 2009 Accident description Aviation Safety Network Retrieved 20 February 2009 KAL기피랍사건 Doosan Encyclopedia 2010 retrieved 7 July 2010 permanent dead link Accident description Aviation Safety Network Retrieved 20 February 2009 Kim Tae Hong 141 Days of Hell What about 40 Years NK Daily 7 August 2009 Accident description Aviation Safety Network Retrieved 20 February 2009 Accident description Aviation Safety Network Retrieved 20 February 2009 Accident description Aviation Safety Network Retrieved 20 February 2009 Accident description Aviation Safety Network Retrieved 20 February 2009 Accident description Aviation Safety Network Retrieved 20 February 2009 Germano da Silva Carlos Ari Cesar 2008 O Samurai desaparecido O rastro da bruxa historia da aviacao comercial brasileira no seculo XX atraves dos seus acidentes 1928 1996 in Portuguese 2 ed Porto Alegre EDIPUCRS pp 274 278 ISBN 978 85 7430 760 2 Accident description Aviation Safety Network Retrieved 20 February 2009 Accident description Aviation Safety Network Retrieved 20 February 2009 Accident description Aviation Safety Network Retrieved 20 February 2009 Germano da Silva Carlos Ari Cesar 2008 Dia do aviador O rastro da bruxa historia da aviacao comercial brasileira no seculo XX atraves dos seus acidentes 1928 1996 in Portuguese 2 ed Porto Alegre EDIPUCRS pp 291 293 ISBN 978 85 7430 760 2 Accident description Aviation Safety Network Retrieved 20 February 2009 Accident description Aviation Safety Network Retrieved 20 February 2009 Accident description Aviation Safety Network Retrieved 20 February 2009 Accident description Aviation Safety Network Retrieved 20 February 2009 Accident description Aviation Safety Network Retrieved 20 February 2009 Accident description Aviation Safety Network Retrieved 20 February 2009 Accident description Aviation Safety Network Retrieved 20 February 2009 Accident description Aviation Safety Network Retrieved 20 February 2009 Accident description Aviation Safety Network Retrieved 20 February 2009 Accident description Aviation Safety Network Retrieved 20 February 2009 Accident description Aviation Safety Network Retrieved 20 February 2009 Accident description Aviation Safety Network Retrieved 20 February 2009 Accident description Aviation Safety Network Retrieved 20 February 2009 Accident description Aviation Safety Network Retrieved 20 February 2009 Accident description Aviation Safety Network Retrieved 20 February 2009 Accident description Aviation Safety Network Retrieved 20 February 2009 RECENT ACCIDENTS INCIDENTS WORLDWIDE September 2009 Jacdec Archived from the original on 9 June 2010 Retrieved 12 November 2009 Airframe Dossier Nihon Aeroplane Manufacturing Company NAMC YS 11A 200 c n 2080 c r PP CTI Aerial Visuals AerialVisuals ca Retrieved 8 November 2016 Outdoor Exhibition Hall Museum of Aeronautical Sciences in Japanese Retrieved 8 November 2016 Airframe Dossier Nihon Aeroplane Manufacturing Company NAMC YS 11 c n 1001 2001 c r JA8611 Aerial Visuals AerialVisuals ca Retrieved 8 November 2016 Experience Exhibits Tokorozawa Aviation Museum Archived from the original on 14 March 2016 Retrieved 8 November 2016 Airframe Dossier Nihon Aeroplane Manufacturing Company NAMC YS 11A 200 c n 2101 c r JA8732 Aerial Visuals AerialVisuals ca Retrieved 8 November 2016 機体記号 JA8734 エアーニッポン 徹底ガイド FlyTeam フライチーム Retrieved 8 January 2019 あいち航空ミュージアムに展示予定の機体搬入作業を一般公開します pref aichi jp in Japanese 19 October 2017 Archived from the original on November 2 2017 Retrieved 30 October 2017 Airframe Dossier Nihon Aeroplane Manufacturing Company NAMC YS 11A 500 c n 2179 c r RP 77 Aerial Visuals AerialVisuals ca Retrieved 8 November 2016 NAMC YS 11A Grissom Air Museum Retrieved 8 November 2016 Airframe Dossier Nihon Aeroplane Manufacturing Company NAMC YS 11 c r P4 KFD Aerial Visuals AerialVisuals ca Retrieved 8 November 2016 Green William 1970 The Observer s book of automobiles 16th rev format ed Frederick Warne amp Co Ltd ISBN 0 7232 0087 4 Taylor John W R ed 1970 Jane s all the World s Aircraft 1970 71 London Sampson Low Marston amp Company pp 158 160 ISBN 978 0 354 00067 3 Lednicer David The Incomplete Guide to Airfoil Usage m selig ae illinois edu Retrieved 16 April 2019 Bibliography edit Endres Gunter NAMC YS 11 The Japanese Commuter Air International No July 1996 pp 22 27 ISSN 0306 5634 Lehman William US Airways Arcadia Publishing 2013 ISBN 0 7385 9623 X Odagiri Hiroyuki Goto Odagiri and Akira Gotō Technology and Industrial Development in Japan Clarendon Press 1996 ISBN 0 1982 8802 6 Taylor John W R 1966 Jane s All The World s Aircraft 1966 67 London Sampson Low Marston amp Company External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to NAMC YS 11 YS 11 photographs by Tony Hara Shimizu Kaho 27 November 2007 Japan zeroes in on homegrown jetliner The Japan Times Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title NAMC YS 11 amp oldid 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