Sukhoi Su-2
Sukhoi Su-2 | |
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Su-2 in Monino (1993) |
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Type: | Light bomb plane |
Design country: | |
Manufacturer: | |
First flight: |
August 25, 1937 |
Commissioning: |
1940 |
Production time: |
1940 to 1942 |
Number of pieces: |
793 |
The Soviet Sukhoi Su-2 ( Russian Сухой Су-2 ) was a two-seat bomber aircraft in composite construction and at the time of the German attack on the USSR in 1941 the most modern light bomber of the Soviet air force . It was developed by Pavel Sukhoi .
History and commitment
The development of this type began after a tender by the Council for Labor and Defense on December 27, 1936 in the ZAGI , headed by Andrei Tupolev , as the successor to the R-5 biplane . The first prototype ANT-51 (project name Ivanov ) equipped with an M-62 engine flew for the first time on August 25, 1937 with Mikhail Gromov at the wheel.
After Pawel Sukhoi opened his own design office, a total of three prototypes with different engines were tested. The last one to emerge in 1939 was the BB-1 (BB = Blischni Bombardirowschtschik = close-up bomber) with the M-87A engine , which was converted to the M-88 engine in 1940 and went into series production as the Su-2 . Compared to the prototype designed in all-metal construction, the series version was manufactured in a mixed construction because duralumin was not available in sufficient quantities. At the beginning of 1941 an improved production version followed with the more powerful M-88B engine, which, after the armament had been reduced from four to two MG, could also carry six RS-82 missiles .
From autumn 1941 a Su-2 with the ASch-82 star engine appeared. From it the Su-4 ( BB-3 ) with armored cabin was developed in 1942 . This had a more powerful M-90 engine with 2,095 hp (1,541 kW) and two 12.7 mm and two 7.62 mm machine guns as armament. The guy didn't go into series production.
The production of the Su-2 ran until autumn 1942 and comprised 793 copies. Ultimately, the aircraft was defeated by the Il-2 , which in particular offered significantly better armor and more powerful armament with slightly poorer flight performance.
In combat use as attack aircraft, the Su-2 squadrons suffered heavy losses against the German troops, which is why from 1942 the machines were withdrawn from direct frontline use and used in the hinterland for school and towing tasks. An armored attack aircraft version with an M-88B engine, developed in 1940 and called SchB , did not get beyond the prototype stage. Although the Su-2 was designed as a light bomber, it was mainly used as a reconnaissance aircraft during the war.
Military users
Technical specifications
Parameter | Tupolev ANT-51 (Туполев АНТ-51) (1st prototype) |
Sukhoi BB-1 (Сухой ББ-1) (1940) |
Sukhoi Su-2 (Сухой Су-2) (1st series 1941) |
Sukhoi Su-2 (Сухой Су-2) (2nd series 1941) |
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crew | 2 (pilot / gunner) | |||
length | 9.92 m | 10.25 m | 10.46 m | |
span | 14.30 m | |||
height | k. A. | 3.94 m | ||
Wing area | 29.0 m² | |||
Empty mass | 2604 kg | 2930 kg | 2970 kg | 3273 kg |
maximum take-off mass | 3937 kg | 4360 kg | 4375 kg | 4700 kg |
drive | a radial engine M-62 | a double radial engine M-88 | a double radial engine M-88B | an ASch-82 double radial engine |
Starting power | 840 hp (618 kW) | 952 hp (700 kW) | 1,000 PS (735 kW) | 1,400 hp (1,030 kW) |
Top speed | 360 km / h near the ground 403 km / h at an altitude of 4700 m |
460 km / h | 455 km / h at an altitude of 4400 m | 430 km / h near the ground, 486 km / h at an altitude of 5850 m |
Landing speed | 120 km / h | k. A. | 136 km / h | |
Rise time | 16.36 min at 5000 m altitude | 8.2 min at 4000 m altitude | 12 min at 5000 m altitude | 9.8 min at 5000 m altitude |
Service ceiling | 7440 m | 8800 m | 8400 m | 8900 m |
Range | 1200 km | 1190 km | 1100 km | |
Armament | four rigid 7.62 mm machine gun SchKAS one movable twin machine gun SchKAS |
k. A. | two rigid 7.62 mm MG SchKAS one movable 7.62 mm MG SchKAS |
four rigid 7.62 mm machine gun SchKAS one movable twin machine gun SchKAS |
Bomb load | 300 kg | k. A. | up to 600 kg or six RS-82 missiles |
400–600 kg or eight – ten RS-82 or RS-132 missiles |
literature
- Wilfried Bergholz : Suchoi since 1927. Motorbuch, Stuttgart 2018, ISBN 978-3-613-04045-8 .
- Rainer Göpfert: Soviet warplanes of the Second World War. Part 11: Sukhoi Su-2 (BB-1) light bomber. In Fliegerrevue No. 6/2015.
- Wilfried Copenhagen : Soviet bomb planes. Transpress, Berlin 1989 ISBN 3-344-00391-7 .
Web links
- Сухой Су-2. Retrieved December 26, 2019 (Russian).
- Сухой Су-4 (ББ-3). Retrieved December 26, 2019 (Russian).
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b Su-2. (No longer available online.) Sukhoi, archived from the original on April 28, 2006 ; accessed on November 17, 2016 (English). Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ Airplanes in their time: Suchoi Su-2. In: Aerosport No. 2/1967, p. 73
- ^ Rudolf Höfling: Tupolew . Airplanes since 1922. Motorbuch, Stuttgart 2012, ISBN 978-3-613-03459-4 , p. 63 .