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INTRODUCTION:
The Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-29 Fulcrum jet was built as a reply to the
Western world, as an addendom to Kruschev's famous threat to the west,
"We will bury you". It has proven itself throughout the "cold war" and combat
assignments as one of the former Soviet Union's
most advanced fighter jets.
In 1979, the United States attempted to gain access to information about
the MiG-29 through intelligence-gathering operations, and the use of
satellites capable of photographing extremely detailed features from
high altitudes. The plane was ascertained to be actively serving Russian
air forces, built and validated by "design bureau", known as the OKB.
As in the past, the government of India, competitively buying against
their opposition, Pakistan, negotiated with the then-U.S.S.R. to
purchase 45 units of the aircraft. Afterwards, other warring nations,
maintaining amicable relations with Russia, purchased hundreds more of
the plane.
Several components compose the electronics suite available to the
MiG-29. Resting on the underside of the plane are radar warning receiver
aerials, and an angle-of-attack vane, for coordinating flight instruments
with the outside air pressures. Above its wings, the jet contains a
common characteristic in Russian aircraft, numerous antennae, for ADF
provisions, IFF functions, VHF reception, and for radar analysis.
Besides its radar equipment. including a frontal scanner and conical
radome, the Fulcrum includes the use of various examples of weapons
technology. Fired from the plane are the R-23-type AA-9 and 10 air-to-air
missiles with inertial guidance, as well as the AA-7 radar homing
projectile. The R-60 AA-8 Aphid can also be used underwing in addition to this.
Production of the MiG-29 continues at present, and, at last report,
was being used actively by the air powers of countries like Syria and India.
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PROGRAMME:
Technical assignment (operational requirement) issued 1972, to replace MiG-21, MiG-23,
Su-15 and Su-17; initial order place simultaneously; detail design began 1974; first of 14
prototypes built for factory and State testing flew 6 October 1977; photographed by US
satellite, Ramenskoye flight test centre, November 1977 and given interim Western designation
"Ram-L"; second prototype flew June 1978; second and fourth prototypes lost through engine
failures; after major design changes production began 1982, deliveries to Frontal Aviation 1984;
operational early 1985; first detailed Western study possible after visit of demonstration
team to Finland July 1986; production of basic MiG-29 combat aircraft by Moscow Aircraft
Production Group (MAPO), and of MiG-29UB combat trainers at Nizhny Novgorod, for CIS air
forces completed, but manufacture for export continues.
DESIGN FEATURES:
All-swept low-wing configuration, with wide ogival wing leading-edge root extensions (LERX),
lift-generating fuselage, twin tail fins carried on booms outboard of widely spaced engines
with wedge intakes; doors in intakes, actuated by extension and compression of nosewheel
leg, prevent ingestion of foreign objects during take-off and landing; gap between roof of
each intake and skin of wingroot extension for boundary layer bleed; fire control and mission
computers link radar with laser rangefinder and infrared search/track sensor, in conjunction
with helmet-mounted target designator; radar able to track 10 targets simultaneously; targets
can be approached and engaged without emission of detectable radar or radio signals; sustained
turn rate much improved over earlier Soviet fighters; thrust/weight ratio better than one;
allowable angles of attack at least 70 per cent higher than previous fighters; difficult to
get into stable flat spin, reluctant to enter normal spin, recovers as soon as controls
released; wing leading-edge sweepback 73 degrees 30' on LERX, 42 degrees on outer panels;
anhedral approx 2 degrees; tail fins canted outward 6 degrees; leading-edge sweep 47 degrees
50' on fins, approx 50 degrees on horizontal surfaces. Design flying life 2500 h.
| STRUCTURE:
Approx 7 per cent of airframe, by weight, of composites; remainder metal, including
aluminium-lithium alloys; trailing-edge wing flaps, ailerons and vertical tail surfaces of
carbonfibre honeycomb; approx 65 per cent of horizontal tail surfaces aluminium alloy,
remainder carbonfibre; semi-monocoque all-metal fuselage, sharply tapered and downswept aft
of flat-sided cockpit area, with ogival dielectric nosecone; small vortex generator each side
of nose helps to overcome early tendency to aileron reversal at angles of attack above 25
degrees; tail surfaces carried on slim booms alongside engine nacelles.
ACCOMMODATION:
Pilot only, on 10 degrees inclined K-36DM zero/zero ejection seat, under rearward hinged
transparent blister canopy in high-set cockpit. Sharply inclined one-piece curved windscreen.
Three internal mirrors provide rearward view.
| POWER PLANT:
Two Klimov/Sarkisov RD-33 turbofans, each 49.4 kN (11,110 lb st) dry and 54.9-81.4 kN
(12,345-18,300 lb st) with afterburning. Engine ducts canted at approx 9 degrees, with wedge
intakes, sweptback at approx 35 degrees, under wingroot leading-edge extensions. Multi-segment
ramp system, including top-hinged forward door (containing a very large number of small holes)
inside each intake that closes the duct while aircraft is taking off or landing, to prevent
ingestion of foreign objects, ice or snow. Air is then fed to each engine through louvres in
top of wingroot leading-edge extension and perforations in duct closure door. Basic 'Fulcrum-A'
has four integral fuel tanks in inboard portion of each wing and in fuselage between wings; total
capacity 4365 litres (1153 US gallons; 960 Imp gallons).
| AVIONICS:
RP-29
N019 Sapfir-29
(
Zhuk-M radar -MiG-29M2) coherent pulse Doppler lookdown/shootdown engagement radar
(NATO "Slot Back"; search range 54 nm; 100 km; 62 miles, tracking range 38 nm; 70 km; 43 miles),
target tracking limits 60 degrees up, 38 degrees down, 67 degrees each side, collimated with
laser rangefinder; infrared search/track sensor (fighter detection range 8 nm; 15 km; 9.25
miles) forward of windscreen (protected by removable fairing on non-operational flights);
R-862 com radio; ARK-19 DF; inertial navigation system; SRO-2 (NATO "Odd Rods") IFF transponder
and SRZ-15 interrogator; Sirena-3 360 degrees radar warning system, with sensors on wingroot
extensions, wingtips and port fin. Two SO-69 ECM antennae under conformal dielectric fairings
in leading-edge of each wingroot extension; head-up display; and helmet-mounted target
designation system for off-axis aiming of air-to-air missiles.
| LANDING GEAR

Retractable tricycle type, made by Hydromash, with single wheel on each main unit and twin
nosewheels. Mainwheels retract forward into wingroots, turning through 90 degrees to lie flat
above leg; nosewheels, on trailing-link oleo, retract rearward between engine air intakes.
Hydraulic retraction and extension, with mechanical emergency release. Nosewheels steerable
+/-8 degrees for taxiing, T-O and landings, +/-30 degrees for slow speed manoeuvring in
confined areas (selector in cockpit). |
MiG-29 Technical Data
| Prime contractor: | Mikoyan-Gurevich Design Bureau |
| Country of origin: | Soviet Union / Russia |
| NATO codename: | Fulcrum |
| Function: | All-weather multirole fighter |
| Crew: | 1 |
| Year: | 1977 (base version) |
| In-service year: | 1984 (base version) |
| Power plant: | Two
Sarkisov RD-33 afterburning turbofans |
| Thrust: | 18,260 lb. each | 8,300 kg. each |
| Dimensions | | Wing span: | 37 ft. 3 in. | 11.36 m. |
| Length: | 56 ft. 8 in. (including nose probe) | 17.32 m. (including nose probe) |
| Height: | 15 ft. 5 in. | 4.73 m. |
| Weight: |
| Normal | 32,780 lb. | 14,900 kg. |
| Max. takeoff | 39,600 lb. | 18,000 kg. |
| Performance |
| Ceiling: | 59,040 ft. | 18,000 m. |
| Speed: | 1,490 mph. | 2,400 km/h |
| Range: | 932 miles (on internal fuel)
1,304 miles (with one ventral fuel drop tank)
1,801 miles (with three fuel drop tanks) | 1,500 km. (on internal fuel)
2,100 km. (with one ventral fuel drop tank)
2,900 km. (with three fuel drop tanks)
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| Armament |
One
GSh-30-1
30mm cannon with 150 rounds. Max. external weapons load of 3,500 kg. (7,716 lb.) including
R-27R1 (AA-10A "Alamo A"),
R-60 (AA-8 "Aphid"),
R-60T/MK (AA-8 "Aphid"),
R-73/73E (AA-11"Archer"),
R-77 RVV-AE ("AA-12") AAMs.,
Kh-25M (AS-12 "Kegler"),
Kh-29L/T (AS-14 "Kedge"),
Kh-31A/P/RE (AS-17 "Krypton"),
Kh-66 ("AS-7 Kerry") ASMs.,
KAB-500L, KAB-1000L,
KAB-1500L laser guided bombs,
KAB-500KR,
KAB-1000KR, KAB-1500KR TV guided bombs, FAB-250,
FAB-500, FAB-1000,
FAB-1500 unguided bombs,
BetAB-250,
BetAB-500, concrete-piercing bombs,
RBK-250,
RBK-500
cluster bomb, one 30 kT nuclear bomb,
S-8,
S-13 and
S-24 unguided rockets,
ZAB-500 napalm bombs,
KMGU-2 submunitions dispensers, three drop tanks, two 1,137l. (300 gal.) or two 1,400l. (370 gal.) and one 2,274l.
(600 gal.), ECM pods carried on six external points.
Typical interceptor configuration: Six
R-73 or
R-73E (AA-11 "Archer")
AAMs., or four
R-73/73E ("AA-11 Archer")
AAMs., and two
R-27R1 (AA-10A "Alamo-A")
AAMs. |
| Known Variants |
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MiG-29K, MiG-29KU, MiG-29K-2002, MiG-29K-2008, MiG-29M, MiG-29ME, MiG-29MT, MiG-29N, MiG-29NUB, MiG-29S, MiG-29SD,
MiG-29SE, MiG-29SM, MiG-29SMT-II, MiG-29SMTK, MiG-29UB, MiG-29UBT |
| Operators |
| Armenia, Belarus, Bulgaria, CIS, Croatia, Cuba, Czech Republic,
Germany, Hungary, India, Iran, Iraq, Kazakhstan, Malaysia, Moldova, North Korea, Poland, Romania, Russia, Slovakia, Syria,
Turkemenistan, Ukraine, Uzbekistan, Yemen, Yugoslavia |
| Aircraft's Price |
1997 - $15.5 millions (fully-equipped in lots between 25-100)
1997 - $24-31 millions (fully-equipped in lots of 10-25) |
| Operation Costs |
| One flight hour costs $ 5,500 (MiG-29SMT) |
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