|
Entered service |
1987 |
|
Crew |
4 men |
|
Dimensions and weight |
|
Length |
54.1 m |
|
Wing span |
35.6 m swept, 55.7 m spread |
|
Height |
13.1 m |
|
Weight (empty) |
118 t |
|
Weight (maximum take off) |
275 t |
|
Engines and performance |
|
Engines |
4 x SSPE Trud NK-321 turbofans |
|
Traction (dry / with afterburning) |
4 x 137.20 / 245.16 kN |
|
Maximum speed |
2 220 km/h |
|
Service ceiling |
15.5 km |
|
Range |
12 300 km |
|
Armament |
|
Missiles |
12 x Kh-55 (AS-15 "Kent-A") or Kh-55SM (AS-15
"Kent-B") cruise missiles.
12 x Kh-15P (AS-16 "Kickback") |
|
Bombs |
free-fall bombs in place of the missiles |
|
The Tu-160
Blackjack is the world's largest operational bomber. Dwarfing the
similar-looking
B-1B Lancer, it is the heaviest combat aircraft ever built.
Unlike the B-1B, the Tu-160 bomber remains committed to both
low-level penetration (at transonic speeds) and high-level
penetration at speeds of about Mach 1.9.
Although the
aircraft has a fly-by-wire control system all cockpit displays are
conventional analogue instruments, with no multi-function or head-up
displays. The long pointed radome houses a terrain following and
attack radar. Below this is a fairing for a forward-looking TV
camera used for visual weapon aiming.
The
development programme of the Tupolev Tu-160 was extremely
protracted; the prototype Tu-160 first flew in 1981 and the second
aircraft was lost in 1987. Series production was at Kazan and
continued until January 1992, when President Yeltsin announced that
no further strategic bombers would be built. It is believed that
production totaled no more than 39 Blackjacks.
Even after
the aircraft entered service, problems continued to severely
restrict operations and production began before a common standard
and configuration was agreed. Thus wingspans, equipment fit, and
intake configurations differ from aircraft to aircraft.
Nineteen
Tu-160s were delivered to the 184th Guards Heavy Bomber Aviation
Regiment at Priluki beginning in May 1987. These were left at the
Ukrainian base after the break up of the USSR in 1991 and, after
protracted discussions between Ukraine and the Russian Federation,
eight were returned to Russia in 1999. Scrapping of the remaining
Tu-160s held in Ukraine began in late 1998 under a contract issued
by the US government. In early 2001, six Russian Tupolev Tu-160s
were declared operational as air-launched cruise missile carriers
under the START treaty. These are assigned to the 121st Guards Heavy
Bomber Aviation Regiment at Engels and were joined in 2001 by the
first of the eight refurbished aircraft formerly held in Ukraine.
Although perhaps up to a dozen further airframes are nominally
serviceable it seems unlikely that Russia has sufficient funds to
rework these aircraft. US-based Platforms International Corp. has
acquired three demilitarized ex-Ukrainian Tu-160s which it is
converting as Tu-160SK launchers for space vehicles.
|
Video of the Tupolev Tu-160
Blackjack strategic bomber |
|
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