Difference between revisions of "Wings of Russia (page 3)"
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− | {{Under Construction| | + | {{Under Construction|14|November|2024}} |
[[Image:WofRussia DVD.jpg|thumb|right|350px|none|<i>Wings of Russia</i> DVD covers.]] | [[Image:WofRussia DVD.jpg|thumb|right|350px|none|<i>Wings of Russia</i> DVD covers.]] | ||
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[[Image:WofRussia13_Omega2.jpg|thumb|500px|none|Oemga II.]] | [[Image:WofRussia13_Omega2.jpg|thumb|500px|none|Oemga II.]] | ||
[[Image:WofRussia13_00006.jpg|thumb|500px|none|]] | [[Image:WofRussia13_00006.jpg|thumb|500px|none|]] | ||
− | [[Image:WofRussia13_Bratukhin_B- | + | [[Image:WofRussia13_Bratukhin_B-5b.jpg|thumb|500px|none|Bratukhin B-5.]] |
[[Image:WofRussia13_Bratukhin_B-9.jpg|thumb|500px|none|Bratukhin B-9.]] | [[Image:WofRussia13_Bratukhin_B-9.jpg|thumb|500px|none|Bratukhin B-9.]] | ||
[[Image:WofRussia13_Bratukhin_B-10.jpg|thumb|500px|none|Bratukhin B-10.]] | [[Image:WofRussia13_Bratukhin_B-10.jpg|thumb|500px|none|Bratukhin B-10.]] | ||
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[[Image:WofRussia13_Yak-100.jpg|thumb|500px|none|]] | [[Image:WofRussia13_Yak-100.jpg|thumb|500px|none|]] | ||
− | == Sikorsky H-5 == | + | == [[:Category: Sikorsky H-5|Sikorsky H-5]] == |
[[Image:WofRussia13_Siko.jpg|thumb|500px|none|]] | [[Image:WofRussia13_Siko.jpg|thumb|500px|none|]] | ||
== [[:Category: Mil Mi-1|Mil Mi-1]] == | == [[:Category: Mil Mi-1|Mil Mi-1]] == | ||
− | [[Image:WofRussia13_00015.jpg|thumb|500px|none|]] | + | [[Image:WofRussia13_00015.jpg|thumb|500px|none|Footage already seen at the beginning.]] |
== [[:Category: TsAGI 1-EA|Yuriev TsAGI 1-EA]] == | == [[:Category: TsAGI 1-EA|Yuriev TsAGI 1-EA]] == | ||
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== Aeronautical Products A-1 == | == Aeronautical Products A-1 == | ||
Reg. NX1270 Aeronautical Products A-1.<br> | Reg. NX1270 Aeronautical Products A-1.<br> | ||
− | The company Aeronautical Products Inc. | + | The company Aeronautical Products Inc. - which normally manufactured aircraft engine parts - had two undergraduate engineers of the University of Michigan, Corwin Denny and Karl Schakel, who started design of this single-seat helicopter. Despite they soon left the Detroit factory, the work was put to an end and a first flight occured in 1943. |
[[Image:WofRussia13_NX1270.jpg|thumb|500px|none|]] | [[Image:WofRussia13_NX1270.jpg|thumb|500px|none|]] | ||
[[Image:WofRussia13_NX1270b.jpg|thumb|500px|none|]] | [[Image:WofRussia13_NX1270b.jpg|thumb|500px|none|]] | ||
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[[Image:WofRussia13_00012.jpg|thumb|500px|none|]] | [[Image:WofRussia13_00012.jpg|thumb|500px|none|]] | ||
− | ( | + | == [[:Category: Mil Mi-4|Mil Mi-4]] == |
+ | The roomy Mil Mi-4 could accomodate a field gun or sixteen troops. | ||
+ | [[Image:WofRussia13_00014.jpg|thumb|500px|none|]] | ||
+ | A dozen of the forty or so variants in service are presented. Among them...<br> | ||
+ | Reg. СССР-31509 / SSSR-31509 Mil Mi-4 built in 1958 by the Aircraft Factory No. 387 (factory number: 1156, serial number: 056-11). Decommissioned on 30 April 1975 after 17 years of service with [[:Category: Aeroflot|Aeroflot]]. | ||
+ | [[Image:WofRussia13_CCCP-35109.jpg|thumb|500px|none|]] | ||
+ | Footage from the 1955 documentary Крылья Родины (Wings of the Homeland, 45 minutes) about the Moscou Tushino Air Show held on 18 August 1955. (full analysis in the coming weeks). | ||
+ | [[Image:WofRussia13_00020.jpg|thumb|500px|none|]] | ||
+ | Reg. СССР-31498 / SSSR-31498 built in 1956 and decommissioned on 28 September 1976. | ||
+ | [[Image:WofRussia13_CCCP-31698.jpg|thumb|500px|none|]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | == [[:Category: Sikorsky H-34|Sikorsky VH-34D]] == | ||
+ | Sikorsky VH-34D used between 1955 and 1958 as <i>Marines One</i>. | ||
+ | [[Image:WofRussia13_VH-34.jpg|thumb|500px|none|]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | == [[:Category: Mil Mi-4|Mil Mi-4S]] == | ||
+ | Mil Mi-4S built in the "saloon" version for the First Secretary of the Central Committee of the Soviet Union: N.S.Khrushchev seen here in Kremlin, Moscow, 1959. Despite lack of evidence, should be Reg. СССР-66914 / SSSR-66914. | ||
+ | [[Image:WofRussia13_Mi-4S.jpg|thumb|500px|none|]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | == [[:Category: Yakovlev Yak-24|Yakovlev Yak-24]] == | ||
+ | [[Image:WofRussia13_Yak-24.jpg|thumb|500px|none|]] | ||
+ | [[Image:WofRussia13_Yak-24b.jpg|thumb|500px|none|Red Yak-24 with a blue band and code 35 (barely visible on the video).]] | ||
+ | [[Image:WofRussia13_Yak-24c.jpg|thumb|500px|none|]] | ||
+ | [[Image:WofRussia13_Yak-24c2.jpg|thumb|500px|none|Promotional movie in which the same Yak-24 is lifting up a GAZ 51 lorry lost amid the flooding of the melting snow.]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | == [[:Category: Kamov Ka-15|Kamov Ka-15]] == | ||
+ | [[Image:WofRussia13_Ka-15.jpg|thumb|500px|none|]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | == Kamov Ka-18 == | ||
+ | [[Image:WofRussia13_Ka-18.jpg|thumb|500px|none|]] | ||
+ | == [[:Category: Mil Mi-6|Mil Mi-6]] == | ||
+ | [[Image:WofRussia13_Mi-6.jpg|thumb|500px|none|]] | ||
− | [[ | + | == [[:Category: Kamov Ka-22|Kamov Ka-22]] == |
− | + | [[Image:WofRussia13_Ka-22.jpg|thumb|500px|none|]] | |
− | |||
− | |||
− | [[Image:|thumb|500px|none|]] | ||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | + | = DVD 14: Helicopters. Workers and Soldiers. = | |
− | + | (coming soon) | |
+ | (to be continued)<br> | ||
[[Image:|thumb|500px|none|]] | [[Image:|thumb|500px|none|]] | ||
[[Image:|thumb|500px|none|]] | [[Image:|thumb|500px|none|]] | ||
[[Image:|thumb|500px|none|]] | [[Image:|thumb|500px|none|]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
{{footnote}} | {{footnote}} | ||
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[[Category: Kaman HH-43 Huskie]] | [[Category: Kaman HH-43 Huskie]] | ||
[[Category: Kamov Ka-8]] | [[Category: Kamov Ka-8]] | ||
+ | [[Category: Kamov Ka-15]] | ||
+ | [[Category: Kamov Ka-22]] | ||
[[Category: Kamov TsAGI A-7]] | [[Category: Kamov TsAGI A-7]] | ||
[[Category: Leonardo da Vinci's Aerial Screw]] | [[Category: Leonardo da Vinci's Aerial Screw]] | ||
[[Category: Mil Mi-1]] | [[Category: Mil Mi-1]] | ||
[[Category: Mil Mi-4]] | [[Category: Mil Mi-4]] | ||
+ | [[Category: Mil Mi-6]] | ||
[[Category: Pescara helicopter]] | [[Category: Pescara helicopter]] | ||
[[Category: Piasecki H-21]] | [[Category: Piasecki H-21]] | ||
[[Category: Pitcairn-Cierva PCA-2]] | [[Category: Pitcairn-Cierva PCA-2]] | ||
+ | [[Category: Sikorsky H-5]] | ||
[[Category: Sikorsky H-19]] | [[Category: Sikorsky H-19]] | ||
[[Category: Sikorsky H-34]] | [[Category: Sikorsky H-34]] | ||
Line 348: | Line 378: | ||
[[Category: Wright Flyer III]] | [[Category: Wright Flyer III]] | ||
[[Category: Yakovlev Yak-3]] | [[Category: Yakovlev Yak-3]] | ||
+ | [[Category: Yakovlev Yak-24]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | [[Category: Aeroflot]] |
Revision as of 10:19, 14 November 2023
This page is under construction!
This page may not be completed and may only display partially correct information. Please use the discussion page before making any changes. |
Documentary (2009)
This page is about DVD13 to DVD18.
About the first six DVDs, please read Wings of Russia.
DVDs 7 to 12 are on Wings of Russia (page 2).
DVD 13: Helicopters. Aerial All-Road Vehicles
Otto Lilienthal ?
Leonardo da Vinci's Aerial Screw
Wright Flyer III
Same aircraft in other movies at Frequently Seen Aircraft (Military Fixed-Wing).
Mil Mi-1
Chinese Toy (contra-rotating propeller)
As said by the narator.
French naturalist Claude Launoy think the concept and François Bienvenu built it. A demonstration flight to the French Royal Academy of Sciences was operated on 28 of April 1783.
Mikhail Lomonosov's Coaxial Rotor
In July 1754, Russian Mikhail Lomonosov developed a model of a small machine with a coaxial rotor and demonstrated it to the Russian Academy of Sciences. Unable to fly but lift up with the help of a counterweight.
Yakovlev EG
In December 1947, the Yakovlev EG (or Izdeliye Sh) an experimental aircraft with coaxial rotors made its first flight. The program was closed in 1948 both because of some technical problems and due to the appearance of a more successful model of light helicopter, the Mil Mi-1.
Various Unsuccessful Project
Human energy is insufficient to propel these (unidentified) machines.
Gray Goose
Unsucccessful prototype by Jonathan Edward Caldwell.
Same aircraft in other movies at IMPDb: Frequently Seen Aircraft ( (Others) - Human Powered Flight / Ornithopter section.
Unidentified Aircraft
A steam engine unable to provide enough energy to lift up.
Douhéret Hélicoplane
Pitts Sky Car
Unidentified Aircraft
Breguet-Richet Gyroplane
The Breguet-Richet Gyroplane was an early French experimental quadcopter rotary-wing aircraft developed by Breguet Aviation in 1907.
Paul Cornu Helicopter
13 November 1907 : the first successful helicopter to lift off by its only power and rotor. Two 20-foot (6-meter) counter-rotating rotors driven by a 24-hp (18-kW) Antoinette engine lifted its inventor to about five feet (1.5 meters) and remained aloft one minute. Other source gives only one foot (30 cm) of freee space under the wheels.
Igor Sikorsky Helicopter
Two designs in 1909 and 1910. Only the second one was tested and was half a success : it could lift its own weight but couldn't take off with a pilot.
Blériot XI
Karman-Zuroves PKZ-1
Austria, 1918.
Etienne Oemichen N°7 Helicostat
Mil Mi-4
de Bothezat Helicopter
George de Bothezat was born in 1882 in Saint Petersburg. Studies done in Berlin and graduation in 1911 at La Sorbonne (France) as Doctor of Philosophy for a study of aircraft stability (Étude de la Stabilité de l`aeroplane). 1918 : He fled the Russian Revolution and lectured at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Columbia University. Three years later, in 1921, the US Army Air Service hired de Bothezat to build a prototype helicopter. Some flights were performed in 1922.
Berliner Experimental
1920 then 1922 : two designs by Emile and tested by his son Henry.
Pescara helicopter
Kamov KaSkr-I Gyrocraft (1929)
the first Soviet autogyro, designed by Kamov and Skrzhinskii.
Cierva C.8L Autogiro
Reg. G-EBYY Cierva C.8L Autogiro (now on display at Paris Le Bourget Air and Space Museum).
Cierva C.30
Reg. G-ACFI Cierva C.30 c/n 1
Kamov KaSkr-II Gyrocraft
1930: Re-engined KASKR-I with a Gnome-Rhone Titan engine.
Pitcairn PCA-2
Kamov TsAGI A-7
The Kamov TsAGI A-7 leading (top) a Cierva C.30 and (bottom) a Kamov KaSkr-II.
This is one is seen in the 1940 documentary Праздник сталинской авиации (Prazdnik stalinskoy aviatsii / public holiday of Stalin's aviation).
Yuriev TsAGI 1-EA
In 1925, Boris Yuriev was put in charge of helicopter research at the (Soviet) Central Aero-Hydrodynamic Institute (TsAGI) under Mikhail Leontyevich Mil supervision.
Kamov TsAGI 11
Unidentified Aircraft
Nicolas Florine Tandem Helicopter
Born Nikolay Florin on 19 July 1891 in Batumi, Georgia, Russian Empire, Nicolas Florine was a Russian born engineer who settled in Belgium. He built the first tandem rotor helicopter in 1927. 25 October 1933 : the full scale development piloted the Belgian test pilot Robert Collin stays in the air for 9 minutes 58. Nicolas Florine passed away at Brussels (Belgium) on 21 January 1972.
Breguet-Dorand Gyroplane
The first flight in 1933 ended by an accident. Rebuilt in 1935, the aircraft set lots of record until 1939 (Flight duration exceeding one hour; altitude; speed -over 100 kh/m-; ...).
Passing in front of (left) the Bloch MB.210 prototype and (right) a Caudron Simoun
Focke-Wulf Fw 61 V2
Registration D-EKRA.
Focke-Wulf Fw 61 V1
Reg. D-EBVU.
Same aircraft in other movies at IMPDb: Frequently Seen Aircraft (Rotary-Wing).
SNCASE SE.3000
Talking about the Focke-Achgelis Fa 223 but this picture is about a French (postwar) SNCASE SE.3000 : the first one has a faceted nose, the French derivative a more smooth, streamlined one.
Flettner Fl 282
GF+YF Flettner Fl 282 v6 W.Nr. 282000006 (sixth prototype). First flight on 11 May 1942. Last one on 10 May 1943.
Flettner Fl 282 maybe the v23 airframe.
Focke-Achgelis Fa 223
Focke-Achgelis Fa 223 hovering over an unidentified aircraft (maybe a Fieseler Fi 156 Storch).
Consolidated B-24 Liberator
Vought-Sikorsky VS-300
Concept demonstrator.
The Vought-Sikorsky VS-300 fitted with floats becoming the first practical amphibious helicopter.
Sikorsky R-4
Bratukhin Helicopter
Just after the War, several variants of the same concept were built and tested. The fatal crash of one of the last model stopped any further development and eventually the Bratukhin design bureau was closed on spring 1951.
Yakovlev EG
Yakovlev Yak-100
Sikorsky H-5
Mil Mi-1
Yuriev TsAGI 1-EA
With Mikhail Leontyevich Mil on the far left.
Yakovlev Yak-3
Kamov Ka-8
Demonstration flight (and landing !) during the Tushino Air Show, 1948. Note the (unidentified) airship in the distance.
Kamov Ka-10
Kaman K-125
or Kaman K-225 ?
Aeronautical Products A-1
Reg. NX1270 Aeronautical Products A-1.
The company Aeronautical Products Inc. - which normally manufactured aircraft engine parts - had two undergraduate engineers of the University of Michigan, Corwin Denny and Karl Schakel, who started design of this single-seat helicopter. Despite they soon left the Detroit factory, the work was put to an end and a first flight occured in 1943.
Piasecki PV-2
Unidentified Aircraft
Hiller XH-44
Bell 47
Bell 47D ?
Hiller Model 360
Sikorsky H-19
Piasecki HRP Rescuer
One of the 28 Piasecki HRP Rescuer built.
Piasecki H-21
Piasecki H-16 Transporter
Two airframe built : the first one was powered by two Pratt & Whitney piston engines while the second one was duly equipped with two 2100shp Allison turboshafts.
Kaman HH-43 Huskie
Unidentified Aircraft
Sikorsky S-61R or Sikorsky SH-3 Sea King ?
Westland WS-55 Whirlwind Srs.1
Reg. G-AOCZ Westland WS-55 Whirlwind Srs.1 c/n WA115.
Sikorsky HRS-1
BuNo 127798 code HR-13 Sikorsky HRS-1 of Marine Helicopter Transport Squadron 161 (HMR-161). Airframe c/n 55032 delivered to US Marine Corps in June 1951. A first (light ?) crash after taking off from K-18 in Korea on 21 January 1952. 12 February 1953 : Crashed into water 25 miles South of Pusan during rendezvous with aircraft carrier.
Sikorsky H-34
Mil Mi-1
Firing anti tank missile during army trial:
Crop sprayer on the civil side :
Reg. СССР-68155 / SSSR-68155 Mil Mi-1M c/n 06801712 on service (August 1960 - September 1970) always with Aeroflot (Krasnodar, North Caucasus).
... and movie star (Polosatyy reis).
Same helicopter in other movies at Frequently Seen Aircraft (Rotary-Wing).
Mil Mi-4
The roomy Mil Mi-4 could accomodate a field gun or sixteen troops.
A dozen of the forty or so variants in service are presented. Among them...
Reg. СССР-31509 / SSSR-31509 Mil Mi-4 built in 1958 by the Aircraft Factory No. 387 (factory number: 1156, serial number: 056-11). Decommissioned on 30 April 1975 after 17 years of service with Aeroflot.
Footage from the 1955 documentary Крылья Родины (Wings of the Homeland, 45 minutes) about the Moscou Tushino Air Show held on 18 August 1955. (full analysis in the coming weeks).
Reg. СССР-31498 / SSSR-31498 built in 1956 and decommissioned on 28 September 1976.
Sikorsky VH-34D
Sikorsky VH-34D used between 1955 and 1958 as Marines One.
Mil Mi-4S
Mil Mi-4S built in the "saloon" version for the First Secretary of the Central Committee of the Soviet Union: N.S.Khrushchev seen here in Kremlin, Moscow, 1959. Despite lack of evidence, should be Reg. СССР-66914 / SSSR-66914.
Yakovlev Yak-24
Kamov Ka-15
Kamov Ka-18
Mil Mi-6
Kamov Ka-22
DVD 14: Helicopters. Workers and Soldiers.
(coming soon)
(to be continued)
[[Image:|thumb|500px|none|]]
[[Image:|thumb|500px|none|]]
[[Image:|thumb|500px|none|]]
Back To:
See also
- Unidentified Aircraft
- Bell 47
- Blériot XI
- Bloch MB.210
- Cierva C.30
- Consolidated B-24 Liberator
- Etienne Oemichen N°7 Helicostat
- Flettner Fl 282
- Focke-Achgelis Fa 223
- Focke-Wulf Fw 61
- Gray Goose
- Hiller UH-12
- Kaman HH-43 Huskie
- Kamov Ka-8
- Kamov Ka-15
- Kamov Ka-22
- Kamov TsAGI A-7
- Leonardo da Vinci's Aerial Screw
- Mil Mi-1
- Mil Mi-4
- Mil Mi-6
- Pescara helicopter
- Piasecki H-21
- Pitcairn-Cierva PCA-2
- Sikorsky H-5
- Sikorsky H-19
- Sikorsky H-34
- Sikorsky R-4
- TsAGI 1-EA
- Vought-Sikorsky VS-300
- Westland Whirlwind (helicopter)
- Wright Flyer III
- Yakovlev Yak-3
- Yakovlev Yak-24
- Aeroflot