R-Z | |
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Role | Reconnaissance/Light Bomber |
Manufacturer | Polikarpov |
First flight | 1935 |
Introduction | 1935 |
Primary user | Soviet Air Force |
Number built | 1,031 |
Developed from | Polikarpov R-5 |
The Polikarpov R-Z was a Soviet reconnaissance bomber aircraft of the 1930s. It was a revised version of the Polikarpov R-5 which was built in large numbers between 1935 and 1937. It was used in combat during the Spanish Civil War as well as the Winter War and Battle of Khalkhin Gol.
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The R-Z or R-Zet was developed at the aircraft factory GAZ No 1 (State Aircraft Factory No 1) at Moscow as a development of, and a replacement for the Polikarpov R-5, the standard light reconnaissance bomber of the Soviet Air Force. Based on the R-5SSS, the most advanced variant of the R-5, the R-Z had a new, deeper, monocoque fuselage, with a sliding canopy for the pilot and fixed glazed fairing for the observer. The 544 kW (730 hp) M-17F engine (a licenced built copy of the BMW VI was replaced with the 611 kW (820 hp) M-34 engine. The R-Z first flew in January 1935 [1] and was accepted for the Soviet Air Force in preference to the competing Kochyerigin LR, also an R-5 derivative. By the time production finished in spring 1937, 1,031 R-Zs had been built.[1]
Like its predecessor the R-5, the R-Z was used in large numbers by both the Soviet Air Force and Aeroflot.
Its first use in combat was during the Spanish Civil War, where 61 R-Zs were delivered to the Spanish Republican Air Force[2] from 1937, where they were nicknamed Rasante.[1] These were heavily used, flying in tight formations and using co-ordinated defensive fire to defend against fighter attack, while returning individually at low levels.[2] Although many R-Zs were damaged by ground fire, complete losses were relatively low [3] with 36 surviving to be captured by the Nationalists at the end of the war in April 1939.[4]
R-Zs were used by the Soviet air force against Japan above Mongolia in the Battle of Khalkhin Gol in 1939, and the Winter War against Finland in the same year.[1] By the time of the German invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941, the R-Z was in the process of being replaced by the Ilyushin Il-2, although it remained in service with a number of light bomber regiments.[4]
Data from The Osprey Encyclopedia of Russian Aircraft from 1875 - 1995 [1]
General characteristics
Performance
Armament
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