Mikoyan-Gurevich I-270

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The Mikoyan-Gurevich I-270 (Design Ж ("Zh") under Mikoyan-Gurevich's in-house designation sequence, USAF designation "Type 12") was a response to a Soviet Air Force requirement in 1945 for a rocket-powered interceptor aircraft for the point-defence role. In concept and basic configuration, it was strongly reminiscent of the Messerschmitt Me 263 rocket fighter, of which a few prototype examples ended up in Soviet hands following V-E Day, and more remotely the Soviet Union's own earlier Bereznyak-Isayev BI-1,[1] and is generally regarded as a further development of the German design. Only two prototypes were built, both of which were destroyed in crashes, leading to the cancellation of the project.

Model of I-270

Flights

In the early stages of World War II (1942), a complete prototype BI-1 (also known as The Devil's Broomstick), made its first several flights. The I-270 shared the BI-1's simple, tapered fuselage, bubble canopy, wing design, and dual-chambered bipropellant rocket motor. On the other hand, it was considerably larger than the BI-1 and featured short, reinforced wings (of the RP-218) and a raised T-tail which (planes such as Tupolev ANT-8 proved) offered better landing control than the BI-1's more traditional fighter layout. While there seems little doubt that the BI-1 influenced the design of the I-270, the latter appears far from a direct descendant of the former, and much closer to being a Soviet version of the Me 263, sharing very similar fuselage, canopy and landing gear layouts, while adding a conventional stabliizer surface atop the vertical tail, absent on the German design.

Soviet tradition of rocketry starting from the early work of Konstantin Tsiolkovsky and carried through by men like Sergei Korolev made rocket fighters a reality. The RD-2M engine, designed by Leonid Dushkin was dual-combustion-chamber version of the engine used for the 1941 BI-1 rocket plane. That in turn had followed from a tradition dating back to Sergey Korolev's work on project "06" in the early 1930s and the RP-318 rocket plane designed in 1936.

The first gliding trials commenced in December 1946, with the first prototype towed into the air behind a Tupolev Tu-2, ballast loaded in place of an engine. The second prototype began powered tests early in 1947, but was damaged beyond repair making a hard landing. Shortly afterwards, the first prototype was also destroyed in a landing accident. By this stage, turbojet technology was at a far more advanced stage than it had been at the outset of the project, and surface-to-air missiles had replaced the need for point-defence interceptors. Under these circumstances, the Air Force decided to cancel the project.

Operators

 Soviet Union
  • Soviet Air Force

Specifications (I-270)

Data from MiG:50 Years of Secret Aircraft Design[2]

General characteristics

  • Crew: one, pilot
  • Length: 8.92 m (29 ft 3 in)
  • Wingspan: 7.75 m (25 ft 5 in)
  • Height: 3.08 m (10 ft 1⅓ in)
  • Wing area: 12 m² (129 ft²)
  • Empty weight: 1,546 kg (3,407 lb)
  • Loaded weight: 4,120 kg (9,080 lb)
  • Powerplant: 1× Dushkin-Glushko RD-2 M-3V rocket, 14.2 kN (3,190 lbf) 14.2 kN

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 505 knots, 581 mph (936 km/h) at 15,000 m (49,200 ft)
  • Service ceiling: 17,000 m (55,760 ft)
  • Climb to 15,000 m (49,200 ft): 3.03 min
Armament
  • Guns: 2 × 23 mm (0.90 in) Nudelman NS-23 cannon

See also

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration and era

References

  • Belyakov, R. A. and J. Marmain. MiG: Fifty Years of Secret Aircraft Design. Shrewsbury, UK:Airlife Publishing, 1994. ISBN 1-85310-488-4.
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