Viktor Pugachyov
Viktor Georgiyevich Pugachyov (Russian: Ви́ктор Гео́ргиевич Пугачёв) (born August 8, 1948 in Taganrog) is a Russian test pilot who was the first to show the so-called Pugachev's Cobra maneuver of Su-27 to the general public. He was named Hero of the Soviet Union in the late 1980s. He graduated from Yeysk military aviation school in 1970. Test-pilot school and MAI (Moscow State Aviation Institute). After two years with LII (Flight Research Institute named after M.M.Gromov) joined OKB Sukhoi where he tested the Su-9, Su-15, Su-24, Su-25 and the Su-27. He became famous after his 1989 Su-27 demonstrations on the Paris Airshow. Pugachev is credited with first ever non-vertical take-off and landing (VTOL) from the aircraft carrier Admiral Kuznetsov.[1]
Currently he lives in Zhukovsky and works as the Chief Pilot Designer at Sukhoi Design Bureau.
Record flights
While working as a test pilot at Sukhoi he broke 13 world records in the Sukhoi P-42:
Date | Class (and group) | Description | Record | Status |
---|---|---|---|---|
1986-11-15 | C-1 (3) | Time to climb to 3,000 m | 25.37 s | Record |
1986-11-15 | C-1h (3) | Time to climb to 3,000 m | 25.37 s | Record |
1986-11-15 | C-1 (3) | Time to climb to 6,000 m | 37.05 s | Record |
1986-11-15 | C-1h (3) | Time to climb to 6,000 m | 37.05 s | Record |
1986-11-15 | C-1 (3) | Time to climb to 9,000 m | 47.03 s | Improved to 44.18 s by same aircraft |
1986-11-15 | C-1h (3) | Time to climb to 9,000 m | 47.03 s | Improved to 44.18 s by same aircraft |
1986-11-15 | C-1 (3) | Time to climb to 12,000 m | 58.10 s | Improved to 55.54 s by same aircraft |
1986-11-15 | C-1h (3) | Time to climb to 12,000 m | 58.10 s | Improved to 55.54 s by same aircraft |
1990-03-29 | C-1h (3) | Time to climb to 15,000 m with 1,000 kg payload | 1 m 21.71 s | Record |
1993-05-20 | C-1i (3) | Time to climb to 15,000 m | 2 m 6 s | Record |
1993-05-20 | C-1i (3) | Time to climb to 15,000 m with 1,000 kg payload | 2 m 6 s | Record |
1993-05-20 | C-1i (3) | Maximum payload to 15,000 m | 1,015 kg | Record |
1993-05-20 | C-1i (3) | Maximum altitude with 1,000 kg payload | 22,250 m | Record |
Honours and awards
- This article incorporates information from the equivalent article on the Russian Wikipedia.
- Hero of the Soviet Union (1989) - for courage and heroism in the development of the Su-27
- Order of Merit for the Fatherland, 3rd class (29 July 1999) - for services to the state, a large contribution to the development, creation of modern aviation technology and years of diligent work
- Order of Lenin (1989)
- Order of the Badge of Honour (1983)
- Order for Personal Courage
- Honoured Test Pilot of the USSR (1991)
- Order of Ivan Kalita (Moscow Region, 1 August 2008)
- Prize Laureate. Vladimir Vysotsky's "Own Track"
- Jubilee Medal "300 Years of the Russian Navy"
- Medal "In Commemoration of the 850th Anniversary of Moscow"
References
- ↑ The Illustrated Directory of Fighters By Mike Spick