Yatsenko I-28

Yatsenko I-28
Role Single-seat fighter
National origin Soviet Union
Manufacturer Yatsenko OKB
Designer Vladmir Yatsenko
First flight 10 June 1939
Number built 7


The Yatsenko I-28 was a 1930s Soviet single-seat fighter designed by Vladmir Yatsenko and first flown in 1939.[1][2] The I-28 was a low-wing cantilever monoplane of mixed construction powered by a 900 hp (671 kW) Tumansky M-87 radial piston engine.[1] It had an enclosed single-seat cockpit with a rearwards sliding canopy.[1] The wing had an inverted-gull shape to reduce the length of the retractable main landing legs.[1] The prototype was destroyed shortly after the first flight but an order was placed for 30 production aircraft.[1] Also ordered was a prototype of an attack version, the I-28Sh.[1] Although the first five production aircraft were completed the programme was cancelled in early 1940.[1]

Variants

I-28.1
First prototype powered by a Tumansky M-87A radial engine.[2]
I-28.2
Second prototype powered by a Tumansky M-87B radial engine.[2]
I-28
Production variant, canceled.[1]
I-28Sh
Proposed attack variant, not built.[1]

Specifications (I.28-2)

Data from [2]The History of Soviet Aircraft from 1918

General characteristics

Performance


References

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 1.8 Orbis 1985, p. 3116
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Nemecek 1986, pp. 408-409

Bibliography