Alenia Aermacchi M-346

Started by dy031101, August 09, 2009, 11:31:32 AM

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dy031101

I'll start this thread with a possible what-if and/or future history:

http://www.flightglobal.com/blogs/the-dewline/2009/08/alenia-eyes-son-of-yak-for-usa.html

Yup, this scenario pits the M-346 (a jet plane) against the turboprop-powered types that we've all known and loved.
To the individual soldiers, *everything* is a frontal assault!

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B777LR

To say the M-346 is the son of a Yak, you would also have to say the Yak is the son of an Alenia Aermacchi. And if the M-346 is an updated Yak-130, it is also an updated M-346. And it is NOT Soviet, it was designed long after the Soviet Union. 

dy031101

Quote from: B787 on August 09, 2009, 01:35:23 PM
To say the M-346 is the son of a Yak, you would also have to say the Yak is the son of an Alenia Aermacchi. And if the M-346 is an updated Yak-130, it is also an updated M-346. And it is NOT Soviet, it was designed long after the Soviet Union. 

I'm not endorsing the "son of a Yak" statement, either, thinking that the first Yak-130 served as the common basis for the modern day Yak-130 and M-346......?
To the individual soldiers, *everything* is a frontal assault!

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McGreig

Quote from: B787 on August 09, 2009, 01:35:23 PM
To say the M-346 is the son of a Yak, you would also have to say the Yak is the son of an Alenia Aermacchi. And if the M-346 is an updated Yak-130, it is also an updated M-346. And it is NOT Soviet, it was designed long after the Soviet Union. 
Eh?? :unsure: :blink:

Comrade! He doesn't say that the aircraft is Soviet but that it's "the descendant of Soviet aeronautical skills", which seems absolutely correct - the Soviet Union didn't collapse until 1991 and the Yak-130 was designed in response to a Soviet Air Force requirement issued in the late Eighties by a design team created and trained in the Soviet Union.

Also, what is the problem with "Son of Yak"? The Yak-130 was designed by Yak before the partnership was struck with Aermacchi in 1994 (the first prototype left the assembly shop in November 1994) and, as the article says, the M-346 is essentially a westernised and updated version of the Yak-130.

And, Comrade, surely it is better to be son of Yak, which produced a major series of war winning fighters than son of Macchi which, errmm, didn't - - - :wacko:

NARSES2

Quote from: McGreig on August 09, 2009, 05:26:27 PM
[And, Comrade, surely it is better to be son of Yak, which produced a major series of war winning fighters than son of Macchi which, errmm, didn't - - - :wacko:

Well I've heard of "Son's of Camels" before but never the "Son of a Yak" - have to remember that one next time I'm in Mongolia  ;D
Do not condemn the judgement of another because it differs from your own. You may both be wrong.

jcf

Quote from: McGreig on August 09, 2009, 05:26:27 PM

And, Comrade, surely it is better to be son of Yak, which produced a major series of war winning fighters than son of Macchi which, errmm, didn't - - - :wacko:

Yet Macchi produced some of the loveliest aircraft ever, something that cannot be said about Yakovlev.  ;D


thedarkmaster



i like the Yak 130, in fact i like Yak's cant really say that about Macchi's  ;D
Everything looks better with the addition of British Roundels!



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dy031101

Few single-engine aircraft could be configured to carry as big a cannon as the Yak-9UT.  ;D
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lancer

Interesting thread. especially as I'm currently building a Yak 130 for this years SIG display.
If you love, love without reservation; If you fight, fight without fear - THAT is the way of the warrior

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redstar72

Quote from: joncarrfarrelly on August 10, 2009, 09:36:23 AM

Yet Macchi produced some of the loveliest aircraft ever, something that cannot be said about Yakovlev.  ;D


I also like Macchi MC-202/205, they were beautiful-looking fighters, but... Yak-9U is the most beautiful!



It's my IMHO.
Really, it's not a good theme for a discussion. For example, I think that Skyraider and Ar 240 were ugly, but I know people who love them.

Quote from: dy031101 on August 10, 2009, 09:57:23 AM

Few single-engine aircraft could be configured to carry as big a cannon as the Yak-9UT.  ;D


I think you meant Yak-9K? It was armed with 45-mm Nudelman-Suranov NS-45 cannon.


http://www.airwar.ru/enc/fww2/yak9k.html

Yak-9UT, the Yak-9U version (I consider Yak-9 and Yak-9U as two different aircraft), also could be armed with it - but only as a prototype. Serial aircraft carried one 23-mm and two 20-mm cannons:
http://www.airwar.ru/enc/fww2/yak9ut.html
Best regards,
Soviet Aviation enthusiast

redstar72

If anybody need good Yak-130 drawings (to build a model, or as blanks for profiles), you can get them here:
http://www.airwar.ru/other/draw2/yak130aiv.html
Best regards,
Soviet Aviation enthusiast

jcf

Quote from: redstar72 on August 11, 2009, 06:33:28 AM

Yet Macchi produced some of the loveliest aircraft ever, something that cannot be said about Yakovlev.  ;D


Who said anything about Macchi fighters?
The racers folks, the racers.

dy031101

#12
Quote from: redstar72 on August 11, 2009, 06:33:28 AM
I think you meant Yak-9K? It was armed with 45-mm Nudelman-Suranov NS-45 cannon.
Quote from: redstar72 on August 11, 2009, 06:33:28 AM
Yak-9UT, the Yak-9U version (I consider Yak-9 and Yak-9U as two different aircraft), also could be armed with it - but only as a prototype. Serial aircraft carried one 23-mm and two 20-mm cannons:
http://www.airwar.ru/enc/fww2/yak9ut.html

I stand corrected.

Alright, let's not get too carried away in the past glory now.  ;D

Hum...... wouldn't the M-346 be more of a high-performance aircraft compared to other turboprop-powered contestants?

I found that loitering time, observation, rough field capabilities, and operation under harsh environments are qualities difficult to associate with a Western jet aircraft (despite the ancestrial root of the M-346)......

Do correct me if I'm wrong though.
To the individual soldiers, *everything* is a frontal assault!

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B777LR

Quote from: dy031101 on August 11, 2009, 09:33:50 AM
Hum...... wouldn't the M-346 be more of a high-performance aircraft compared to other turboprop-powered contestants?

I found that loitering time, observation, rough field capabilities, and operation under harsh environments are qualities difficult to associate with a Western jet aircraft (despite the ancestrial root of the M-346)......

Do correct me if I'm wrong though.

The M-346/Yak-130 is more capable than the BAe Hawk, and they have 2 engines. The M-346 is even capable of supersonic flight. They do the same job though, and the Yak-130/M-346 were designed with the specific purpose of being able to model the handlings of most modern aircraft, including Tucanos, EF2000s and Raptors.

McGreig

Quote from: B787 on August 11, 2009, 11:01:14 AM
The M-346/Yak-130 is more capable than the BAe Hawk
Hmm, I'm not so sure of that - they seem pretty evenly matched. The maximum speeds are similar (1,028 km/h Hawk 128, 1,050Km/h Production Yak-130), the Hawk has a longer range (2,520km as opposed to 2,000km) and they both carry 3,000kg of stores (although the Yak has more pylons). The Yak has two engines but, in a small aircraft with the engines relatively close to each other, does a twin have a significant survival/safety advantage?

Admittedly, the Hawk is conceptually 20 years older, but it as undergone continuous development. The Yak was originally designed as a pure trainer aimed at training pilots for fourth and fifth generation fighters and it has had to undergo considerable redesign to meet the current Russian requirement for a combined trainer and light combat aircraft.

More interestingly, Yefim Gordon's "OKB Yak" has some brief details (but no pictures) of projected four-seat versions of the Yak-130 for crew training and shipboard COD and of a projected single seat light attack aircraft and a UAV.

I'm tempted by the single seat version but can't decide whether to go for a "Hawk-200" look or keep the existing contours and simply plate over the rear canopy.