Thumb Old MiG-21Thumb Aero L-29 DelfinThumb Mil Mi-2 and Aero L-29 DelfinThumb РОССИЯThumb турбовинтовыми двигателями Антонова АИ-24

Mil Mi-2 and Aero L-29 Delfin

The Mil Mi-2 (NATO reporting name Hoplite) is a small, lightly armored turbine-powered transport helicopter that could also provide close air support when armed with 57 mm rockets and a 23 mm cannon.

Design and development
The Mi-2 was produced exclusively in Poland, in the WSK "PZL-Świdnik" factory in Świdnik.

The first production helicopter in the Soviet Union was the Mil Mi-1, modelled along the lines of the S-51 and Bristol Sycamore and flown by Mikhail Mil's bureau in September 1948. During the 1950s it became evident, and confirmed by American and French development, that helicopters could be greatly improved with turbine engines. S. P. Isotov developed the GTD-350 engine and Mil used two of these in the far superior Mi-2.

The twin shaft-turbine engines used in the Mi-2 develop 40% more power than the Mi-1's piston engines, for barely half the engine weight, with the result that the payload was more than doubled. The Mi-2 fuselage was extensively altered from its predecessor, with the engines mounted overhead. However, the external dimensions remained similar.

After initial development at the Mil bureau (Soviet designation V-2) the project was transferred to Poland in 1964, after the first Świdnik-built example had flown (making this the only Soviet-designed helicopter to be built solely outside the Soviet Union). PZL-Świdnik produced a total of 5,497 units, about a third for military users. The factory also developed fiberglass rotor blades, and developed the wide-body Mi-2M seating 10 passengers instead of eight. Most typical kits include four stretchers for air ambulance usage, or aerospraying or cropdusting applications.

In Poland, there were also developed several specialized military variants for support or reconnaissance roles, with 23 mm autocannon, machine guns and/or two 57 mm rocket pods, four 9K11 Malyutka anti-tank missiles or Strela-2 AA missiles.

Operational history
The Mi-2 was first introduced into the Soviet Air Force in 1965. The Mi-2 is used by mainly former Soviet and Eastern Bloc countries, although it was also purchased by Mexico and Myanmar armed forces.

Most of the armed Mi-2 variants were used by Poland. Some were also used by the former East Germany (with machine gun and unguided rocket armament only).

North Korea still maintains a large active fleet of Mi-2s.

Aero L-29 Delfin (left side)
The Aero L-29 Delfín (English: Dolphin, NATO reporting name: Maya) is a military jet trainer aircraft that became the standard jet trainer for the air forces of Warsaw Pact nations in the 1960s. It was Czechoslovakia's first locally designed and built jet aircraft.

Source: Wikipedia

10 favorites and 5 comments

favorites
  • boro.boro sur flickrboro.boro (Carlos)
  • Brandon Chitwood. Photography sur flickrBrandon Chitwood. Photography (Brandon Chitwood)
  • jgurbisz sur flickrjgurbisz (Justin Gurbisz)
  • JohnC757 sur flickrJohnC757 (Johnny Cuppens)
  • lddb72 sur flickrlddb72
  • Noro8 sur flickrNoro8
  • RiddimRyder sur flickrRiddimRyder
  • Whitney Lake sur flickrWhitney Lake (Whitney Lake)
  • Wojciech Mikoś sur flickrWojciech Mikoś
  • www.MatthewHampshire.com sur flickrwww.MatthewHampshire.com
comments

Location

World map

Metadata

You can also view metadata statistics graphically.

Photo albums

View all albums as cover photo or as simple text links

5 tags

English translation

You have asked to visit this site in English. For now, only the interface is translated, but not all the content yet.

If you want to help me in translations, your contribution is welcome. All you need to do is register on the site, and send me a message asking me to add you to the group of translators, which will give you the opportunity to translate the pages you want. A link at the bottom of each translated page indicates that you are the translator, and has a link to your profile.

Thank you in advance.

Document created the 31/01/2014, last modified the 27/09/2024
Source of the printed document:https://www.gaudry.be/en/photos/set-flying-machines/066543898126200011613008.html

The infobrol is a personal site whose content is my sole responsibility. The text is available under CreativeCommons license (BY-NC-SA). The photos are under Creative Commons license (BY-NC-ND).More info on the terms of use and the author.