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Ilyushin Il-28

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The Ilyushin Il-28 is a jet bomber aircraft of the immediate post war period that was originally manufactured for the Soviet Air Force. It was the USSR's first such aircraft to enter large-scale production. It was also licence-built in China as the Harbin H-5. Total production in the USSR was 6,316 aircraft, and over 319 H-5s were built. Only 187 examples of the HJ-5 training variant were manufactured. In the 1990s hundreds remained in service with various air forces over 40 years after the Il-28 first appeared.

The Il-28 has USAF/DoD reporting name "Type 27"[1] and NATO reporting name 'Beagle',[2][3] while the Il-28U trainer variant has USAF/DoD reporting name "Type 30"[1] and NATO reporting name "Mascot".[4][5]

Design and development

The aircraft is conventional in layout, with high, unswept wings carrying large engine nacelles beneath them. The bombardier is accommodated in the glazed nose, and the other end of the fuselage carries a turret with two 23 mm cannons. These features make it resemble the World War II medium bombers that preceded it, but the swept tail surfaces and the pilot's bubble canopy and ejector seat were more similar to other aircraft of its own era, making it a blend of old and new features.

Operational history

File:Preserved Ilyushin Il-28.jpg
Ilyushin Il-28 monument at Tambov, Russia

The Il-28 was widely exported, serving in the air arms of some 20 nations ranging from the Warsaw Pact to various Middle-Eastern and African air forces. Egypt was an early customer, and targeting Egyptian Il-28s on the ground was a priority for the Israeli Air Force during the Suez Crisis, Six Day War, and Yom Kippur War. The Soviet Union was in the process of providing the type for local assembly in Cuba when this was halted by the Cuban Missile Crisis, after which Nikita Khrushchev agreed to remove them. The type also saw limited use in Vietnam and with the Afghan forces in Afghanistan. Four ex-Egyptian and two ex-Soviet Il-28s (all with Egyptian crews) were operated by the Nigerian Air Force in the Biafra Wars. Yemeni Il-28s took part in the civil war in that country. Finland also had four examples of this type delivered between 1961 and 1966 for target-towing duties. They remained in service until the 1980s.

The Soviet Union withdrew the type in the 1980s, while the last Soviet-built examples were still flying in Egypt into the 1990s. Chinese-built Il-28s designated H-5 and built by HAMC were also flying in the 1990s with several hundred in China itself, and a smaller number in North Korea and Romania. The three main Chinese versions are the H-5 bomber, followed by the HJ-5 trainer, and the H-5R (HZ-5) long range (in comparison to the reconnaissance version of Shenyang J-6) reconnaissance aircraft, and later, the HD-5 ECM/ESM version. The latter two types have been phased out.

The type is known to still be in active frontline service the North Korean Air Force in respectable numbers, although little is known as to whether they are a mix of survivors from the batch of 24 Soviet manufactured aircraft delivered in the 1960s and some of the newer Chinese built H-5 variant, or are solely H-5s.

First Il-28 in the West

On 11 November 1965, Li Xianbin (李显斌), a PLAAF captain of an Ilyushin Il-28 of the 8th division defected by flying his bomber numbered 0195 from Jianqiao (笕桥) air base in Hangzhou to Chiang Kai-shek International Airport, Taiwan and this was the first fully operational Il-28 in western hands. The radio operator / tail gunner Lian Baosheng (廉保生) was found dead at the scene and the navigator Li Caiwang (李才旺) was captured alive after a failed suicide attempt. Both survivors were honored and rewarded positions in the Republic of China Air Force. Li Xianbin (李显斌) was rewarded 2,000 taels (approximately 70 kg) of gold, while Li Caiwang (李才旺) was rewarded 1,000 taels (approximately 35 kg) of gold. Since Lian Baosheng (廉保生) was dead, his reward of 1,000 taels (approximately 35 kg) of gold was divided evenly among Li Xianbin (李显斌) and Li Caiwang (李才旺).

Variants

Soviet Union variants

  • Il-28 – Three-seat bomber version
  • Il-28D – Long-range nuclear bomber for the Soviet Air Force
  • Il-28R – Three-seat tactical reconnaissance version
  • Il-28REB – Electronic warfare, electronic jamming version
  • Il-28RTR – Elecronic reconnaissance version
  • Il-28S – Swept-wing version, scrapped before it was completed
  • Il-28TTorpedo bomber version for the Soviet Naval Aviation able to accommodate one large or two small torpedoes in a lengthened weapons bay.
  • Il-28P – Civil conversion for Aeroflot mail service. By some accounts, also denoted Il-20
  • Il-28U – Training version
  • Il-28ZA – Atmospheric sampling version

Chinese variants

  • H-5 – Chinese bomber version
  • HJ-5 – Chinese trainer version
  • H-5R or (HZ-5): Phased out Chinese long range photo reconnaissance version
  • HD-5 – Chinese ECM/ESM version being phased out
  • H-5 Testbed – Chinese testbed for ejection seat, eventually replaced by the testbed version Shenyang J-6
  • B-5 – Export designation of the H-5

Czechoslovakian variants

  • B-228 – Il-28s built by Avia under licence in Czechoslovakia
  • CB-228 – Il-28Us built by Avia under licence in Czechoslovakia

Operators

File:II-28 Beagle Iraq 2.jpeg
An Iraqi Il-28 bomber junked at Al Taqaddum, Iraq.
File:II-28 Beagle Iraq 1.jpg
Another Iraqi Il-28 bomber seen from the rear.
Template:AFG
54 aircraft acquired (including four Il-28U examples) from 1957. Only trainers were retained beyond 1994.[6][7] All grounded during the civil war in the 1990s.
Template:ALB
Aviation Regiment 4020 operated one Il-28 acquired in 1957 attached to 2 Skuadrilja (2nd Squadron). This aircraft was traded for an H-5, the Chinese version of the Soviet Il-28, in 1971 and retired from service in 1992.[8]. This is now apparently rotting at Tirana International Airport (see Google Earth, 41°24'43.77N , 19°42'54.30"E)
Template:DZA
Template:BUL
14 Il-28Rs and one Il-28U received in 1955 and retired in 1974.
Template:CHN
Template:CUB
A total of 36 received[9] in 1962, but soon returned to the Soviet Union as a result of the Cuban Missile Crisis.[6]
Template:CZS
Both Soviet-built Il-28 and Il-28Us and Avia-built B-228 and CB-228s operated.[6] 90 Il-28s, 30 Il-28RTs and an unknown number of Il-28Us were delivered from 1954 and operated until 1973.
Template:DDR
Operated 12 Il-28s and one Il-28U aircraft, primarily on target tug and engine testing duties between 1954 and 1982.
Template:EGY
Received 70 Czechoslovakia-built Il-28s in 1956, shortly before the Suez Crisis. Some IL-28s still in service for limeted use.
Template:FIN
Received four aircraft in the 1960s, and used as target tugs until 1981.[6]
Template:HUN
80 Il-28s, two Il-28Rs and six Il-28Us received from both USSR and Czechoslovakia and used between 1954 and 1972.
Template:IDN
21 Skadron based at Kemayoran Air Force Base, Jakarta received 12 Il-28s acquired in 1961. Aircraft were used during Operation Trikora in 1962 (the handover of Western New Guinea to Indonesia from the Netherlands). All of the aircraft were grounded in 1969 and retired in 1970.
Template:IRQ
Template:NGA
Template:PRK
Operates an unknown number of IL-28 and H-5 aircraft.
Template:POL
Received 72 Il-28s, 15 Il-28Rs and an unknown number of Il-28Us. The first aircraft arrived in 1952, last was retired in 1986.
Template:ROM
About 22 Il-28s, three Il-28Rs and eight Il-28Us, both Soviet- and Chinese-built, operated from 1955. All remaining Il-28s were retired from service by June 2001.
Template:SOM
Template:Country data South Yemen
Template:USSR
About 1,500 served with the Soviet Air Forces and the Soviet Navy (Soviet Naval Aviation), with operations beginning in 1950. Front line operations continued through the 1950s, with a few examples remaining into the 1980s. A small number of demilitarized aircraft were provided to Aeroflot.[6]
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Specifications (Il-28)

Data from [citation needed]

General characteristics

  • Crew: Three (pilot, bombardier, gunner)
  • Length: 17.60 m (57 ft 9 in)
  • Wingspan: 21.50 m (70 ft 6 in)
  • Height: 6.70 m (22 ft 0 in)
  • Wing area: 60.8 m² (654 ft²)
  • Empty weight: 11,890 kg (26,210 lb)
  • Loaded weight: 17,700 kg (39,000 lb)
  • Max takeoff weight: 21,200 kg (46,700 lb)
  • Powerplant:Klimov VK-1 turbojets, 26.5 kN ()5,955 lbf each

Performance

Armament

  • Guns: 4 × Nudelman NR-23 cannons (2 in nose and 2 in tail barbette)
  • Bombs: 3,000 kg (6,600 lb) of bombs in internal bay


See also

Related development

Comparable aircraft

Related lists

References

External links

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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Ilyushin Il-28".