Su-15 Flagon
Sukhoi Su-15 Flagon : The Boeing-Killer
The Sukhoi Su-15 (NATO reporting name: Flagon) is a twinjet supersonic interceptor aircraft developed by the Soviet Union. It entered service in 1965 and remained one of the front-line designs into the 1990s.[1] The Su-15 was designed to replace the Sukhoi Su-11 and Sukhoi Su-9, which were becoming obsolete as NATO introduced newer and more capable strategic bombers.
Recognizing the limitations of the earlier Su-9 and Su-11 in intercepting the new Boeing B-52 Stratofortress, particularly in terms of radar and aircraft performance, the Sukhoi OKB quickly began the development of a heavily revised and more capable aircraft. A variety of development aircraft evolved, including the Sukhoi T-49, which shared the fuselage of the Su-9 (including its single engine), but used cheek-mounted intakes to leave the nose clear for a large radome for the RP-22 Oryol-D ("Eagle") radar (NATO "Skip Spin"), and the T-5, essentially a heavily modified Su-11 with a widened rear fuselage containing two Tumansky R-11 engines.
These led to the T-58, which combined the twin engines with a modified version of the T-49's nose, but with side inlets further back, behind the cockpit. It was approved for production on 5 February 1962, as the Su-15, and the prototype first flew on 30 May 1962. It entered service testing 5 August 1963, but its service entry was delayed by political infighting with the Yakovlev OKB over production line capacity in Novosibirsk, which was also building the Yak-28P. The Su-15 proved to be superior in most respects other than range, and it was officially commissioned on 3 April 1965. Series production began the following year, and it entered service with the PVO in 1967, replacing Su-9s, Su-11s, and Yakovlev Yak-25s. The initial Su-15 received the NATO reporting name "Flagon-A". A simplified trainer version, the Su-15UT (NATO "Flagon-C"), with no radar or combat capability, entered service in 1970.
Initial delta-winged Su-15s had poor take-off and landing characteristics, and so Sukhoi investigated a new wing design with extended wingtips (increasing wing area) and boundary layer control. Su-15s with the new wing went into production in 1969. They were dubbed "Flagon-D" by NATO, although the Soviet designation was unchanged.
Also in 1969 testing began of the upgraded Su-15T with the Volkov Taifun ("Typhoon") radar, which was based on the MiG-25's powerful RP-25 Smerch-A ("Tornado") radar (NATO "Foxfire"). The Taifun proved troublesome, however, and ceased production after only 10 aircraft had been built. It was followed in December 1971 by the Su-15TM (NATO "Flagon-E"), with the improved Taifun-M radar (NATO "Twin Scan") and provision for UPK-23-250 gun pod or R-60 (AA-8 "Aphid") short-range air-to-air missiles. Aerodynamic demands forced a redesign of the radome with an ogival shape, earning a new NATO reporting name, "Flagon-F", although again the Soviet designation did not change. A comparable combat-capable trainer, the Su-15UM (NATO "Flagon-G"), followed from 1976. The final Su-15UMs, the last Su-15s produced, came off the line in 1979.
Various OKB proposals for upgraded Su-15s with better engines and aerodynamics to satisfy a VVS requirement for a long-range tactical fighter were rejected in favour of the Mikoyan MiG-23 fighter.
Korean Air Lines Flight 007
Korean Air Lines Flight 007 (KE007/KAL007) was a scheduled Korean Air Lines flight from New York City to Seoul via Anchorage, Alaska. On September 1, 1983, the flight was shot down by a Soviet Sukhoi Su-15 interceptor aircraft. The Boeing 747 airliner was en route from Anchorage to Seoul, but owing to a navigational mistake made by the crew, the airliner drifted from its planned route and flew through Soviet prohibited airspace over underground silos with intercontinental ballistic missiles. The Soviet Air Forces treated the unidentified aircraft as an intruding U.S. spy plane, and destroyed it with air-to-air missiles, after firing warning shots. The South Korean airliner eventually crashed into the sea near Moneron Island west of Sakhalin in the Sea of Japan, killing all 246 passengers and 23 crew aboard, including Larry McDonald, a United States representative. It is the worst Korean Airlines disaster to date. The Soviet Union found the wreckage under the sea two weeks later on September 15 and found the flight recorders in October, but this information was kept secret by the Soviet authorities until 1992, after the country's dissolution.
CONTROLS
Just like normal planes~!
AG1 for Airbrakes
AG5 for Drag chutes
ARMAMENTS
×2 UPK-23-250 23mm Gun Pods
×1 R-98MR (Semi-Active Radar)
×1 R-98MT (Infrared Homing)
Fly Safe n Search some Boeing Comrades~!
Specifications
Spotlights
- Trainzo yesterday
- WritersCrusadersAirCo2 yesterday
General Characteristics
- Created On Android
- Wingspan 24.9ft (7.6m)
- Length 64.1ft (19.5m)
- Height 14.5ft (4.4m)
- Empty Weight N/A
- Loaded Weight 19,719lbs (8,944kg)
Performance
- Power/Weight Ratio 8.41
- Wing Loading 79.8lbs/ft2 (389.4kg/m2)
- Wing Area 247.2ft2 (23.0m2)
- Drag Points 5171
Parts
- Number of Parts 309
- Control Surfaces 0
- Performance Cost 1,157
Tags For Comrades~! 2
@SuperSuperTheSylph
Tags For Comrades~! 1
@YarisSedan
@Pnut
@WritersCrusadersAirCo2
Boeing 747-200 Korean Air Lines Flight 007
By @Footballbilibili
https://www.simpleplanes.com/a/h06EbU/Boeing-747-200-Korean-Air-Lines-Flight-007
NICE ONE COMRADE!!
FLAG ON!
@Trainzo flattered by ur word duh, tysm (≧▽≦)
@Pnut just normal recipe for Defending The Motherland's Skies XD
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Yep, it's intended to replace the Su-7, Su-9, Su-11 if i remember, and it has the MiG-25's Radar, Flagon is born lol
Flies very good for a Speedy boi, the plane look like if SU-7 and MiG 25 had a child. Comrade is cooking good stuff again lol
Great plane , great screens , just GREAT . Waooh .
@OverlordPrime @SpetzavodHeavyIndustries
Oграничение скорости, установленное самолетами.
(Speed limit enforced by aircraft.)
Come on We can hunt F-5E/F Tiger II, F-4 Phantom II, And F-8 Crusader
@SpetzavodHeavyIndustries thanks, I appreciate that. But your builds have something that is better than what most of what I built my planes. But hey, you did great! :)
@WritersCrusadersAirCo2 im quite flattered u sayying this to me, anyways tysm 🔥
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Ur builds looking awesome with those decals (≧▽≦)
@OverlordPrime
*Sir, they fly over the underground ICBM Silos
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Release the "OH LOOK A CIVILIAN AIRLINERS- 🚀✈️🔥💥
Amazing Aircraft! Those Screenshots look Beautiful! ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
NO TRESPASSING
LAW ENFORCED BY INTERCEPTOR