MiG-29 FULCRUM (MIKOYAN-GUREVICH)

The MiG-29 is marketed worldwide and equals or surpasses the F-15C in several areas. The MiG-29's wings are swept-back and tapered with square tips. LERXs are wide and curved down to the front. LERX begins on the nose below the mid-mount point, and the wings’ trailing edges end at a high-mounted point. Twin jet engines are mounted low and to the sides of the fuselage. Diagonal-shaped air intakes give a box-like appearance. There is a large exhausts. The fuselage is made of a long, thin, slender body with long, pointed drooping nose. There is a high-mounted bubble canopy. The tail fins have sharply tapered leading edges, canted outward with angular, cutoff tips. Flats are high-mounted on the fuselage, movable, swept-back, and tapered with a negative slant.

The US Department of Defense of the United States of America and the Ministry of Defense of the Republic of Moldova recently reached an agreement to implement the Cooperative Threat Reduction accord signed on June 23, 1997, in Moldova. The Pentagon pounced on the planes after learning Iran had inspected the jets and expressed an interest in adding them to their inventory. Although Iran already flies the less-capable Fulcrum A, it doesn't own any of the more advanced C-models. Of the 21 Fulcrums the United States bought, 14 are the frontline Fulcrum C's, which contain an active radar jammer in its spine, six older A's and one B-model two-seat trainer. This agreement authorized the United States Government to purchase nuclear-capable MiG-29 fighter planes from the Government of Moldova. This is a joint effort by both Governments to ensure that these dual-use military weapons do not fall into the hands of rogue states. From Oct. 20 to Nov. 2, 1997, loadmasters and aerial port experts squeezed two MiGs apiece, sans wings and tails, into the cargo holds of C-17 Globemaster III transports from Charleston Air Force Base, S.C. The Charleston airlifters delivered the MiGs to the National Air Intelligence Center at Wright-Patterson AFB near Dayton, Ohio. If the NAIC can discover how the Fulcrum works, Air Force pilots might gain an edge if they face the Fulcrum in future combat. The MiG-29 is a widely exported aircraft, flown by Iraq, Iran, North Korea and Cuba.

 

Specifications

Country of Origin CIS (formerly USSR)
Similar Aircraft
  • F/A-18 Hornet
  • F-16 Fighting Falcon
  • F-15 Eagle
  • Su-27 Flanker
MANUFACTURER Moscow Air Production Organization
TYPE
  • all-weather
  • single-seat counter-air fighter
  • attack capability
Crew One
Power Plant Two Klimov/Sarkisov RD-33 turbofans
Thrust 22,200 pounds
Wingspan 36 feet and 5 inches
Height 15 feet and 6.25 inches
Length 56 feet and 10 inches
Weight (empty): 24,030 pounds
Maximum Speed Mach 2.3, 1,520 mph
Ceiling 18400 meters
Cruise range 905 nm
In-Flight Refueling No
Internal Fuel 4000kg
Payload 4000kg
Sensors Slot Back radar, IRST,RWR, Balistic bombsight
Drop Tanks Drop tank with 800kg of fuel for 90 nm range
Ferry tank with 1500kg of fuel for 255nm range
Armament
  • One 30mm GSh-30L cannon with 150 rounds
    Six AAMs including a mix of SARH and
  • AA- 8 Aphid (R60)
  • AA-10 Alamo (R27T)
  • AA-11 Archer (R73)
  • FAB 500-M62, FAB-1000, TN-100, ECM Pods, S-24
  • AS-12, AS-14
User Countries
  • Russia
  • Belarus
  • Bulgaria
  • CIS
  • Croatia
  • Cuba
  • Czech Republic
  • Germany
  • Hungary
  • India
  • Iran
  • Iraq
  • Kazakhstan
  • Malaysia
  • Moldova
  • North Korea
  • Poland
  • Romania
  • Slovakia
  • Syria
  • Turkemenistan
  • Ukraine
  • Uzbekistan
  • Yemen
  • Yugoslavia

Back to Booklet

Hosted by www.Geocities.ws

1