Showing posts with label Su-34 Fullback. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Su-34 Fullback. Show all posts

Russia producing new Su-34 bombers


Russia's Air Force should get at least five new state-of-the-art Sukhoi Su-34 fighter bombers this year.
Sukhoi said Monday it had just commenced full-scale production of the Su-34 Fullback fighter bomber at a Novosibirsk-based aircraft-manufacturing plant, a subsidiary of Sukhoi Aircraft Holding, the RIA Novosti news agency reported.
"In 2008, our plant will increase its production capacity by 15-20 percent and will manufacture at least five Su-34 aircraft, while modernizing 20 Su-24 Fencer planes," said Alexander Kalashnikov, deputy general director of the Novosibirsk plant according to the report.
RIA Novosti said the Su-34 could prove to be a world leader for the next generation of combat aircraft. The news agency said the Russian Air Force planned to buy 70 of them by 2015 to take over from its current front line fighter bomber fleet of about 300 aging Sukhoi Su-24s. The Su-24s are still being upgraded to give them a longer operational life, the report said.
RIA Novosti said the first two serial-production Su-34s were bought by the Russian Defense Ministry in 2007 and that since then they have been based at the Lipetsk pilot training center where they have been used to train combat pilots.
RIA Novosti said the Su-34 fighter-bomber cost $36 million per unit. It described the plane as "a two-seat strike aircraft fitted with twin AL-31MF afterburner turbojet engines (which was) is designed to deliver high-precision strikes on heavily-defended targets under any weather conditions, day or night."
The report said the Su-34 was armed with a 30-mm GSh-301 cannon, up to 12 Alamo or Archer AAMs, ASMs, and bombs.

Russian Air Force Ready To Get 100 Su-35 & Su-34 By 2015




 
The Russian Air Force will receive up to 100 Sukhoi fighter jets by 2015, the Defense Ministry spokesman said on Sunday.

Three state contracts with the Sukhoi design bureau on the supply of the jets have been already signed, Vladimir Drik said.
Fifty advanced Su-35 Flanker-E multirole fighters, billed as "4++ generation using fifth-generation technology," more than ten advanced Su-27SM Flanker multirole jets and five Su-30M2 Flanker-C multirole fighters are among the aircraft to be supplied.

The Russian Air Force will also receive twenty-five new Su-34 Fullback fighter-bombers in the next few years, the spokesman said.



Russian Air Force Wants To Get 120 Sukhoi Su-34 Strike Aircraft Until 2020- MAKS 2011



 The Russian air force wants to procure 120 Sukhoi Su-34 strike aircraft, the service's commander has revealed.
Speaking at the MAKS air show in Moscow, Gen Aleksander Zelin said five squadrons will eventually be armed with the two-seat type, with each to have 24 aircraft.
The Russian defence ministry's procurement plan for this year includes 12 Su-34s, and production activities at Sukhoi's NAPO plant in Novosibirsk are gradually picking up.
Orders have been confirmed for 32 Su-34s so far, with seven of these having been accepted into squadron service and a handful more being used by the defence ministry's weapons-assessment units and industry.




The air force is now working with United Aircraft and Sukhoi to firm-up contacts for follow-on batches, and intends to have 70 of the aircraft operational in 2015.
The Su-34 holds a prominent position in Russia's state arms-acquisition programme, which was validated earlier this year and runs until 2020.
It has been developed as a replacement for the air force's Su-24 swing-wing strike aircraft, currently the most numerous type in its combat aircraft inventory and the backbone of its frontal bomber units.
Powered by two AL-31FM engines - developed by NPO Saturn and produced by MMPP Salut - the Su-34 can carry 8,000kg (17,600lb) of weapons on 12 hard points.
In 2010, Russian president Dmitry Medvedev offered Beijing an export version dubbed the Su-32, but there has been no indication so far that China, or any other international customer, is seeking to acquire the aircraft.
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