Myasishchev
Soviet aerospace design bureau
V. M. Myasishchev Experimental Design Bureau (Экспериментальный Машиностроительный Завод им. В. М. Мясищева) or OKB-23 , founded in 1951 by MGB UdSSR Vladimir Myasishchev , was one of the chief Soviet aerospace design bureaus until its dissolution in 1960. Vladimir Myasishchev went on to head TsAGI . In 1967, Myasishchev left TsAGI and recreated his bureau, which still exists to this day. The bureau prefix was "M." As of 2003[update] , its workforce is estimated at approximately one thousand. Myasishchev and NPO Molniya intend to use the V-MT or M-55 as launch vehicle for sub-orbital spaceflight .[ 1]
In July 2014, the merger of Myasishchev and Ilyushin to create a single modern production complex was announced by the Board of Directors of OAO Il.[ 2] [ 3]
Products
Myasishchev M-50
1940-1960
VM-1/DVB-102 : prototype long-range, high-altitude bomber, 1940
VM-2: projected version of VM-1 with M-20 diesel engines, 1940
VM-3/DVB-102N: projected version powered by M-120TK engines, 1940
VM-4: prototype version powered by M-71TK-3 engines, 1943
VM-5/DVB-102DM: projected version powered by MB-102TK engines, 1942
VM-6/Pe-2M-1 : Pe-2 with M-1 engines, 1943
VM-7/Pe-2B
VM-8/Pe-2D (Pe-6)
VM-9/Pe-2S
VM-10/Pe-3M
VM-11/Pe-2K
VM-12/Pe-2I
VM-13/Pe-2M
VM-14/DIS : long-range escort fighter prototype, 1945
VM-15/Pe-2RD
VM-16/DB-108 : long-range bomber prototype developed from the Pe-2, 1944
VM-17/DB-II-108 : prototype three crew version of VM-16, 1945
VM-18 : prototype four crew version of VM-16 with increased length and wingspan, 1945
VM-19/VB-109 : VM-17 rebuilt for two crew and same wingspan as the VM-16 and VM-17, 1945
VM-20/Pe-2F
VM-21/Pe-2R
VM-22/DVB-202: projected four-engine strategic long-range, high-altitude bomber, 1944
VM-23/DVB-302: projected four-engine strategic long-range, high-altitude bomber, 1945
VM-24/RB-17: projected tactical jet bomber, 1945
M-25/M-4 "Bison" : company designation for M-4
M-26 (I) : M-4 powered by VD-7 engines, 1951
M-26 (II) : projected four-engine military transport aircraft, 1960
M-27 : projected two or four engine jet airliner, 1952
M-28/2M : four-engine high-altitude bomber, 1951
M-29/M-6P : projected airliner derived from the M-4, 1953
M-30 (I) : projected high-altitude reconnaissance aircraft, 1953
M-30 (II) : nuclear powered canard wing supersonic bomber, 1959
M-31 : projected transonic strategic bomber, 1952
M-32 : projected delta-wing supersonic strategic bomber, 1953
M-33 : Yak-1000 development, 1951
M-34 : transonic bomber, 1953
M-36 : company designation for 3M
M-39 : 3M powered by VD-7V turbojets, 1957
M-50 "Bounder" prototype supersonic bomber, 1954
M-51 : unmanned M-50, 1956
M-52 : supersonic strategic missile carrier developed from the M-50, 1956
M-53 : projected SST, 1958
M-54 : tailless delta-wing supersonic strategic missile carrier, 1959
M-55 : various SST studies, 1958
M-56 : canard or delta supersonic strategic missile carrier, 1956, very similar to XB-70
M-57 : nuclear powered bomber project, 1959[ 4]
M-58 : tailless supersonic bomber, 1958
M-59 : canard wing supersonic missile carrier, 1959
M-60 : nuclear powered bomber project developed from the M-50, 1955
M-70 : supersonic flying boat, 1955
1967-present
M-12 : STOL/VTOL utility aircraft, 1968
M-13 : military transport, 1968
M-17 "Mystic-A" : high-altitude reconnaissance aircraft, 1970
M-18 : supersonic bomber design, 1972; cancelled in favor of the Tupolev Tu-160
M-19 : hypersonic air and space plane; various engine and fuel types, 1974
M-20 : strategic multi-regime supersonic bomber, many aerodynamic configurations, 1968
M-25 : supersonic attack aircraft, used its own shockwave as a weapon, 1969
M-35/VM-T : 2 M-4s converted to carry the space shuttle Buran , 1977
M-52 eight-engine heavy transport aircraft, 1979
M-55 "Mystic-B" : high-altitude research and reconnaissance aircraft, 1985
M-60 : widebody airliner projects; many variants, 1985-2003
M-61/M-17PV : development of M-17, 1984
M-62 Oryol : high-altitude remote-controlled drone, 1975
M-63 : high-altitude aircraft, 1981
M-65/M-17P : M-17 development, 1986
M-67 : high-altitude observation aircraft, 1987
M-70 Gzhel : single-engine business/executive transport aircraft, 1989; renamed to M-101
M-72 Yamal twin-engine amphibious aircraft, 1989
M-80 two or four-engine VTOL transport aircraft, 1994
M-90 Air Ferry: very heavy multi-purpose transport project, 1992. Not built.
M-101 Gzhel : single-engine business/executive transport aircraft, 1992
M-102 Duet : twin-engine business/executive transport aircraft, 1989
M-103 Skif : experimental heavy bomber, 1990
M-104 : project
M-105 : twin-engine business/executive transport aircraft developed from the M-102, 1994
M-111 : twin-engine business/executive transport project, revision of 1975 German AMC-111 project, 1993
M-112 : twin-engine business/executive transport aircraft, German-Russian joint project, 1993
M-120 : twin-engine business/executive transport aircraft
M-121 : twin-engine business/executive transport aircraft
M-150 : twin-engine, 150 passenger short-range airliner, 1995
M-200 Master : military advanced trainer project, 1992. Not built.
M-201 Sokol : twin-engine business/executive transport aircraft, 1992
M-202 Olyon : 19 passenger twin-engine feederliner developed from the M-102, 1997
M-203 Barsuk : single-engine light utility aircraft, 1995
M-205 : two-seat light attack aircraft, 1996
M-207 : advanced trainer developed from the M-205, 1996
M-302 Kuryer : twin-engine business/executive transport aircraft for Iran, 1993
M-500 : agricultural utility aircraft
Spacecraft
Missiles
References
Bibliography
Butowski, Piotr (July–August 1999). "Supersonic Mysasischchevs: More Details on the OKB's Frustrated Bombers". Air Enthusiast (82): 2– 5. ISSN 0143-5450 .
External links
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