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Assuntos em discussão: Força Aérea Brasileira, forças aéreas estrangeiras e aviação militar.

Moderadores: Glauber Prestes, Conselho de Moderação

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#151 Mensagem por Einsamkeit » Ter Jun 21, 2005 12:12 am

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Orbital launch vehicle. Family: Energia. Country: Russia. Status: Hardware. Library of Congress Designation: J. Department of Defence Designation: SL-17. Article Number: 11K25.

The Energia-Buran Reusable Space System (MKS) was developed as a system that would duplicate the capabilities of the US shuttle system. This decision was taken on 12 February 1976 by the Soviet leadership (Brezhnev, Ustinov, Keldysh) following the loss of the moon race to America. This had pointed to serious deficiencies in the technology base of the Soviet Union. The time-honoured Soviet method of rectifying such situations was to copy the foreign technology. The Buran decision was contrary to the opinions of the Soviet Chief Designers, who favoured smaller reusable ballistic capsules or spaceplanes, and the Soviet military, which preferred a new family of modular, lower-tech, expendable launch vehicles.

Following extended development, Buran made a remarkably successful first unmanned flight on 15 November 1988, four years late to schedule. But the it would never fly again. The Soviet Union was crumbling, and the ambitious plans to build an orbiting defence shield, to renew the ozone layer, dispose of nuclear waste, illuminate polar cities, colonise the moon and Mars, were not to be. Funding dried up and the Buran program completely disappeared from the government's budget after 1993.


The Energia-Buran Reusable Space System (MKS) had its origins in NPO Energia studies of 1974 to 1975 for a 'Space Rocket Complex Program'. In 1974 the N1-L3 heavy lunar launch vehicle project was cancelled and Glushko was appointed chief designer of the new NPO Energia enterprise, replacing Mishin as the head of the former OKB-1. At the same time in the United States development work was underway on the space shuttle. The US Defence Department planned to use the shuttle for a range of military missions. The Soviet military, seeking strategic parity, wished development in the Soviet Union of a reusable manned spacecraft with analogous tactical-technical characteristics. The success of Apollo and the failure of the N1-L3 program pointed to serious deficiencies in the technology base of the Soviet Union. The time-honoured Soviet method of rectifying such situations was to copy the foreign technology.

The American shuttle design was studied intensively by Russian rocket scientists, but important aspects of it were rejected based on Soviet engineering analysis and technology:

The Soviet Union at this point had no experience in production of large solid rocket motors, especially segmented solid rocket motors of the type used on the shuttle. Glushko favoured a launch vehicle with parallel liquid propellant boosters. These would use a 700 tonne thrust four-chamber Lox/Kerosene engine already under development.

The high chamber pressure, closed-cycle, reusable 230 tonne thrust Lox/LH2 main engine being developed for the shuttle was well outside engineering experience in the Soviet Union. No engine using these cryogenic propellants had ever been used in Russian rockets, and the largest such engine under development was the 40 tonne thrust 11D57. Glushko believed that while a Soviet cryogenic engine of 200 tonnes thrust could be developed in the required time, to develop a reusable engine would be impossible due to limited experience with the propellants.

This conclusion led to other important design decisions. If only expendable engines were to be used, there was no need to house them in the re-entry vehicle for recovery. This meant that the orbiter itself could be moved from the lateral mounting of the space shuttle to an on-axis position at the top of the rocket core. The result was the Vulkan - a classic Soviet launch vehicle design: booster stages arranged around a core vehicle, with the payload mounted on top. The elimination of the lateral loads resulted in a lighter booster, and one that was much more flexible. The vehicle could be customised for a wide range of payloads by the use of from two to eight booster stages around a core equipped with from one to four modular main engines. Either a payload container for heavy payloads (Glushko's LEK lunar base) or the military's required spaceplane could be placed on the nose as the payload.

As far as the manned orbital vehicle itself, three different primary configurations were studied extensively, as well as a range of more radical proposals. The final choice was a straight aerodynamic copy of the US shuttle.

The government decree 132-51 authorising development of the Energia-Buran system was issued on 12 February 1976 with the title 'On development of an MKS (reusable space system) consisting of rocket stages, orbiter aircraft, inter-orbital tug, guidance systems, launch and landing facilities, assembly and repair facilities, and other associated facilities, with the objective of placing in a 200 km Northeast orbit a payload of 30 tonnes and returning a payload of 20 tonnes'. The Ministry of Defence was named the Program Manager, with NPO Energia as the prime contractor. The official military specification (TTZ) was issued at the same time with the code name Buran (the name Energia for the launch vehicle separately did not come into use until just before the launch). A declaration of the Presidium on 18 December 1976 directed co-operation between all concerned user, research, and factory organisations in realising the project. Chief Constructor within NPO Energia was I N Sadovskiy. Chief Designer for the launch vehicle was Y P Kolyako and for the orbiter P V Tsybin. NPO Yuzhnoye in the Ukraine would build the booster rockets.

The Vulkan was used as a starting point, but modified to meet this requirement. Wind tunnel tests were conducted on a wide range of possible arrangements of rocket stages and orbiter positions. In the end, Buran was moved to the lateral position, as with the US space shuttle. The main engines, for the reasons given earlier, remained in the core vehicle. The liquid boosters were retained, but reduced to four in number. After being re-stressed for the lateral launch loads, the resulting Energia launch vehicle had half the lift-off mass and payload of the Vulkan. This was sufficient to carry the Buran with its required internal payload of 30 tonnes.

The MKS draft project was completed on 12 December 1976. The military assigned the system the index number 1K11K25 and the launch vehicle the article number 11K25. The draft project was reviewed by the expert commission in July 1977, leading to a government decree 1006-323 of 21 November 1977 setting out the development plan. The technical project was completed in May 1978. The flight test plan at the beginning of the project foresaw first launch of the booster in 1983, with the payload being an unmanned OK-ML-1 mock-up of the orbiter. This would not have a heat shield and remain attached to the booster. A second mock-up, OK-ML-2, would be used on the second launch, but be separated from the vehicle after burnout. However it would also be without heat shield, and be expended. The first flight Buran was to fly unpiloted in 1984. Manned flights were to be routine by the 1987 seventieth anniversary of the Soviet Union.

The approved launch vehicle layout consisted of the core Block Ts stage, surrounded by 4 Block A liquid propellant boosters and the Buran orbiter or a payload canister. During assembly, transport, and on the pad these were attached to a Block Ya launch services module, which provided all pneumatic, electrical, hydraulic, and other services to the vehicle prior to launch.

The modular Energia design could be used for payloads of from 10 to 200 tonnes using various combinations of booster stages, numbers of modular main engines in the core stage, and upper stages. The version with two booster stages was code-named Groza; with four booster stages, Buran; and the six-booster stage version retained the Vulkan name. The 7.7 meter diameter of the core was determined by the maximum size that could be handled by existing stage handling equipment developed for the N1 programme. The 3.9 meter diameter of the booster stages was dictated by the maximum size for rail transport from the Ukraine.

Propellant selection was a big controversy. Use of solid propellants in the booster stages, as used in the space shuttle, was considered again. But Soviet production of solid fuel motors had been limited to small unitary motors for ICBM's and SLBM's. There was no technological base for production of segmented solid fuel motors, and transport of the motor sections also presented problems. The final decision was to use the familiar Lox/Kerosene liquid propellants for the boosters. In the 1960's Glushko had favoured use of toxic but storable chemical propellants in launch vehicles and had fought bitterly against Korolev over the issue. It is surprising that he now accepted use of Lox/Kerosene. But Korolev was dead, and the N1 a failure. Glushko's position had been vindicated, perhaps he now had to agree objectively that use of the expensive and toxic propellants in a launch vehicle of this size was not rational.

Another factor may have been that the propellants of the core were going to be cryogenic anyway. Lox/Kerosene propellants for the core were considered, but a primary objective of the project was to seek technological parity with the United States by exploiting technologies developed there. Chief among these in the field of liquid fuel rocketry was the use of Lox/LH2 propellants. Therefore the engines of the core were to have the same thrust rating and specific impulse specifications as the Space Shuttle Main Engine (SSME) of the USA.

Although the SSME may have been the starting point, Soviet engine technology led that of the United States in many other detailed points of liquid rocket design. By the mid-1960's the USA had practically abandoned development of liquid fuel engines, with the sole exception of the SSME. The US military preferred to use solid rocket motors for missile and booster stage applications. Russian rocket engineers had spent their entire lives perfecting military liquid fuel rockets and had never favoured solid fuel. Therefore Russian Liquid Oxygen/Kerosene and N2O4/UDMH engines were of much higher performance than those in the US. The contribution of unique Soviet technology and the inevitable changes that occurred during development resulted in the MKS RD-0120 main engine being different in detail from the SSME while retaining the same performance.

In the first stages of the development of the RD-0120, different basic engine schemes were evaluated before a single-shaft turbo-pump for both liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen was selected (the SSME had separate turbo-pumps for each fuel component). Use of a single pump simplified the engine control system and manufacturing, but also required more detailed and sophisticated methods of design and optimization then were available to the Americans. Another principal difference was the absence of resonance chambers, which were used on the SSME for suppression of high frequency vibrations in combustion chamber. The start sequence developed for the RD-0120 was and remains completely unique.

On the other hand Russian engineers observe that the SSME designers used some technologies that were not used previously in the USA but were common in Russia. The best example was the milled combustion chamber, widely used on Russian engines, but never before on American engines.

Drawing on this blend of mature American technology and Soviet innovation, the RD-0120 had a relatively trouble-free development program. The final engine represented for the Soviet Union new technical solutions in engine reliability, control, throttleability, and performance. These were the first fully throttleable Soviet engines, and their first production Lox/LH2 engines.

By contrast the RD-170 engine for the booster stage was a purely Soviet design and experienced a slow and difficult development program. These were exactly the kind of closed-cycle liquid oxygen/kerosene engines that Glushko had opposed developing in the 1960's. In addition the TTZ required that they be reusable for ten missions. Glushko fell back on his old solution when being unable to handle combustion stability problems: an engine unit consisting of four chambers fed by common turbopumps. Providing adequate wall cooling for the high temperature / high pressure combustion chambers seemed at times insoluble. One problem followed another and finally the RD-170 became the pacing item, with rocket stages completed but lacking engines. As costs reached the project ceiling, Glushko and Minister Afanasyev had to escalate the fight to the highest levels of the Soviet leadership. But Glushko defended his people, retained his job, and the problems were eventually solved.

The Block A 11S25 booster stages were the responsibility of KB Yuzhnoye in the Ukraine, F Utkin, General Constructor. They were to be reused ten times, and were therefore fitted with parachute containers. Solid fuel soft landing rockets in the parachute lines provided a soft landing downrange. It's not clear how the 35 tonne boosters were to be transported back to base for reuse.

In 1979 the EUK13 dimensional model of the launch vehicle was delivered to Baikonur for handling demonstrations and production of tooling. Continued development problems with the booster rockets led to a management shake-up at Yuzhnoye in January 1982. By this time the project was several years behind schedule. The originally planned first flight in 1983 was obviously unattainable. Also in 1982 the 3M-T transport aircraft was completed and began delivery of central block propellant tanks and structural elements for construction of a realistic mock-up of the booster. The 3M-T was a heavily modified M-4 bomber, and was limited to 50 tonnes loads carried on the top of the fuselage. By December 1982 the 4M Energia mock-up was completed, leading to dynamic/vertical/load tests in May-October 1983. The 4M was then returned to the shop for fitting of complete functional propellant systems.

The OK-ML-1 orbiter mock-up arrived atop the 3M-T at Baikonur in December 1983. OK-ML-1 was used for handling and pad compatibility tests. It was followed by the OK-MT in August 1984. This functional mock-up was used for systems integration tests, and was to be expended on the second test flight.

From March-October 1985 the Ts core stage was back on the UKSS for cold flow tests. A total of nine cryogenic fuelling cycle were completed with the 4M Energia mock-up, representing the first operational use in the world of super-chilled hydrogen.

In early 1986 came what was to be the first 20 second Energia main engine firing test. This was terminated at 2.58 seconds when the automatic control system detected a slow spool up of an engine turbine. In a the first attempt at a full-duration test helium leaks contaminated electro-hydraulic systems, leading to a situation where the tanks could not be drained. An engineering brigade had to work on the fuelled booster for 55 minutes, attach another helium tank, which led to successful de-fuelling of the vehicle. The second engine test was a complete success, the engine running for 390 seconds. This test required the entire city of Leninsk to be without water for ten days in order to accumulate enough water for the UKSS cooling system.

By January 1986 it was clear that the project, now three years behind schedule, had no prospect of completion due to problems in completing the Buran spaceplane. Minister O D Bakhnov called large group of industry leaders to the cosmodrome to review measures to concentrate and accelerate the remaining work. Three 'Tiger Teams' were set up. That led by B I Gubanov, was to finish the Energia launch vehicle and fly it, without the Buran mock-ups if necessary, at the earliest possible date. These groups were given unlimited authority to obtain necessary resources to complete their missions. As was usual on crash programs, working in parallel meant that there was some duplication of effort and some work had to be repeated.

In August-September 1986 further UKSS tests of Energia were conducted in preparation of a test launch without Buran. These were conducted using a dummy payload and solid rocket motors to simulate loads from the booster rockets. Following this vehicle 6SL was selected for the first actual launch. The launch vehicle used by itself without Buran was named Energia by Glushko only just before the launch. Energia was to deliver the military Skif-DM Polyus battle station into orbit. This was to be followed by ten flights of Energia-Buran, only the first of which was to be unpiloted.

Due to delays in completion of the enormous static test facility at Baikonur, which could test the entire Energia vehicle stack, it was decided to launch the vehicle without the verification the tests would provide. The launch of 6SL was planned for 11 May 1987 at 21:30 Moscow time. It was delayed five days when a leak was detected in the Block 3A electrical distribution section, then by another hour due to a fault LH2 thermostat. The launch vehicle performed successfully, but the payload failed to inject itself into orbit due to a guidance system failure.

With the launch vehicle finally proven, the focus moved to clearing Buran for flight. Buran was first moved to the launch pad on 23 October 1988. The launch commission met on 26 October 1988 and set 29 October 06:23 Moscow time for the first flight of the first Buran orbiter (Flight 1K1). 51 seconds before the launch, when control of the countdown switched to automated systems, a software problem led the computer program to abort the lift-off. The problem was found to be due to late separation of a gyro update umbilical. The software problem was rectified and the next attempt was set for 15 November at 06:00 (03:00 GMT). Came the morning, the weather was snow flurries with 20 m/s winds. Launch abort criteria were 15 m/s. The launch director decided to press ahead anyway. After 12 years of development everything went perfectly. Buran, with a mass of 79.4 tonnes, separated from the Block Ts core and maneuverd to a 251 km x 263 km orbit of the earth. Buran touched down 206 minutes after launch at the Jubilee runway, just 12 km from the launch pad. The completely automatic launch, orbital manoeuvre, deorbit, and precision landing of an airliner-sized spaceplane on its very first flight was an unprecedented accomplishment of which the Soviets were justifiably proud. It completely vindicated the years of exhaustive ground and flight test that had debugged the systems before they flew.

But this triumph was also the last hurrah. Energia would never fly again. The Soviet Union was crumbling, and the ambitious plans to use Energia to build an orbiting defence shield, to renew the ozone layer, dispose of nuclear waste, illuminate polar cities, colonise the moon and Mars, were not to be. Funding dried up and the Buran program completely disappeared from the government's budget after 1993.

Development of the launch vehicle cost 1.3 billion roubles, with an estimated total economic effect of 6 billion roubles. Total cost of the Energia-Buran project was put at 14,5 billion roubles. It involved the work of 1206 subcontractors and 100 government ministries. The cost of Buran - a significant part of the effort to maintain strategic and technical parity with the United States - contributed to the collapse of the Soviet system and its own demise. Today the Energia core stages sit in the MIK assembly hall, immense exhibits. The booster stages are in forlorn rows, their engines stripped for more lucrative use on Zenit and Atlas boosters launched by American companies.

Had the Soviet Union not fallen and the Energia booster gone into production, huge projects were planned to take advantage of its capabilities to realize Soviet military and international space goals. These included:


Restoration of the earth's ozone layer
Disposal of nuclear waste outside of the solar system
Illumination of polar cities by reflection of the sun's light
Large-area space energy refelctors
Solar sails for interplanetary flights
Exploitation of lunar resources for fusion reactors on the earth
Space control system to assure ecological compliance and guarantee strategic stability
International global information communications system
Removal of space debris in geostationary orbit
Large space radio telescope to study galazies

Energia Development
Over 232 experimental test stands were built during Energia development.

Rigorous qualification tests were conducted of all structural components. Structural and functional elements were tested individually, and then in ever larger assemblies. The result was that the flight data very closely followed predictions, and both the launch vehicle and orbiter flew successfully on their very first flights. This was in sharp contrast to the numerous early failures of the Soyuz and N1 programmes in the 1960's.

85 wind tunnel models were built in scales for 1:3 to 1:550 to determine the vehicle's aerodynamic coefficients at all velocities, the effectiveness of the aerosurfaces, the aerodynamic moments, and the interference effects between Buran and the launch vehicle during launch and separation. These models were run through 39,000 simulated launches at wind tunnel speeds of from M 0.1 to M 2.0. 12 special test stands were built to test Buran/launch vehicle interference characteristics. Gas dynamics models - these were tested at scales of from 1:15 to 1:2700 and Mach 5 to 20 and Reynolds numbers of 10^5 to 10^7. A 1:10 acoustic model of the launch vehicle was equipped with solid rocket motors to measure acoustic levels on the test stand.

Energia Assembly / Processing / Launch / Landing Facilities

Using the N1 facilities at Baikonur as a starting point, major modifications had to be made and several new buildings erected to assemble and launch Buran at the remote Baikonur cosmodrome. The land-locked location of Baikonur meant that major assembly work on the orbiter and launch vehicle had to be conducted on site, instead of at the subcontractors factories. The liquid oxygen and liquid hydrogen tanks of the core, and the Buran orbiters, were flown to Baikonur on the back of the 3M-T transport. The booster stages and all other material and equipment were brought in by rail.
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Somos memórias de lobos que rasgam a pele
Lobos que foram homens e o tornarão a ser
ou talvez memórias de homens.
que insistem em não rasgar a pele
Homens que procuram ser lobos
mas que jamais o tornarão a ser...
Moonspell - Full Moon Madness

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Lauro Melo
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#152 Mensagem por Lauro Melo » Ter Jun 21, 2005 10:01 am

talharim escreveu:
Agora outras notícias sobre a Argélia:

Já teria negociado a compra de + 18 SU-30MKI.

Já teria concluído negociações para a compra de 300 tanques T-90S.

Já teria concluído negociações para compra de 80 MIG-AT.

Fora o acordo já anunciado para aquisição de 200 MIG-29 SMT,sendo que 50 já foram entregues.
O que a Argélia está querendo com isso?..........está causando um enorme desequilíbrio militar na região...............

Para mim está cheirando a guerra :twisted: ............aquela região está prestes a explodir..............e a Rússia está faturando alto com todo mundo :twisted:


Fala talharim,

As compras dos T-90, Mig-AT e 200 Mig-29 SMT, estão sendo faladas desde 2001 ( existe uma notícia no Sistema de Armas, vou procurar esta notícia de 2001 e coloco aqui, parece ser a mesma notícia ).

As compras militares dependem disto; rivalidade. As próprias Indústrias colocam no mercado notícias sobre vendas. Assim os Países vizinhos ou rivais são obrigados a fazer alguma coisa.

A Industria Bélica vem tendo dificuldade depois de 1990 e utiliza desta tática para tentar vender algo.

Devemos saber separar o Real do Marketing.

abraços,




"Os guerreiros não caem se ajoelham e levantam ainda mais fortes."
TOG: 22 anos de garra, determinação e respeito.
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#153 Mensagem por FinkenHeinle » Ter Jun 21, 2005 2:12 pm

Einsamkeit escreveu:os Russos tem quantos An-225 no momento, e sei que é meio off-topic, mais o Foguete Buran ja esta operacional?
pelo que sei seria o maior foguete do mundo, maior que o saturno americano.

Olá Eins!


Só existe hoje apena sum An-225 operacional, nas mãos da própria Antonov, que recentemente até promoveu uma Restauração/Modernização desse avião.

Ela vende serviços de Transportes PEsados em todo o mundo!

Quanto ao Buran, ele está paralisado/cancelado e com mínimas chances de ser reiniciado.

Quanto à ser maior que o Saturno, está errado, visto que o Buran era o Ônibus Espacial soviético, semelhante ao Ônibus Espacial americano.




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André R. Finken Heinle

"If the battle for civilization comes down to the wimps versus the barbarians, the barbarians are going to win."
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#154 Mensagem por Einsamkeit » Ter Jun 21, 2005 3:34 pm

Finken, eu estava comparando o Foguete saturno com o Energia que lança o buran, Pena o Buran nao estar mais na ativa, Isso mostra a capacidade russa e nossa ineficiencia.




Somos memórias de lobos que rasgam a pele
Lobos que foram homens e o tornarão a ser
ou talvez memórias de homens.
que insistem em não rasgar a pele
Homens que procuram ser lobos
mas que jamais o tornarão a ser...
Moonspell - Full Moon Madness

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FinkenHeinle
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#155 Mensagem por FinkenHeinle » Ter Jun 21, 2005 4:43 pm

Einsamkeit escreveu:Finken, eu estava comparando o Foguete saturno com o Energia que lança o buran, Pena o Buran nao estar mais na ativa, Isso mostra a capacidade russa e nossa ineficiencia.

OK, desculpe pelo equívoco...


Quanto ao Buran, simplesmente não existe uma necessidade que justifique os investimentos que seriam necessários!




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André R. Finken Heinle

"If the battle for civilization comes down to the wimps versus the barbarians, the barbarians are going to win."
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#156 Mensagem por Slip Junior » Ter Jun 21, 2005 8:18 pm

FinkenHeinle escreveu:
Einsamkeit escreveu:os Russos tem quantos An-225 no momento, e sei que é meio off-topic, mais o Foguete Buran ja esta operacional?
pelo que sei seria o maior foguete do mundo, maior que o saturno americano.

Olá Eins!

Só existe hoje apena sum An-225 operacional, nas mãos da própria Antonov, que recentemente até promoveu uma Restauração/Modernização desse avião.

Bom, a ultima noticia que eu tive do An-225 Mrya era que seria estudada a sua restauração mas que o mesmo ainda estava inoperante. Aproveitando o assunto, não sei se alguem já comentou isso aqui antes, mas a EADS e a Antonov estão estudando a possibilidade de reabrir a linha de produção do An-124 Ruslan! É aguardar para ver!

Abraços




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#157 Mensagem por Jet Crash® » Ter Jun 21, 2005 11:04 pm

Slip Junior escreveu:
FinkenHeinle escreveu:
Einsamkeit escreveu:os Russos tem quantos An-225 no momento, e sei que é meio off-topic, mais o Foguete Buran ja esta operacional?
pelo que sei seria o maior foguete do mundo, maior que o saturno americano.

Olá Eins!

Só existe hoje apena sum An-225 operacional, nas mãos da própria Antonov, que recentemente até promoveu uma Restauração/Modernização desse avião.

Bom, a ultima noticia que eu tive do An-225 Mrya era que seria estudada a sua restauração mas que o mesmo ainda estava inoperante. Aproveitando o assunto, não sei se alguem já comentou isso aqui antes, mas a EADS e a Antonov estão estudando a possibilidade de reabrir a linha de produção do An-124 Ruslan! É aguardar para ver!

Abraços



A EADS "não tá com nada no balaio", como diz a peãozada de BH. Rússia e Ucrânia vão tocar o projeto.

Quem quizer se manter atualizado, só assinar o Military News. Temos assinantes ilustres como Tom Cooper do ACIG.

The "Ruslan" Is Rather Alive

Delegations of Ukrainian and Russian aircraft builders who
participated in the operation at the Le Bourget (France) air salon,
have agreed on the resumption of the production of An-124 "Ruslan"
heavy cargo airplanes. Ukrainian manufacturers, among whom are the
Kiev Aviant and the Zaporozh'e aircraft engine plant Motor Sich,
will deliver components for final assembly of the airplanes at the
Volga-Dniepr company's plant in Ul'yanovsk.

They are upgrading 50 "Ruslan" at first, then they are organizing
series production of the An-124-300 airplane. Realization of the
project will cost 6.4 billion dollars, of which 5 billion will be
allocated for the manufacture of the An-124-300 with a cost of more
than 100 million dollars each.

There also was a presentation of the project for upgrade of the
airplane at Le Bourget, after which its payload is supposed to be
increased to 500 tonnes.

But Ukraine won't pull off this project alone. It is assumed that
the Russian Sberbank, Vneshtorgbank and BRB, and also IFC (a unit of
the World Bank) will finance it.

The ultra-heavy air transportation market in the world is estimated
at 500 million dollars a year. As is expected, its volume will
triple in the coming years. Therefore, the upgraded "Ruslan" with
new engines and European avionics has good chances to received
orders for shipping operations. At the least, for the time being
there are no alternatives to it, since NATO will begin to build its
own airplanes for long-range shipping operations, the A400M, not
earlier than 2012.

As early as 2003, the defense ministers of the NATO countries
preferred the Ukrainian "Ruslan" to the American C-17 for military
transport shipping operations. The Boeing corporation has proposed
NATO pay for leasing the C-17 airplane with a payload of 77 nearly
496 million dollars a year. But the ANTK Antonov organization
department Antonov Airlines has proposed the An-124 for service for
only 67 million dollars a year.




Jet Crash®

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#158 Mensagem por Slip Junior » Ter Jun 21, 2005 11:28 pm

JetCrash®, obrigado pela notícia! Você poderia me dizer de quando ela é datada? Bom, a notícia à que me referia é esta abaixo:

New demand for upgraded Russian heavylift

Antonov is talking to EADS and "other potential major US and European partners" about re-starting production of an upgraded version of the An-124-100 Ruslan heavylift transport after identifying a market for up to 80 aircraft over the next 25 years.

Talks with Russia's Volga Dniepr, its main customer, on a business plan for the go-ahead have identified a need for $407 million worth of funding to develop the An-124-100M variant, which would have a 150t maximum cargo capacity against the current -124-100's 120t and a 550km range increase, to 5,200km (2,800nm).

Anotonv deputy general designer Alexander Kiva says there is "a real basis for co-operation with Russia, Europe and the USA".

Emphasis

He adds that the emphasis is on "power and avionics" but declines to say whether this means exchanging the Lotarev Progress D-18T engines with western powerplants. The Antonov literature shows a reduction in the number of crewmembers from six to four, implying a new digital cockpit.

"We had a visit from EADS two weeks ago and discussed joint involvement in resumed production of the An-124," says Kiva. "This is about maintaining the monopoly of the Ukraine and Russia in large freighters."

At present there are 49 An-124s in service, 28 of which are used as commercial freighters. Antonov believes there is a market for around 30 aircraft with "existing customers" and a further 50 with "potential customers".


Fonte: Flight Internacional, 16 de junho de 2005, em http://www.flightinternational.com/Arti ... lift+.html

Abraços




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#159 Mensagem por Jet Crash® » Ter Jun 21, 2005 11:36 pm

Slip Junior escreveu:JetCrash®, obrigado pela notícia! Você poderia me dizer de quando ela é datada?
Abraços


A notícia é de hoje 21 de Junho de 2005. Fresquinha.




Jet Crash®

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#160 Mensagem por talharim » Qua Jun 22, 2005 10:20 pm

New Mission-Data Recorders for AMX Aircraft


Source: TEAC
Jun. 21, 2005




TEAC Aerospace Technologies, Inc. (Montebello, CA), announced the receipt of a multi-year contract award from Aermacchi for MDR-80 mission-data recorders to support the Aermacchi AMX aircraft. The AMX, a joint program undertaken by Alenia, Aermacchi and Embraer, is a surface-attack aircraft for battlefield interdiction, close-air support, and reconnaissance missions. Contract delivery will commence in the fourth quarter of 2005.

TEAC's MDR-80 mission-data recorders deliver a solution to record both combat and training missions to provide vital tactical and flight information for battle commanders and training officers. TEAC's mission-data recorders come with removable, expandable memory modules to handle gigabytes of digital video plus PCM, ACMI, MFOQA, HUMS, Ethernet, and 1553 data recording, along with mission-data loading. The flexible MDR architecture meets today's requirements with a built-in upgrade path for operational expansion and technology insertion in the future without redesign. TEAC currently offers the MDR-80 in 30 commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) configurations.

For the AMX, the solid-state digital MDR-80 will be configured to record a single video source, with over two hours of high-resolution digital recording capacity, and 1553 data on solid-state removable memory modules. The recorded video will be used for post-mission debrief and analysis.

TEAC's newest line of mission-data recorders, the MDR-80s are already operational worldwide with deployments in Australia, Bulgaria, Chile, France, Italy, Spain, Germany, Ireland, the Netherlands, South Africa, Sweden, the UK, Japan, the Republic of (South) Korea, India, Netherlands, Switzerland, and the US. The MDR-80 is the latest in TEAC's line of airborne videotape recorders (AVTRs) that fly on over 20,000 fighter aircraft and helicopters in 50 countries around the world and on the US space shuttle.



Fonte:http://www.edefenseonline.com/default.asp?func=article&aref=06_21_2005_WI_01




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#161 Mensagem por Paisano » Sáb Jun 25, 2005 3:56 pm

Querem a Aeronáutica como uma "Areonáutica"*

Fonte: http://www.tribunadaimprensa.com.br

Logo que o general Castelo Branco tomou posse na Presidência da República, depois do golpe de 64, o deputado Bilac Pinto, udenista mineiro papo amarelo, companheiro de conspiração e amigo íntimo de Castelo, apresentou projeto na Câmara mudando o nome do Ministério da Aeronautica para Ministério da Aviação. Ninguém entendeu.

O Ministério da Aeronáutica foi criado por Getúlio em janeiro de 41, em plena Guerra Mundial. O primeiro titular foi o gaúcho Salgado Filho, advogado, professor de literatura clássica no Rio, ministro do Trabalho de 32 a 34 (substituiu Lindolfo Collor, que, jornalista, rompeu com Vargas por causa do empastelamento do "Diário Carioca" em abril de 32) e, a partir de 38, ministro do Superior Tribunal Militar.

Por que mudar o nome? O brigadeiro Eduardo Gomes, símbolo da Aeronáutica e então ministro, vetou em silêncio, o projeto foi arquivado e ninguém mais falou no assunto. Mas contou a Prudente de Morais Neto.

Bilac Pinto, candidato "in pectore" de Castelo a seu sucessor, quis apenas fazer um favor fonoaudiológico ao general-presidente. Castelo, cearense de Mecejana, não conseguia dizer Aeronáutica. Só "Areonáutica". Bilac, amante do bem-dizer, quis ajudar a Aeronáutica em terra. Na boca.

Lula na França

O governo Lula, já metido em tantas trapalhadas, ameaça fazer mais uma. Lula irá a Paris participar das festas do 14 de julho, neste ano que é o "Ano Brasil-França". E querem que ele assine, lá mesmo, a compra, na França, dos aviões-caça para a Aeronáutica, sem tomar conhecimento da concorrência que há oito anos vinha sendo discutida na Aeronáutica. Dois caças franceses já estariam lá pintados de verde e amarelo para voarem na hora.

Eram três as propostas. Uma, a norte-americana: mais de US$ 300 milhões, com maior número de aviões, mas cheia de restrições, porque eles não transferem tecnologia e certos tipos de armamentos. Foi logo descartada.

Outra, a russa: US$ 146 milhões por 12 modernos aviões Sukhoi27, bimotores, armados, com toda a logística e podendo ser recomprados e substituídos a qualquer ano, a preço de mercado, se o Brasil quiser.

E a francesa (a Dassault associada à Embraer): 120 milhões de euros (US$ 150 milhões) por 12 velhos aviões Mirage, monomotores, com logística. Há uma segunda proposta francesa: leasing dos aviões e manutenção da Força Aérea Francesa. Para usar, o Brasil precisa de autorização do governo francês.

A Amazônia

Desde o começo, a Aeronáutica, publicamente, preferiu os caças russos: mais baratos, muito mais modernos e com transferência plena de tecnologia. De repente, apareceu um lobby, poderoso e misterioso como todos os grandes lobbies, e a Aeronáutica começou a ser escanteada na decisão.

Os Mirage que os franceses querem nos empurrar não são sequer os Mirage 2000-5, um pouco mais novos, mas a versão antiga, semelhante aos que o Brasil comprou 30 anos atrás, totalmente superados. Com eles, o Brasil ficaria com uma força aérea de terceira classe, mesmo na América do Sul, onde o Peru tem os Mig29, o Chile os F16, Cuba os russos Sukhois.

O mais grave, e este é o centro da conspiração que precisa ser denunciada, é que, com esses Miragezinhos ultrapassados, a Amazônia ficará inteiramente desprotegida, porque eles não têm faixa de vôo para operar na Amazônia: monomotores, de pequeno alcance e sem capacidade de ataque ao solo. Com eles o Brasil não terá poder aéreo na Amazônia e é esse poder indispensável que os lobistas conspiradores querem impedir. Sobre o Atlântico, também os Miragezinhos antiquados não têm capacidade de ação.

Conversem com qualquer militar brasileiro que tenha comandado na Amazônia. Com os Miragezinhos, a Aeronáutica ficará sem poder aéreo para defendê-la, diante dos modernos aviões militares bimotores de grande potência

Os Caças

Qual a solução? Não entendo de avião, muito menos de avião militar. Mas sei ler e ouvir. Será por acaso que, dos seis maiores paises do mundo, que têm espaço vital, dois (Estados Unidos e Canadá) usam os grandes caças modernos americanos, e três (Rússia, China e Índia) usam os grandes caças modernos russos, bimotores, de grande alcance, compatíveis com as dimensões desses paises. Falta o Brasil, onde querem a Amazônia indefensável.

Se os preços dos 12 Mirage e dos 12 Sukhoi27 são semelhantes, a diferença só poderia estar nas vantagens técnicas e de ação. Ora, desde o começo a Aeronáutica viu, e por isso preferiu, que o avião russo é melhor:

- preço menor; melhor e mais moderno; único bi-turbina; já vem armado com oito toneladas de armas poderosas e de longo alcance (BVR), o dobro dos concorrentes; radar mais avançado e de longo alcance (o Único equipado com radar optrônico, uma tecnologia russa); de enorme alcance (sem reabastecimento e sem tanques externos, vôa pelo paÍs de norte a sul, leste a oeste, e cobre toda a América do Sul e metade do Atlântico. E mais: pagamento inicial e o restante, a combinar, para conveniência da Aeronáutica.

O debate das Forças Armadas sobre a Amazônia reacendeu e trouxe de novo à tona a questão da Aeronáutica. Há um crime de lesa-pátria atrás disso.

*Sebastião Nery




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#162 Mensagem por César » Sáb Jun 25, 2005 4:31 pm

Não vou culpar o Sebastião Nery, pois ele mesmo admite que não sabe de aviação. Mas esse trecho me pareceu mais um lobby(bem exagerado) dele para o Su-27:

- preço menor; melhor e mais moderno; único bi-turbina; já vem armado com oito toneladas de armas poderosas e de longo alcance (BVR), o dobro dos concorrentes; radar mais avançado e de longo alcance (o Único equipado com radar optrônico, uma tecnologia russa); de enorme alcance (sem reabastecimento e sem tanques externos, vôa pelo paÍs de norte a sul, leste a oeste, e cobre toda a América do Sul e metade do Atlântico. E mais: pagamento inicial e o restante, a combinar, para conveniência da Aeronáutica.


Fui!

César




"- Tú julgarás a ti mesmo- respondeu-lhe o rei - É o mais difícil. É bem mais difícil julgar a si mesmo que julgar os outros. Se consegues fazer um bom julgamento de ti, és um verdadeiro sábio."

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#163 Mensagem por CFB » Sáb Jun 25, 2005 5:20 pm

César escreveu:Não vou culpar o Sebastião Nery, pois ele mesmo admite que não sabe de aviação. Mas esse trecho me pareceu mais um lobby(bem exagerado) dele para o Su-27:

- preço menor; melhor e mais moderno; único bi-turbina; já vem armado com oito toneladas de armas poderosas e de longo alcance (BVR), o dobro dos concorrentes; radar mais avançado e de longo alcance (o Único equipado com radar optrônico, uma tecnologia russa); de enorme alcance (sem reabastecimento e sem tanques externos, vôa pelo paÍs de norte a sul, leste a oeste, e cobre toda a América do Sul e metade do Atlântico. E mais: pagamento inicial e o restante, a combinar, para conveniência da Aeronáutica.


Fui!

Mas ele naum esta certo :roll:




César




Apesar de todos os problemas, ainda confio no Brasil
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#164 Mensagem por Einsamkeit » Sáb Jun 25, 2005 6:24 pm

Que venham os Su-27 com R-77 e R-73.




Somos memórias de lobos que rasgam a pele
Lobos que foram homens e o tornarão a ser
ou talvez memórias de homens.
que insistem em não rasgar a pele
Homens que procuram ser lobos
mas que jamais o tornarão a ser...
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#165 Mensagem por Alitson » Sáb Jun 25, 2005 8:26 pm

Que a FAB crie vergonha na cara, mande o RobaPovo ou Lula pra p. q o p. e compre os F-16AM/BM da Holanda!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Pelo menos uns 30!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Já que eles são tão cegos que nem pararam pra ver os F/A-18A/B dos estoques da US Navy ou fos Marines!!!!!!!!!!!




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G&P M4 CARBINE V5
G&P M4A1
G&P M16A3+M203
ARES SCAR-L
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