:Tupolev Tu-91
{{Short description|Prototype two-seat Soviet attack aircraft}}
{{good article}}
{{Infobox aircraft
|name=Tu-91
|image=Tupolev_Tu-91.jpg
|image_size=300
|caption=
|type =Naval attack aircraft
|national_origin=Soviet Union
|manufacturer=Tupolev OKB
|first_flight=17 May 1955
|status =Prototype only
|number_built=2
}}
The Tupolev Tu-91 (NATO reporting name Boot) was a two-seat Soviet attack aircraft built during the 1950s. It was initially designed as a carrier-borne aircraft, but was converted into a land-based aircraft after Joseph Stalin's death in 1953 cancelled the aircraft carriers being designed. Two prototypes had been built and production had been approved by the Soviet Navy when it was inspected by the General Secretary, Nikita Khrushchev, in 1956. He remarked how ridiculous the Tu-91 looked and the program was cancelled.
Development
Following the end of World War II in 1945, Stalin ordered an aggressive naval expansion to counter the American naval superiority. The expansion called for building a large number of warships oriented around battleships and other heavy ships, with aircraft carriers limited to a supporting role, despite Admiral of the Fleet Nikolai Kuznetsov, Commander-in-chief of the Soviet Navy, pushing for carriers. Stalin restored him to command of the navy in 1951, after having demoted him four years before, and Kuznetsov attempted to persuade him of the value of the carrier in 1952, but Stalin refused to make a decision before his death the following year.Rohwer & Monakov, pp. 199–201
Kuznetsov had ordered preliminary design work to begin on the Project 85 light aircraft carrier and the aircraft for the ship before Stalin's death, although the ship was never more than a paper design.Rohwer & Monakov, pp. 216–217 This allowed the Tupolev Design bureau to decide upon on a single-engined turboprop aircraft to meet Soviet Naval Aviation's requirement for a long-range strike aircraft, capable of attacking targets with bombs or torpedoes.Gunston 1995b, p. 423 The new leaders of the Soviet Union rejected proposals for carriersDuffy & Kandalov, p. 112 and the Council of Ministers issued a requirement for a land-based bomber powered by a Kuznetsov TV-2 turboprop engine that was capable of level and dive bombing attacks on targets with bombs, torpedoes, rockets, gunfire and naval mines, in addition to coastal reconnaissance missions, on 29 April 1953.Gordon & Rigmant, p. 147 This forced the bureau to revise the design to eliminate the wing-folding mechanism, arresting gear and other carrier-specific equipment for the second prototype.
The Tu-91 first flew on 17 May 1955, when the manufacturer's flight testing began. They concluded successfully about September with the test pilots concluding that the aircraft was highly manoeuverable, although barrel rolls should be forbidden. The aircraft also passed the subsequent state testing and the design bureau began preparing for production at Factory No. 31, in Tbilisi, Georgia.{{refn|Historians Yefim Gordon and Vladimir Rigman state that the first flight was made on 2 September 1954 with manufacturer's testing concluded on 21 January 1955.Gordon & Rigmant, p. 148|group=Note}}
The Tu-91 was part of a display of the latest military aircraft for the Soviet leadership in mid-1956, one of the very few propeller-driven aircraft present. When
the newly elected Khrushchev inquired about the aircraft, the officer detailed to the aircraft misspoke, stating that it could do the job of a heavy cruiser rather than it had the firepower of that ship. Khrushchev replied, "But nobody needs heavy cruisers any more", and commented how ridiculous it looked. This off-hand comment caused the program to be cancelled.Duffy & Kandalov, pp. 112–113
Description
The Tu-91 was a duralumin low-winged monoplane with dihedral wings built from three spars. The wing consisted of three sections, two outer panels and the center section that housed four fuel tanks and the tricycle landing gear. Control surfaces on the outer panels consisted of manually tabbed ailerons and slotted flaps. The aircraft had a conventional tail structure with vertical and horizontal stabilisers. The engine was mounted mid-fuselage above the wing spars, driving a six-bladed contra-rotating propeller in the nose via a long shaft that passed through the cockpit. Providing sufficient air to the engine required a lot of development time that eventually included replacing an engine on a Tupolev Tu-4LL flying testbed with a mockup of the Tu-91's nose with a working TV-2 installation. The solution adopted consisted of three air intakes: a chin inlet and two cheek inlets below the cockpit that met in a plenum chamber forward of the engine. The engine exhausted through a bifurcated exhaust duct that exited the sides of the fuselage aft of the wing.Gunston 1995a, p. 156
The crew of two sat side by side in a cockpit in the aircraft's nose, enclosed in an armour "bathtub" that consisted of {{convert|8|to|18|mm|1|adj=on}} ANBA-1 light alloy armour. All of the panels in the two canopies were bulletproof except for those directly overhead. In addition to the forward fuel tanks, there were another pair of tanks located between the exhaust ducts, all of which self sealing and filled with inert gases. The internal armament of the Tu-91 consisted of a pair of {{cvt|23|mm|2}} NR-23 cannon located in the wing roots and another pair of NR-23s in a DK-15 powered tail turret that were remotely controlled by the aircraft's navigator using a periscopic gunsight mounted externally above the cockpit. The aircraft could be fitted with five plyons, one under the fuselage and the others under the wings. These could carry a single torpedo or various bombs, rockets and mines up to a total weight of {{convert|1500|kg}}. Two of the wing pylons were plumbed to carry drop tanks in addition to weapons. A camera was fitted in the rear fuselage for reconnaissance missions.Gunston 1995a, pp. 156–157
Specifications (Tu-91)
{{Aircraft specs
|ref=The Osprey Encyclopedia of Russian Aircraft 1875–1995.Gunston 1995b, p. 424
|prime units?=met
|crew=2 (pilot and observer)
|length m=17.7
|length note=
|span m=16.4
|span note=
|height m=5.06
|height note=Duffy & Kandalov, pp. 209–210
|wing area sqm=47.5
|airfoil=
|empty weight kg=8000
|empty weight note=
|gross weight kg=
|gross weight note=
|max takeoff weight kg=14400
|max takeoff weight note=
|fuel capacity=
|more general=
|eng1 number=1
|eng1 name=Kuznetsov TV-2M
|eng1 type=turboprop engine
|eng1 kw=5709
|eng1 note=
|prop blade number=6
|prop name=contra-rotating propeller
|prop dia m=5.7
|prop dia note=
|max speed kmh=800
|max speed note=
|max speed mach=
|cruise speed kmh=250-300
|cruise speed note=
|stall speed kmh=
|stall speed note=
|never exceed speed kmh=
|never exceed speed note=
|minimum control speed kmh=
|minimum control speed note=
|range km=2350
|range note=
|combat range km=
|combat range note=
|ferry range km=
|ferry range note=
|endurance=
|ceiling m=11000
|ceiling note=
|g limits=
|roll rate=
|climb rate ms=
|climb rate note=
|time to altitude=
|wing loading kg/m2=
|wing loading note=
|fuel consumption kg/km=
|power/mass=
|thrust/weight=
|more performance=
|guns=
:* 2 × {{cvt|23|mm|2}} NR-23 cannon with 100 rounds each in wing roots
:* 2 × {{cvt|23|mm|2}} NR-23 cannon with 150 rounds with in a tail turret
|bombs=up to {{cvt|1500|kg|}} of bombs, rockets or a single torpedo
|avionics=
}}
See also
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Notes
{{reflist|group=Note}}
Footnotes
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Bibliography
- {{cite book|last1=Duffy|first1=Paul|last2=Kandalov|first2=Andrei |title=Tupolev: The Man and His Aircraft|publisher=Airlife|location=Shrewsbury, UK|year=1996 |isbn=1-85310-728-X|name-list-style=amp}}
- {{cite book|last=Gordon|first=Yefim|author2=Rigmant, Vladimir |title=OKB Tupolev: A History of the Design Bureau and its Aircraft|publisher=Midland Publishing |location=Hinckley, UK|year=2005|isbn=1-85780-214-4|name-list-style=amp}}
- {{cite book|last=Gunston|first=Bill|title=Tupolev Aircraft since 1922|publisher=Naval Institute Press|location=Annapolis, Maryland|year=1995a |isbn=1-55750-882-8}}
- {{cite book|last=Gunston|first=Bill|title=The Osprey Encyclopedia of Russian Aircraft 1875–1995|publisher=Osprey|location=London|year=1995b|isbn=1-85532-405-9}}
- {{cite book|last1=Rohwer|first1=Jürgen|last2=Monakov|first2=Mikhail S.|title=Stalin's Ocean-Going Fleet: Soviet Naval Strategy and Shipbuilding Programs 1935–1953 |publisher=Frank Cass |location=London |year=2001|isbn=0-7146-4895-7|name-list-style=amp|author-link1=Jürgen Rohwer}}
Further reading
- {{cite journal |last1=Rigmant|first1=V. I.|last2=Saukke|first2=M. V.|last3=Soloviev|first3=S. M.|title=Le Tupolev Tu-91: Il fut abondenné, victim d'un lapsus |journal=Le Fana de l'Aviation |date=April 1994 |issue=293 |pages=14–18 |issn=0757-4169 |language=fr|trans-title=The Tupolev Tu-91: Abandoned Because of a Slip of the Tongue |name-list-style=amp}}
{{Tupolev aircraft}}
Category:1950s Soviet attack aircraft
Category:Single-engined tractor aircraft