MiG-25 Foxbat

Introduction:

As an example for the United States’ F-15 Eagle aircraft, the MiG-25 Foxbat prototype was produced in the late 1950s, and entered the public eye creating and being redesigned amid a storm of controversy. The plane was originally designated the Ye-155P, and after a few years of its manufacture, the world was privy to information that the aircraft was capable of reaching velocity and altitude previously unattainable by its contemporaries. It’s fixed-wing, streamlined body style accomodated its twin-engines and resulted in it setting a speed record of 1,852 miles-per-hour on October 5th, 1967. Not satisfied with a mere world speed record, Russian engineers refined the craft to the extent that it reached an unprecedented altitude of 37,650 feet on August 31st, 1977. Prior to this, mideastern air powers were engaged in an incident that prompted American aircraft companies to “sit up and take notice”. The former Soviet Union was occupying the airspace over Israel during 1971 and 1972, for the purpose of gathering strategic information concerning that country’s defense provisions. After two MiG-25 craft were sighted and chased by Israel’s Air Force F-4 Phantom II jets without contact, reports prompted manufacturers to complete the F-15 Eagle Mach 2+ speed aircraft in order to compete in the “cold war”. Weaponry of the Foxbat consists of three types of air-to-air missiles: IRAAMs, or infrared type, which are attracted to the heat emissions from a target, SARH AA-6 Acrid radar homing missiles, using a guidance system which receives signals from its quarry, and AA-7 Apex air-to-air missiles, operating on the same principle as the Acrid. Numerous electronic apparatus are employed on the MiG-25, such as its standard nose-boom static system on its frontal tip, backed up by a Foxfire-type anti-jamming radar cone. Transference of UHF, VHF, CW, and high-frequency signals are afforded the plane,as are radar warning receivers and aerial transponders. In 1976, the Hakodate airfield in Japan was graced with the Foxbat A’s presence when Soviet Air Force Lieutenant Viktor Belenko chose the location for which to defect. After his Foxbat craft was dissected, remantled, and returned to the then-U.S.S.R., manufacturers worldwide gained massive amounts of data in order to remake the plane. Over the years, the MiG-25 has been involved with air combat missions all over the world, used by Algeria and Iraq as Interceptor craft. India also uses them in a reconnaissance function, and they and Libya use them as trainer planes. Syria has lost Foxbats to Israel’s Eagles during war in the Bekaa valley, and its originators, Russia, have adapted the plane for every significant military role possible.

Programme:

A direct response to the B-70 When the USSR learnt that the USA had started work on the North American B-70 Valkyrie as a Mach 3 strategic bomber, it undertook the design of a fighter intended specifically to counter the US high-altitude bomber. The B-70 was cancelled in 1961, but the Soviets pushed ahead with their new fighter, which first flew in April 1965 as the Ye-266 and later set several world records.The MiG-25 “Foxbat-A” entered service in 1970. The new inteceptor was made largely of steel and titanium to withstand the effect of kinetic heating, and sported an old-fashioned but very powerful radar as well as four examples of the largest air-to-air missile yet deployed. Total production was in the order of 600 aircraft in several variants, and the type has seen limited service in the Middle East

Design started 1959 as Ye-155P supersonic high-altitude interceptor to counter all potential threats, from cruise missiles to A-11 (SR-71A reconnaissance aircraft) under US development; programme launched officially February 1962; Ye-155R reconnaissance version designed and built 1961-62; Ye-155R-1 first to fly 6 March 1964; Ye-155P-1 interceptor prototype flew 9 September 1964; the two Ye-155s had R-15B-2-300 engines; Type 99 (Ye-155M) experimental aircraft had D-30F6 turbofans; production, as MiG-25/25R series, completed mid-1980s. Interceptor versions replaced by MiG-31s in Russian Air Force.

Design Features:

Basic MiG-25 configuration retained, but very different aircraft, strengthened to permit supersonic flight at low altitude; more powerful engines than MiG-25; major requirement increased range, not speed; advanced digital avionics; Zaslon radar was first electronically scanned phased-array type to enter service, enabling MiG-31 to track 10 targets and engage four simultaneously, including targets below and behind its own location; fuselage weapon mountings added; crew increased to two. Wing anhedral 4 degrees from roots; sweepback approx 40 degrees on leading-edge, 32 degrees at quarter-chord, with small sharply swept wingroot extensions; all-swept tail surfaces, with twin outward canted fins and dihedral horizontal surfaces.

Structure:

Airframe 80 per cent tempered steel, 8 per cent titanium in areas subject to high heat, 11 per cent D19 heat-resistance aluminium alloy, by weight.

Accommodation:

Pilot only, on KM-1 zero-height/70 knots (130 km/h 81 mph) ejection seat simply to the one used on several versions of the Mig-21. Canopy hinged to open sideways to starboard.

Power Plant:

Two Soyuz/Tumansky R-15BD-300 turbojets, each rated at 86.30 kN (19,400 lb st) dry, 109.75 kN (24,675 lb st) with afterburning. Fuel in two welded structural tanks occupying 70 per cent of volume of fuselage, between cockpit and engine bay, in saddle tanks around intake ducts, and in integral tank in each wing, filling almost entire volume inboard of outer fence; total capacity 17,660 litres (4,665 US gallons; 3,885 Imp gallons); single-point fuelling; provision for 5,300 litre (1,400 US gallon; 1,165 Imp gallon) underbelly tank.

Avionics:

Sapfir-25 fire-control radar MiG-25 in nose (Smerch radar -earlyer variants of MiG-25), with search range of 54 nm (100 km; 62 miles) and tracking range of 40 nm (75 km; 46 miles); radar warning receivers. IRST Infra-red Search/Track Sensor Pod. SO-63 transponder.

Landing Gear:

Retractable tricycle type; offset tandem twin wheels on each main unit, retracting forward into air intake trunk, facilitate operation from unprepared ground and gravel; rearward retracting twin nosewheel unit with mudguard.

MiG-25PD Foxbat E Specification
Prime contractor: Mikoyan-Gurevich Design Bureau
Country of origin: Soviet Union
NATO codename: Foxbat E
Function: High speed interceptor
Crew: 1
Year: 1964 (base version)
In-service year: 1973 (base version)
Power plant: Two Soyuz/Tumansky R-15BD-300 afterburning turbojets
Thrust: 24,640 lb. each 11,200 kg. each
Dimensions
Wing span: 46 ft. 14.02 m.
Length: 78 ft.2 in 23.82 m.
Height: 20 ft. 6.1 m.
Weight:
Empty 44,000 lb. 20,000 kg.
Max. takeoff 80,784 lb. 36,720 kg.
Performance
Ceiling: 67,900 ft. 20,700 m.
Speed: 1,865 mph. 3000 km/h.
Range: 1,075 miles 1,730 km.
Armament
Max. external weapons load of 4,000 kg. (8,800 lb.).
Typical interceptor configuration: Four R-40 (AA-6 “Acrid”) AAMs., or two R-23 (AA-7 “Apex”) AAMs., and four R-60 (AA-8 “Aphid”) AAMs., or R-73 (AA-11 “Archer”) AAMs.
Known Variants
MiG-25BBT, MiG-25BM, MiG-25P, MiG-25PD, MiG-25PDS, MiG-25PU, MiG-25R, MiG-25RB, MiG-25RBF, MiG-25RBK, MiG-25RBS, MiG-25RBSh, MiG-25RBV, MiG-25RU, MiG-25U
Operators
Algeria, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Bulgaria, India, Iraq, Libya, Syria, Ukraine
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