List of Sukhoi aircraft
Appearance
This is a list of aircraft produced by Sukhoi, a Russian aircraft manufacturer.
Products
[edit]Production Aircraft
[edit]Military Aircraft
[edit]Name | NATO Designation Name | Type | Description | Number Built | Maiden Flight | Introduction | Years of Production | Retired |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Su-2 | None | reconnaissance aircraft, light bomber | 910 | August 25, 1937 | 1939, December | 1937–1942 | 1944 | |
Su-7 | Fitter A | ground-attack aircraft | 1,847 | September 7, 1955 | 1959 | 1957–1972 | - | |
Su-9 | Fishpot B | interceptor fighter aircraft | 1,150 | June 24, 1959 | 1959 | 1959–1960s | 1979 | |
Su-11 | Fishpot C | interceptor fighter aircraft | 108 | December 25, 1958 | 1964 | 1962–1965 | 1983 | |
Su-15 | Flagon | interceptor fighter aircraft | 1,290 | May 30, 1962 | 1965 | 1965–1979 | 1996 | |
Su-17/Su-20/Su-22 | Fitter D | variable-wing ground-attack aircraft | 2,867 | August 2, 1966 | 1970 | 1969–1990 | - | |
Su-24 | Fencer | deep strike bomber, variable-wing interdictor aircraft | 1,400~ | July 2, 1967 | 1974 | 1967–1993 | - | |
Su-25 | Frogfoot | close air support | twinjet, single-seat | 1,000+ | February 22, 1975 | 1981, July 19 | 1978–present | - |
Su-27 | Flanker | multirole fighter, air superiority fighter | twinjet, single-seat | 809 | May 20, 1977 | 1985, June 22 | 1982–present | - |
Su-33 | Flanker D | carrier-based multirole fighter, air superiority fighter | twinjet, single-seat | 35~ | August 17, 1987 | 1998, August 31 | 1987–1999 | - |
Su-30 | Flanker C | multirole fighter | twinjet, twin-seat | 540+ | December 31, 1989 | 1996 | 1992–present | - |
Su-27M/Su-35 | Flanker E | multirole fighter, air superiority fighter | twinjet, single-seat | Su-27M: 15
Su-35S: 128 |
Su-27M: June 28, 1988
Su-35S: February 19, 2008 |
2014 | Su-27M: 1988–1995
Su-35S: 2007–present |
- |
Su-30MK-2/MKK | Flanker G | MK-2: multi-role fighter aircraft
MKK: strike-fighter aircraft Chinese variant of Su-30 |
134 | Su-30МK: 1 July 1997 | 2000, December | 2000–present | - | |
Su-30MKI | Flanker H | air superiority fighter
Indian Air Force variant of Su-30 |
230 (February 2017) | Su-30МK: 1 July 1997
Su-30MKI: 2000 |
2002, September 27 | Su-30MKI: 2000–present | - | |
Su-80 | None | STOL transport aircraft | twin-turboprop, twin-boom | 8 | February 4, 2001 | 2001 | 2001–present | - |
Su-34/Su-32 | Fullback | fighter-bomber, strike fighter | twinjet, twin-seat | 138 | April 13, 1990 | 2014, March 20 | 2006–present | - |
Su-30MKM | Flanker I | Multirole air superiority fighter
Malaysian Air Force variant of Su-30 |
18 | Su-30МK: 1 July 1997 | 2007 | 2007–present | - | |
Su-57/T 50 | Felon | multirole fifth-generation jet fighter | twin-engine, single-seat | 12 | 29 January 2010 | 2020, December | 2009–present (prototypes only until 2018) | - |
Sukhoi Su-47 | Firkin | Experimental aircraft, Jet fighter | Twin-engine, single-seat | 1 | - | |||
Su-75 Checkmate | multirole fifth-generation jet fighter | single-engine, single-seat | 1 | December of 2023 | 2026-2027 | 2021–present (prototypes only 2021) |
Civilian Aircraft
[edit]Name | Type | Description | Seats | Number Built | Maiden Flight | Introduction | Years of Production |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Su-26 | aerobatic aircraft | single-seat | 1 | 153 if combined[1] | June 1984 | 1984 | 1984–present |
Su-29 | double-seat | 2 | 1991 | 1991 | 1991–present | ||
Su-31 | single-seat | 1 | 1992 | 1992 | 1992–present | ||
Su-80 | STOL transport aircraft | twin-turboprop, twin-boom | 30 | 8 | February 4, 2001 | 2001 | 2001–present |
Superjet 100 | regional jet airliner | narrow-body, twinjet | 87 | 136 | May 19, 2008 | April 21, 2011 with Armavia | 2007–present |
Experimental aircraft
[edit]- Su-1/I-330: high-altitude fighter, 1940
- Su-3/I-360: improved Su-1, 1942
- Su-4/BB-3: prototype version of Su-2 re-engined with a M-90 engine, 1941
- Su-5/I-107: prototype motorjet fighter, 1945
- Su-6: ground attack aircraft, 1942
- Su-7: prototype mixed-power high-altitude interceptor, 1944
- Su-8/DDBSh: ground attack aircraft, 1943
- Su-9: jet fighter, 1946
- Su-10: four-engine jet bomber, 1946
- Su-11: prototype twin-engine fighter developed from the Su-9, resembled the Me 262, 1946
- Su-12: observation plane, 1947
- Su-13: prototype twin-engine jet fighter developed from the Su-11, 1947
- Su-15: fighter-interceptor, 1949
- Su-17: fighter, 1949
- Sukhoi-Gulfstream S-21: a supersonic business jet design.
- Sukhoi KR-860: doubledeck superjumbo jet design.[2]
- Su-37 ("Terminator"): an improved Su-35
- Su-28 / Su-25UB: trainer and demonstrator
- Su-25TM / Su-39: 1984, ground attack aircraft, optimised for anti-tank use
- Su-38: light agricultural aircraft
- S-32/37: multirole fighter (was marketed for a time under the designation Su-47)
- Su-47: experimental aircraft
- P-1: 1958, interceptor fighter
- T-3: 1956, fighter
- T-4/100: 1972, supersonic bomber, similar in concept to XB-70 Valkyrie, which was developed by Sukhoi during the 1960s and 1970s.
- T-49: prototype interceptor, modernized variant of Su-11, 1960
- T-60S: intermediate range bomber.
- Su-57: fifth generation fighter. Basic future aircraft of Russian Frontline Aviation. Maiden flight January 29, 2010.[citation needed]
- Sukhoi/HAL FGFA: FGFA is a derivative project from the Sukhoi Su-57 being developed by the Sukhoi OKB and HAL for the Indian Air Force (FGFA is the official designation for the Indian version). Sukhoi/HAL FGFA project cancelled after India left the Su 57 project
Planned aircraft
[edit]Note: The Sukhoi OKB has reused aircraft designations, for example: the Su-9 from 1946 and the later Su-9 from 1956, the former was not produced in quantity. Sukhoi prototype designations are based on wing layout planform. Straight and swept wings are assigned the "S" prefix, while delta winged designs(including tailed-delta) have "T" for a designation prefix.
Unmanned Aerial Vehicles
[edit]- Sukhoi Zond-1
- Sukhoi Zond-2
- Sukhoi Zond-3[3]
References
[edit]- ^ www.3ebra.com, IT-Bureau Zebra -. "Sukhoi Company (JSC) - Airplanes - Civil aviation - Su-26, 29, 31". www.sukhoi.org. Archived from the original on 2010-12-25. Retrieved 2017-08-17.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ KR-860 Ultraheavy transport and passenger aircraft.
- ^ "Sukhoi Zond (Series)". www.militaryfactory.com. Retrieved 2023-06-24.