Went to Riga and gutted I missed this.....
Discussion
They have a pretty awesome aviation museum, 250 yards from the airport. Unfortunately I saw the aircraft and only researched when I got home! (was on a flying visit - arrived 15:30 Monday, left 09:20 Tuesday!) Hopefully I'll get to go again
http://aviamuseum.org/EN

http://aviamuseum.org/EN

Edited by S3_Graham on Thursday 1st August 23:18
Was/is indeed a backfire! There are some super YouTube vids of it.
But weird that the MIG 29 seems to not have any tail plane.
The website is worth a read, story is that one guys started it in the USSR as a training school, then with the USSR breakup he got funding from Latvian gov until '97 when it turned into a museum. Backfire looks awesome in the flesh but sadly I was rushing while working on another aircraft.
But weird that the MIG 29 seems to not have any tail plane.
The website is worth a read, story is that one guys started it in the USSR as a training school, then with the USSR breakup he got funding from Latvian gov until '97 when it turned into a museum. Backfire looks awesome in the flesh but sadly I was rushing while working on another aircraft.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detail...
The voice on the PA system is the late John Blake.
The voice on the PA system is the late John Blake.
S3_Graham said:
It's a shame those days of crazy advancements and pushing the boundaries of what can be done are over 
They're not.
This particular helicopter did not work very well so the concept was abandoned. The more "normal" Mil 26 fulfilled the role envisaged for the Mil 12.
The twin outrigger concept is actually a rather old idea and was used on some early helicopter models, such as the designs by Focke Wulf and Focke Achgelis. The Mil 12 was probably the most extreme example built but it just wasn't that effective.
Here's some old Focke Wulf and Achgelis choppers -


Gassing Station | Boats, Planes & Trains | Top of Page | What's New | My Stuff


