The Svyatogor (Russian: Святого́р) was a large experimental Russian aircraft, constructed by Vasily Slesarev in 1916. The aircraft was named after the mythological hero Svyatogor.
Svyatogor
Svyatogor
Role
Experimental bomber
Type of aircraft
Designer
V.A. Slesarev
First flight
never flown
Status
scrapped
Number built
1
Development
Cabin of the Svyatogor
The work on the Svyatogor began in 1913. It was a large wooden biplane, with wings and fuselage covered in fabric. The aircraft was propelled by two large propellers, 6 meters in diameter. Everything on the aircraft was oversized, the nose wheel was 1.5 meter in diameter and the four rear wheels were 2 meters in diameter. The engines were placed inside the fuselage to allow access during flight.[1]
The aircraft awoke much interest, but failed to receive funding before World War I. In desperate need of aircraft, the project was given a 100,000 rubles funding by E.M. Malynsky and production started in December 1914.
As suitable engines were hard to come by, Slesarev tried to mount some that had been taken from a downed Zeppelin. He contacted the French when this did not work out, and received some Renault engines, which could produce 220 hp. These arrived in January 1916. Despite being without money, the construction of the revised design continued. The project stalled, however, with the transmission problems and the death of Slesarev in 1921. The Slesarev Svyatogor never flew.
Specifications
General characteristics
Crew: 3
Length: 21.0m (68ft 11in)
Wingspan: 36.0m (118ft 1in)
Wing area: 180m2 (1,938sqft)
Empty weight: 3,200kg (7,055lb)
Max takeoff weight: 6,500kg (14,330lb)
Powerplant: 2 × Renault piston engine, 149kW (200hp) each
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