Reports on Captured a/c in Korea
Some time ago, I have found a report named "Evaluation and Analysis of the IL-10 Soviet Airplane" prepared by Cornell Aeronautical Laboratory Inc. which worked on 2 a/c captured in Korea.
A same kind of report must have been prepared for the captured Mig-15 and I would like to get a copy. Does anyone have any clue where I can find it? |
Re: Reports on Captured a/c in Korea
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Also sorry I don't where to find the evaluation of the MiG-15. Joe |
Re: Reports on Captured a/c in Korea
did this same group ever do any reports on Yak aircraft ?
(Yak-9P or Yak-11) |
Re: Reports on Captured a/c in Korea
Dear Joe,
I have found the report in a garage sale. It is over 125 pages with photos and drawings. It is clear that Cornell disassembled the Il-10 down to its rivets and photographed it. There are lots of drawings given down to its electrical system. Even the stencils are included one by one. As for the Yakolevs, I do not know if they have any reports. It must have been done. |
Re: Reports on Captured a/c in Korea
This is the best I've found about the MiG-15. It has a few good photos and more about the defection. Test data is slim however:
http://www.historicwings.com/feature...tfindings.html If anybody has more info concerning the Yak-9P I'd be very interested. What I've read until now is conflicting: some sources say the -9P was tested in Korea, some say it was shipped to the CONUS. Some say it force-landed, and some say it was captured on the ground. |
Re: Reports on Captured a/c in Korea
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I've never seen the flight test reports, which I'd be most interested in. Joe |
Re: Reports on Captured a/c in Korea
In the early 50s (1952?), I attended a CAP encampment at Wright-Patterson. In one of the hangars, I remember climbing all over a complete, but apparently not flightworthy, IL-10. Also, the Lippisch DM-1 was in the same hangar, along with several other types that I can no longer remember. Later the same day, we saw a fire fighting demonstration and the stack of derelicts being used for practice include an XP-54, the nose off one of the early B-36 prototypes, etc. The Yak-9 was not seen then, but a couple years later it was the first aircraft in the door of the museum, looking quite fresh (light blue) and airworthy, IIRC. It was later replaced by a MiG-15. Perhaps the museum research library might have copies of test reports on these aircraft, they used to have them for most of the WWII foreign types tested.
Best Regards, Artie Bob |
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