Thursday, July 30, 2015

Frogfoot UTG.

This is coolbert:

From that prior blog entry:

"That is a Frogfoot on take-off? Su-25 not normally associated with naval aviation. Until now?

Su-25 indeed associated with Russian naval aviation. Frogfoot [NATO code name] used strictly as a training aircraft for pilots to practice carrier take-off and landings. NOT a warplane having an organic combat capability anymore?

"A twin-seat carrier-based combat trainer powered by two R-95Sh turbojet engines each producing 4,100-kgf thrust. The Su-25UTG is a derivative of the Su-25UB combat trainer version of the baseline Su-25 attack aircraft. It differs from the Su-25UB in having the arrestor hook for practising flying off and on the deck of the aircraft carrier as well as a somewhat lighter airframe due to the fact that its weaponry and armour plates were dismounted . . . The Su-25UTG is operated by the composite air division deployed on the Admiral Kuznetsov aircraft carrier. In 1999, one of the aircraft was fitted with a folding wing."


Another image of a Russian Su-25UTB practicing a ski-jump take-off.


Frogfoot UTG on the deck of an aircraft carrier. Presumably the Admiral Kuznetsov.


Yet one more image of Su-25UTG ready for carrier flight ops.

Su-25 Frogfoot then an inventoried Russian naval aviation warplane but only in a training capacity.

coolbert.

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