TheTumansky R-21was a Sovietturbojetengine of the 1960s. Used for development only, the project was canceled.

R-21
Type Turbojet
Manufacturer Tumansky
First run 1960
Major applications Mikoyan-Gurevich Ye-8
Developed from Tumansky R-11

Design and development

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TheTumanskyR-21 was developed at Tushino motor plant (part of OKB-300), headed byNikolai Georgievich Metskhvarishvili,as a twin-spoolaxial-flowafterburning turbojet. It was based on theTumansky R-11with the goal of increasing thrust and airflow, using a new six-stage compressor with a larger diameter and different rotor blades than its predecessor as well as a new afterburner chamber and variable exhaust nozzle. The increased pressure ratio and turbine inlet temperature required components to be fabricated from advanced alloys.[1]Several contemporary Soviet aircraft were planned to use the R-21, including theSukhoi T-58,Sukhoi T-6and theMikoyan-Gurevich Ye-8.On September 11, 1962 an R-21, fitted to a Ye-8, exploded in mid-air after compressor failure; test pilotGeorgy Mosolovsurvived the ejection at Mach 1.78, but he never fully recovered.[2]Shortly afterward the Ye-8 program was cancelled along with R-21 development in favour of heavier fighter planes such as theMikoyan-Gurevich MiG-23,which required more powerful engines.

Variants

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  • R-21F-300 – the only version built.

Specifications (R-21F-300)

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General characteristics

  • Type:Afterburningturbojet
  • Length:
  • Diameter:987 mm (38.9 in)
  • Dry weight:1,250 kg (2,755 lb)

Components

Performance

  • Maximumthrust:
  • 46.1 kN (10,361 lbf) military power
  • 80.6 kN (15,873 lbf) with afterburner
  • Thrust-to-weight ratio:3.76; 5.76 with afterburner.

See also

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Related development

Related lists

References

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