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Sukhoi Su-9

Sukhoi Su-9

This article describes the supersonic Su-9 "Fishpot". For the earlier subsonic interceptor, see Sukhoi Su-9 (1946).

The Sukhoi Su-9 (NATO reporting name Fishpot) was a single-engine, all-weather, missile-armed interceptor aircraft developed by the Soviet Union.

Development

The Su-9 emerged from aerodynamic studies by TsAGI, the Soviet aerodynamic center, during the Korean War, which devised several optimum aerodynamic configurations for jet fighters. The design first flew in 1956 as the T-405 prototype. The Su-9 was developed at the same time as the Su-7, and both were first seen by the West at the Tushino Aviation Day on 24 June 1956, where the Su-9 was dubbed Fitter-B. It entered service in 1959.

Total production of the Su-9 was about 1,100 aircraft. It is believed that at least some Su-9s were upgraded to Su-11 form. None were exported to any of the USSR's client states nor to the Warsaw Pact nations. Remaining Su-9s and later Su-11s were retired during the 1970s. Some were retained as test vehicles or converted to remote-piloted vehicles for use as drones. It was replaced by the upgraded Su-11 and the much-superior Su-15 and MiG-25.

The combat record of the 'Fishpot,' if any, is unknown. It is possible that it was involved in the interception (or even shoot-down) of reconnaissance missions whose details remain classified, but nothing is publicly admitted.

On September 4 1962 a modified Su-9 (designated T-431 by the bureau) piloted by Vladimir Sergeievitch Ilyushin set a new world record for absolute height, at 28,852 m (94,658 ft). In November of the same year Ilyushin set several new sustained speed/altitude records in the same aircraft.

Description

The Su-9's fuselage and tail surfaces resembled those of the Su-7, but unlike the swept wing of that aircraft, the 'Fishpot' used a 53° delta wing with conventional slab tailplanes. It shared Sukhoi features like the rear-fuselage air brakes as well as the Su-7's Lyulka AL-7 turbojet engine and nose intake. The translating shock cone contains the radar set.

The Su-9 was developed from earlier work on a developmental aircraft designated T-3, to which the Su-9 was very nearly identical. Internally at Sukhoi, the Su-9 was known as the T-43.

The delta wing of the Su-9 was adopted because of its lower drag in the supersonic flight regimen. Its greater volume also allowed a very modest increase in fuel capacity compared to the Su-7. The Su-9 was capable of Mach 1.8 at altitude, or about Mach 1.14 with missiles. Its fuel fraction remained minimal, however, and operational radius was limited. Furthermore, rotation speeds were even higher than the Su-7, which was already high at 360 km/h (225 mph). Unlike the Su-7, which had very heavy controls but docile handling characteristics, the 'Fishpot' had light and responsive controls, but was very unforgiving of pilot error.

The Su-9 had primitive R1L (NATO reporting name 'High Fix') radar in the shock cone and was armed with four K-5 (AA-1 'Alkali') beam-riding air-to-air missiles. Like all beam-riders, the K-5 was so limited as to be nearly useless for air-to-air combat. Unlike the Su-7 and later Su-15, no Su-9 carried cannon armament, although two fuselage pylons were reserved for the carriage of drop tanks.

A two-seat trainer version, designated Su-9U, was also produced in limited numbers (about 50 aircraft). It received the NATO reporting name 'Maiden.' It had a full armament and radar system with displays in both cockpits, allowing trainees to practice all aspects of the interception mission, but because the second seat further reduced the already meager fuel fraction, it was not truly combat-capable.

Specifications (Su-9)

{{Aircraft specification|

plane or copter?=plane
>crew=One
length main=17.37 mlength alt=57 ft 0 inspan main=8.43 mspan alt=27 ft 8 inheight main=4.88 mheight alt=16 ft 0 inarea main=34 m²area alt=366 ft²empty weight main=8,620 kgempty weight alt=19,000 lbloaded weight main=12,250 kgloaded weight alt=27,000 lbmax takeoff weight main=13,500 kgmax takeoff weight alt=29,700 lbmore general=engine (jet)=Lyulka AL-7type of jet=turbojetnumber of jets=1thrust main=90 kN thrust alt=19,840 lbfmax speed alt=1,325 mphmax speed more=at high altituderange main=1,125 kmrange alt=340 miceiling main=16,760 mceiling alt=55,000 ftclimb rate main=136.7 m/sclimb rate alt=27,000 ft/minloading main=383 kg/m²loading alt=74 lb/ft²more performance=armament=
* 4x K-5 (AA-1 'Alkali') air-to-air missiles

Operators

* Soviet Union

Related content

{{aircontent|related=Sukhoi Su-7 -Sukhoi Su-11|similar aircraft=McDonnell F-101B Voodoo -Convair F-102 Delta Dagger -English Electric Lightning|sequence=Su-7 -Su-9 -Su-10 -Su-11 -Su-15|see also=
* List of military aircraft of the Soviet Union and the CIS



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