
Nanchang Q-5 | |
|---|---|
| Riik | Hiina #8217 Vabariik |
| Rolli | Maapealse rünnaku õhusõidukid |
| Esimene lend | 10. juuni 1965 |
| Ehitatud | 1300+ |
2007 Nanchang Q-5 (Hiina: 强-5; pinyin: Qiang-5; NATO aruandlusnimi: Fantan), tuntud ka kui A-5 oma ekspordiversioonides, on Hiinas ehitatud ühekohaline kahe reaktiivmootoriga maapealne ründelennuk, mis põhineb Nõukogude MiG-19-l. Kuid õhusõidukit kasutatakse peamiselt tiheda õhu toetamiseks.
Allikas: Nanchang Q-5 Vikipeedias
| Nachang A-5 Fantan Walk Around | |
|---|---|
| Fotograaf | Unknow |
| Lokaliseerimine | Teadmata |
| Fotod | 40 |
| Nachang A-5 Fantan Walk Around | |
|---|---|
| Fotograaf | Howard Mason |
| Lokaliseerimine | Teadmata |
| Fotod | 38 |
Vaata ka:
General Characteristics
The Nanchang Q-5 (Qiang-5, or Attack Aircraft 5), known as the A-5 in export versions, with the NATO reporting name: Flounder, is a Chinese single-seat, twin-engine ground-attack aircraft. Developed in the 1960s, it is derived from the Soviet MiG-19 (Chinese designation Shenyang J-6), but features a redesigned, longer fuselage to incorporate an internal weapons bay and side-mounted air intakes, allowing for a pointed nose. The aircraft was designed primarily for close air support and air interdiction roles, with later variants (like the Q-5A) having the capability to deliver tactical nuclear weapons. It has been a key component of the Chinese Air Force (PLAAF) and Naval Air Force (PLANAF) and was widely exported.
| Property | Typical Value (Q-5/A-5 Variants) |
|---|---|
| Rolli | Ground Attack / Close Air Support (CAS) |
| National Origin | China (PRC) |
| Tootja | Nanchang Aircraft Manufacturing Company |
| First Flight | June 4, 1965 |
| Service Entry | 1970 |
| No. Built | Approx. 1,000 to 1,300 |
| Meeskonna | 1 (Pilot) |
| Length (Q-5I/A-5C) | 15.65 m (51 ft 4 in) |
| Tiibade siruulatus | 9.68 m (31 ft 9 in) |
| Max Takeoff Weight | 11,830 kg (26,080 lb) |
Powerplant and Performance
- Engine: 2 x Shenyang WP-6 afterburning turbojet engines (Chinese license-built version of the Tumansky R-9).
- Max Thrust (per engine, w/ afterburner): ~36.78 kN (8,267 lbf).
- Maximum Speed: Mach 1.12 (Approx. 1,210 km/h or 752 mph).
- Service Ceiling: 16,000 m (52,500 ft).
- Combat Radius (Lo-Lo-Lo): Approx. 400 km (215 nmi).
- Ferry Range: 2,000 km (1,080 nmi).
- Rate of Climb: 103 m/s (20,300 ft/min).
Armament and Avionics
- Internal Gun: 2 x 23 mm Norinco Type 23-2K cannons (100 rounds per gun), mounted in the wing roots.
- Hardpoints: 10 total (4 under-fuselage, 6 under-wing) with a max external capacity of 2,000 kg (4,400 lb).
- Ordnance:
- Bombs: Free-fall bombs (50 kg to 500 kg), cluster bombs, and later, laser-guided bombs (LGBs) via targeting pods (Q-5E/L).
- Rockets: 57 mm, 90 mm, and 130 mm unguided rocket pods.
- Missiles: PL-2, PL-5, PL-7 (Air-to-Air); C-801 (Anti-Ship, for naval variants); and export variants (A-5C) could carry Western AIM-9 Sidewinder or Matra R.550 Magic AAMs.
- Special Munitions: Q-5A variant was configured to carry a single tactical nuclear bomb.
- Avionics: The original Q-5 featured basic 1960s navigation and attack systems. Later export and upgraded domestic versions (A-5C, Q-5II/D/E/L) received significant updates, including:
- Laser Rangefinder (nose-mounted).
- Radar Warning Receiver (RWR) and chaff/flare dispensers.
- Head-Up Display (HUD) and modern Western INS/GPS in export/modernized variants.
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