Yakovlev EG

Yakovlev EG / Sh / Yak-M11FR-1
Role Experimental helicopter
Manufacturer Yakovlev
First flight 1947
Introduction 1947
Retired 1948
Status Cancelled



The Yakovlev EG (Eksperimentalnyi Gelikopter), also commonly known as the Yak-M11FR-1 and Sh (Shootka), was an experimental aircraft with coaxial rotors. The prototype was first flown by V.V. Tezavrovsky in December 1947.

Design and development

The fuselage of the EG was a welded steel tube truss with duralumin skinning on the fwd fuselage back to the rear of the engine compartment. The rear fuselage was fabric covered and supported a tailplane-style unit with twin endplate fins, as well as a tailskid. The Pilot and Passenger sat side by side under a glazed canopy with a car-style door on each side. The M-11FR engine was mounted behind the gearbox which it drove via a short shaft. The gearbox supported the Rotor pylon which had two, contra-rotating, co-axial, two-bladed rotors. A fixed tricycle undercarriage mounted on steel tube trusses supported the helicopter on the ground. Flight testing revealed vibration at forward speeds above 20–30 km/h. In an effort to reduce vibration the tailplane and fins were removed. In early 1948 the M-11FR engine was replaced by an M-12, which proved troublesome so an M-11FR was refitted to complete the flight trials by 8 July 1948.

Specifications

See also

Related development


References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Yakovlev aircraft.

    Yefim Gordon, Dmitry Komissarov & Sergey Komissarov "OKB Yakovlev" 2005

    Bill Gunston & Yefim Gordon "Yakovlev Aircraft since 1924", 1997

    Bill Gunston "The Osprey Encyclopedia of Russian Aircraft", 2000


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