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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia
Still flying Bears off the US coasts? (Photo)
2006-10-12
Posted by:3dc

#17  Jeebus, a prop-driven bomber?


Bexcause it has propellers it is easy to put it in the same bag than B17s or B29s. But it is a turboprop not a piston-engined plane and it is much faster than a Mustang and at least as fast or even faster than German WWII jets. It is only marginally only fifty miles per hour slower than the B52. It has lower ceiling (12000m against 17000m) and payload is only half but it seems to have the same range (15000 km).

It is very noisy, so much that immersed sunmarines were able to detect it by the noise, or to be uncomfortable for intercepting fighters. Many of its crewmen developped hearing problems.

Anyway the Bear was nothing to sneeze at.

The Soviets tried to make a very long range jet bomber but failed because their jet engines were not fuel-efficient. So they built a turboprop instead.
Posted by: JFM   2006-10-12 16:37  

#16  Engines are turboprops, and they always drew a crowd on the flight deck whenever they buzzed us, but always bewteen them and us was either a Tomcat, Phantom, or occasionally a Corsair II. I suppose that even a Hornet has been pressed into doing that, but I never saw that. The Bear is one impressive airplane.
Posted by: USN, ret.   2006-10-12 15:41  

#15  Don't forget the tailgunner.
Posted by: Chuck Simmins   2006-10-12 13:42  

#14  Contrarotating gearboxes are complicated and maintenance intensive.
Posted by: ed   2006-10-12 13:41  

#13  One difference from the cold war - looks like more "stylized" paint is allowed on the front of the aircraft. And looking at the bulge under the nose, that's a maritime patrol verison of a Bear, likely surface search radar in there amongst other electronic listenting goodies.
Posted by: Oldspook   2006-10-12 13:33  

#12  Getting serious for a second, if something like the Bear weren't designed for practicality, and were a maintenance hog instead, how would you find out?
Posted by: Abdominal Snowman   2006-10-12 12:11  

#11  "An F-15 Eagle from the 12th Fighter Squadron at Elmendorf Air Force Base, Alaska, flies next to a Russian Tu-95 Bear Bomber"

Well, that's a polite way of saying it.....
Posted by: mcsegeek1   2006-10-12 12:07  

#10  Don't underestimate props, under several circumstances they are far more fuel efficient than jet engines.

Remember than the Russians are very good at designing for practicality, such as using EMP resistant tubes instead of easily-fryable electronics.

They are also firm believers in armored aircraft and aircraft that are your basic flying engines.

On the surface, such aircraft seem strange, but there is usually an underlying logic to them.
Posted by: Anonymoose   2006-10-12 11:53  

#9  Yet ANother Airplane that I can't afford...
Posted by: Abdominal Snowman   2006-10-12 11:53  

#8  The Tu-95 was concurrent with the B-52. It's only about 10% slower and has outlived several "replacements" (Mya-4, Tu-22).

Over all, a darned good airplane.
Posted by: Jackal   2006-10-12 11:50  

#7  And yes, it's a prop design - two counter-rotating props per engine.
Posted by: mojo   2006-10-12 10:41  

#6  God that must be fun now that we are not pointing guns at each other. BTW the TU-95 Bear is an outstanding Intelligence Platform. It can carry a lot of gear/people, long range, and good loiter time. The long tube out of the nose is a refueling probe. The usuallly work in pairs with one being a tanker version. The tanker will loiter off station (outside U.S. airspace)and refuel the Recon bird as needed.
Posted by: Cyber Sarge   2006-10-12 10:08  

#5  That is indeed a refueling probe, and IIRC, Mister Bear was still in limited production as late as the 1990s. I had a chance to see one at Barksdale AFB, LA in the early 90s - that monster is one SOLID arplane, and it's crews are as devoted to it as our B-52 crews are to their airplanes.

Mike
Posted by: Mike Kozlowski   2006-10-12 09:34  

#4  Still used as maritime patrol aircraft,I believe. Nice long range with the turbo-prop engine. Since they built a bunch, there's probably lots of spare parts to cannibalize.
Posted by: SteveS   2006-10-12 09:30  

#3  Midair refueling probe I think.
Posted by: tu3031   2006-10-12 08:57  

#2  Jeebus, a prop-driven bomber?!? What's that long thing sticking out of the nose?
Posted by: Scooter McGruder   2006-10-12 08:54  

#1  I'm surprised they have a Bear that's still flyable.
Posted by: Mike   2006-10-12 07:02  

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