Myasishchev
Khrunichev State Research and Production Space Center
V. M. Myasishchev Experimental Design Bureau (Экспериментальный Машиностроительный Завод им. В. М. Мясищева) or OKB-23, founded in 1951 by Vladimir Myasishchev) was one of the chief Soviet aerospace design bureaus until its dissolution in 1960. Vladimir Myasishchev went on to head TsAGI. In 1967, Myasishchev left TsAGI and recreated his bureau, which still exists to this day. The bureau prefix was "M." As of 2003, its workforce is estimated at approximately one thousand. Myasishchev and NPO Molniya intend to use the V-MT or M-55 as launch vehicle for sub-orbital spaceflight.[1]
3.7.2014 and 25.7.2014 information from Board of Directors OAO Il about integration between Ilyushin and Myasishchev.[2][3]
Products
Civil
- Myasishchev M-90 Air Ferry - very heavy multi-purpose transport project, not built.
- M-101 Gzhel/Duet and Duet business aircraft
- M-112 and M-150 cargo-passenger aircraft
- M-500 agricultural aircraft
- Space Adventures C-21
- Space Adventures M-55X
Military
- M-4 "Bison" a strategic bomber.
- VM-T 'Atlant', modified to carry the space shuttle Buran
- M-17 "Mystic-A" high-altitude reconnaissance aircraft
- M-18 supersonic bomber design
- M-44 aerospace vehicle project
- M-48 spaceplane project
- M-50 "Bounder" supersonic bomber
- M-55 "Mystic-B" high-altitude research and reconnaissance aircraft
- M-60 nuclear powered bomber project
- M-103 experimental heavy bomber
- M-200 Master military trainer project, not built.
- Buran program, cockpit
- Cosmopolis XXI suborbital craft
- VKA-23 spaceplane project
Missiles
- RSS-40 Buran, nuclear cruise missile project
References
- ↑ "Russian Companies Design Space Tour Plane" Space Travel, 31 August 2012. Retrieved: 6 September 2012.
- ↑ http://www.ilyushin.org/press/news/ev3327/
- ↑ http://www.ilyushin.org/press/news/ev3420/
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Myasishchev. |
- Official site, in English and Russian.
- globalsecurity.org
- Encyclopædia Astronautix
- Myasishchev history