Airliner World – April 2018

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36 AIRLINER WORLD APRIL 2018


Right from the start of
the project, the Russian
government and UAC
specified that design
should be a huge leap
forward in innovation.

The company has also produced
concepts for a pure freighter (MS-21K)
a combi variant (MC-21KP) and options
for VIP versions, but these have been
put on the back burner as the
manufacturer concentrates on bring
the -200 and -300 models into
service. Three Russian-designed
engines were originally looked to
power the jet, while the CFM-56 and
International Aero Engines V2500 were
also viable options. At this early stage,
entry into service (EIS) was scheduled
for 2014, and Yakovlev planned a
production run of around 640 examples
through to 2028, of which two-thirds,
it forecasted, would be acquired by
domestic carriers.


All Change
A presidential decree by Vladimir
Putin in February 2006 saw the largest
reshuffle of the Russian aviation
industry in its history, resulting in
the formation of United Aircraft
Corporation (UAC), under which all the
nation’s aerospace manufacturers were
integrated into a single organisation.
Irkut Corporation, with a history dating
back to 1932 and with vast experience
in the production of military aero-
planes as well as more recently supply-
ing Airbus with A320 nose gear bays,
was selected as the lead contractor for
the MC-21 in July 2007. This was three
years after the Yakovlev had been
integrated within Irkut.

In December 2008, Irkut issued a
tender for developing and supplying
systems for its new airliner that
mentioned Irkut Corporation, the
Irkutsk Aviation Plant Design Bureau,
YDB, Beriev Aircraft Company and
Sukhoi Civil Aircraft as its partners
in the programme. The tender also
revealed another variant, the 211-seat
MC-21-400, while the smaller -100 had
been dropped.
The tender document also outlined
clear targets for the project including:
25% better fuel efficiency, 15% lower
operating costs than the rival A320 and
the Boeing 737 Next Generation, and
this was to be achieved by harnessing
cutting-edge technology. First flight

was scheduled for 2014, with EIS for
domestic carriers in 2015 and
international certification due a year
later. At the 2009 Paris Air Show and
MAKS airshow held in August, Irkut
Corporation went public with three
models of the MC-21-200, -300 and
-400. Later that year it selected Pratt &
Whitney as one of the engine suppliers,
offering the state-of-the-art PW1400G
Geared Turbofan. At the same time, it
confirmed other major suppliers both
from home and abroad. Irkut, having
become the lead contractor for the
programme, completed preliminary
designs late in 2010, but they were
frozen the following spring.

Work Begins
Designing and building the MC-21
has taken far longer than originally
planned, but there are good reasons for
that. It is a complex project and Irkut
Corporation’s inexperience at
managing such a multi-national
programme meant it had to build its
industrial infrastructure almost from

ABOVE LEFT • Final
adjustments are made
to the prototype MC-21
prior to its official
roll-out.

ABOVE • A fuselage
section is manoeuvred
into position prior to its
mating to another
section at the Irkutsk
Aviation Plant.

Inside the completed
fuselage as Irkut
technicians prepare
to install flight test
equipment ahead of
the jet’s maiden flight.
ALL IMAGES IRKUT
CORPORATION UNLESS
STATED

The distinctive lines of
the MC-21 are evident
as the first prototype
is pulled out of the
flight test hangar at the
Irkutsk Aviation Plant
ahead of another sortie.
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