Airforces

(Steven Felgate) #1
72 // FEBRUARY 2018 #359 http://www.airforcesmonthly.com

he Yak-130 advanced jet trainer was
formally taken on strength by the
Russian military in 2010. However,
it wasn’t until 2013 that student pilot training
started on the type. This relatively advanced
and highly agile combat trainer is employed
by the Vozdushno-Kosmicheskiye Sily
Rossiyskoy Federatsii (VKS RF, Russian
Federation Air and Space Force) to train
new aviators destined for fighter and
ground-attack fast jet communities. The
little Yak combines a high-tech training
environment, which immerses the students
in a contemporary glass cockpit, with
fighter-like handling characteristics. It also
features a combat training and offensive
capability with both guided and dumb
ordnance. Perhaps most important for its
basic role are its safety features, including
a pair of Zvezda K-36LT-3.5 zero-zero
ejection seats – arguably the best in the
world in a training aircraft. The twin-engine

jet features g-limits from -3 to +8 and can
pull a sustained 7g at a speed of 450kts.
Alongside its domestic success – which is
now being expanded through introduction
to the Russian Navy – the Yak-130 is also
in service with four export operators, all of
which turned to the nimble trainer due to
its compatibility with their respective fleets
of MiG-29 and Su-27/30 derivatives.
On the downside, the Yak’s performance
and advanced systems make it one of
the more expensive jet trainers currently
available. When combined with relatively high
direct operating costs, this has stymied the
trainer’s ambitions. Indeed, to date Russia
has only been able to justify a small number
to replace L-39Cs, MiG-29s and Su-25s as
lead-in fighter trainers (LIFT) at Armavir and
Borisoglebsk air bases. In this role, compared
with its aged predecessors, the modern
Yak represents a cost-effective investment
with a 30-year, 10,000-hour service life.

Protracted development
The Yak-130 traces its origins back to 1990
when the then Soviet Air Force commander-
in-chief, Aviation Marshal Alexander
Yefimov, publically articulated the need
for a new jet trainer. It was designed to
replace the versatile and popular Czech-
built Aero Vodochody L-39 Albatros, which
was ill-suited to training pilots destined for
modern, high-performance fourth-generation
fighters. A formal decree was issued by
the Soviet government in June of that year,
ordering the Mikoyan Experimental Design
Bureau (OKB MiG) to begin drafting a new
twin-engine jet trainer. The estimated
requirement was 1,200 new aircraft. The
specifications stipulated a landing speed
not exceeding 92kts, while take-off run and
landing roll were to be less than 1,600ft
(500m), including those from unpaved
runways. There was also a new requirement
to be able to reprogramme the flight control

Yak-13 0


T


Russia’s tenacious trainer


The second pre-production aircraft, used
for testing and demonstration purposes,
was painted in 2013 in a ‘retro’ red and
white colour scheme used in the past
on Yakovlev trainers. It took part in the
International Aviation and Space Salon
(MAKS) at Zhukovsky in 2017.
Robert Kysela
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