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Yak- 130
76 // FEBRUARY 2018 #359
with the NSTs-TE helmet-mounted cueing
system. The centreline station can
accommodate an SNPU-130 conformal pod
with a GSh-23L twin-barrel 23mm gun.
Light strike options include two KAB-500Kr
TV-guided bombs and a large selection of
freefall bombs from 110lb (50kg) to 1,100lb
(500kg), RBK-500 cluster bombs, ZB-500
napalm canisters and 650-litre (143-gal)
external tanks in addition to 20-round
B-8M1 packs for 80mm rockets and five-
round B-13L packs for 122mm rockets.
The built-in weapons simulation capability
of the SUO-130 weapons control system
also allows student pilots to practise using
all modern Russian guided missiles and
bombs with infrared, TV and laser seekers
as well as guns and aircraft self-protection
suites in addition to a synthetic radar.
Current manufacturer Irkut offers
customisation of the cockpit controls to
replicate those of fighter types operated
by foreign customers, but to date only the
baseline configuration has been ordered.
Plans to develop light attack derivatives of
the Yak-130 include a laser rangefinder/target
designator in the nose or a compact radar
with air-to-air and air-to-surface modes. The
LD-130 laser rangefinder/target designator,
improving the accuracy of unguided weapons
and allowing the use of laser-guided
munitions, was installed on a pre-series
aircraft and tested in flight for the first time
in April 2015. This sub-version, requested
by a still-unnamed customer, shares almost
full commonality with the basic Yak-130 but
adds the Talisman-NT twin-pod wingtip-
mounted radar jamming system from Belarus.
The air-to-air radar accommodated in the
nose or in a pod still only exists on paper.
Into service
The first pre-series Yak-130, ‘01’, built at the
Sokol plant made its maiden flight on April
30, 2004, at the factory airfield in Nizhny
Novgorod, with Roman Taskaev at the
controls. The second example, ‘02’, flew
in April 2005 and the third, ‘03’, followed
Above right: The front and rear cockpits of the Yak-130 are dominated by multi-function displays. Andrey Zinchuk
Below: A late-production Yak-130 belonging to the 200th UAB at Armavir and
used for training student pilots in the fi ghter stream. Stanislav Bazhenov