Il-38 May Anno 1970 - Photo: Per Gram
The Ilyushin design bureau and
the Russian navy have revealed details of a mission systems upgrade and
airframe refurbishment of the Il-38 antisubmarine warfare (ASW) aircraft. At a ceremony on
January 31 at Ramenskoye airbase south of Moscow, Russian naval aviation
commander Gen. Igor Kozhin said that “about 30” of the 54 Il-38s in the
inventory will be modernized, in a program that will continue until 2025.
Nikolai Stolyarov, director for special
aviation programs with United Aircraft Corporation (UAC), said Ilyushin and its sister
companies Myasischev and Aircraft Repair Plant No.20 have fulfilled “the
second defense ministry order for Il-38Ns” (for five and three aircraft,
respectively). He added that these companies continue lifetime-extension and
modernization work on other military versions of the baseline Il-18 in service
with Russia's Air and Space Force. “This platform has proved itself as very
reliable, durable and robust airplane. We hope the Il-38N program would
resume…after successful completion of special flight trials that will commence
shortly.”
The N version of the Il-38 features the
Novella P-38 search and sighting system from St.-Petersburg-based
Leninets, which replaces the outdated Berkut-38 on the original Il-38, 65 of
which were delivered from 1967 to 1972. The system can track 32 targets
simultaneously and has detection range against aircraft of 90 km (50 nm)
and sea-going targets of 320 km (173 nm). The Indian Navy was the only
export customer, and it still operates five Il-38SD with the Sea Dragon sensor suite,
which is an exportable version of the Novella.
With all-up weight of 68 tons, the
Il-38 has a crew of seven and a range of 9,500 km (5,126nm). It is broadly
similar to the P-3 Orion, which has filled a similar ASW role with the U.S. Navy. According to Ilyushin, the
Il-38N is intended for long-endurance anti-submarine patrols over sea, with
simultaneous search for aerial and sea-going targets. In addition, the aircraft
can set mine fields and perform search-and-rescue and ecological monitoring
duties. Its arsenal of torpedoes, mines, depth charges and buoys has been
extended though addition of the PL250-120 Zagon
anti-submarine guided bombs. Indian Il-38SDs
can fire the Kh-35, whereas the Russian navy decided not to equip its aircraft
with anti-ship missiles.
The Il-38N that was accepted during the
January 31 ceremony (RF-755345)
was the eighth to be upgraded. It is the second Il-38N to be delivered to the
Russian navy's 859 Center in Yeisk on the Black Sea coast for combat use,
flight training and type conversion. Commander Gen. Alexei Serdyuk said his
center will use these airplanes to train Pacific and Northern Fleet aircrews.
“We will employ them on special trials and working out new tactics,” he added
After the ceremony, Gen. Kozhin told
journalists that the Il-38 and Tu-142 will continue the primary ASW types in the Russian inventory. “These
are old platforms, but we expect a substantial increase in their capabilities
through the renewal of their mission equipment. Other maritime nations will be
surprised at the new capabilities these types will demonstrate after
modernization,” he declared.
Kozhin described the Il-38
as “the first indigenous ASW aircraft capable of long-duration
flights over ocean, and it is still capable of search and annihilation of
submarines.” He praised Ilyushin for producing “such a uniquely durable and
reliable machine.” It has been operational with the navy for more than 50years
with minimal attrition. “Despite its rather serious age, this aircraft is made
very capable through yet another modernization program. The President and
defense minister have set the goal to bring the share of new and modernized aircraft
in the Russian naval aviation inventory up to 70 percent. We are on track
with that.
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