Soviet Union | 1928
"Total production of the Soviet inter-war Tupolev I-4 biplane fighter was 369 units."
Authored By: Staff Writer | Last Edited: 06/01/2017 | Content ©www.MilitaryFactory.com | The following text is exclusive to this site; No A.I. was used in the generation of this content.
Long before the Russian concern of Tupolev OKB was developing famous Soviet Cold War bombers, it tried its hand at fighter design in the I-4 (ANT-5) biplane fighter of 1928. The type became the first Soviet all-metal fighter and was produced in the hundreds during the inter-war period. A handful of variants greeted the service career of this oft-forgotten warplane. Design of the fighter is attributed to Pavel Sukhoi. Apart from its all-metal design, the I-4 exhibited traditional physical qualities consistent with the inter-period. The single pilot sat in an open-air cockpit behind the upper wing assembly. The upper and lower components were joined to one another by V-type struts. The lower assembly was also shorter in span making the biplane wing arrangement "sesquiplane". The undercarriage, wheeled at the two main legs under center mass, with a skid added under the tail for ground running. The tail unit was conventional with a single fin and low-set horizontal planes. Engineers elected for the French Gnome-Rhone "Jupiter" 9-cylinder air-cooled radial piston engine of 420 horsepower and this was installed in the nose section. The engine drove a two-bladed propeller which held a large-diameter spinner at its center for aerodynamic efficiency. Article Continues Below Advertisement...
Proposed armament had become 2 x 7.62mm machine guns synchronized to fire through the spinning propeller blades. Provision was added later during testing for rockets to be carried along the upper wing - increasing the fighter's attack value. A first-flight (in prototype form as the "ANT-5") was recorded during August of 1927. This led to some revisions in the design including a new cowling and reworked tail unit. The ANT-5 then entered service as the "I-4". Performance-wise, the I-4 netted a maximum speed of 160 miles per hour, a range out to 525 miles and a service ceiling up to 25,100 feet. Rate-of-climb was 1,820 feet-per-minute. Empty weight was 2,155lb with a Maximum Take-Off Weight (MTOW) of 3,155lb. A revised first-series model appeared with the Mikulin M-22 engine (a license-built copy of the Gnome-Rhone "Jupiter" 9ASB) of 460-480 horsepower. The "I-4Z" then followed and this version introduced smaller lower wings. Having the lower wings completely removed - therefore becoming a true monoplane - the aircraft was revised in the "I-4bis" developmental form. The "I-4P" became a converted floatplane derivative. A total of 369 I-4 fighters were completed into 1934 and the last of the lot was retired from frontline commitments back in 1933 - though the I-4 went on to serve for a time longer as an instructional vehicle. The I-4 series was also briefly trialed as a "parasite fighter" in experiments of the 1930s (that also included the firing of the 76mm Kurchevski recoilless gun from the aircraft), coupled to the new Tupolev TB-1/TB-3 bomber series mothership (detailed elsewhere on this site). Content ©MilitaryFactory.com; No Reproduction Permitted.
Power & Performance
Those special qualities that separate one aircraft design from another. Performance specifications presented assume optimal operating conditions for the Tupolev I-4 Biplane Fighter Aircraft.
1 x Mikulin M-22 (Bristol Jupiter) air-cooled radial piston engine developing 460 horsepower and driving a two-bladed propeller at the nose.
Propulsion
160 mph
257 kph | 139 kts
Max Speed
25,115 ft
7,655 m | 5 miles
Service Ceiling
522 miles
840 km | 454 nm
Operational Range
1,820 ft/min
555 m/min
Rate-of-Climb
City-to-City Ranges
Operational range when compared to distances between major cities (in KM).
Structure
The nose-to-tail, wingtip-to-wingtip physical qualities of the Tupolev I-4 Biplane Fighter Aircraft.
1
(MANNED)
Crew
23.8 ft
7.25 m
O/A Length
37.5 ft
(11.42 m)
O/A Width
9.3 ft
(2.82 m)
O/A Height
2,161 lb
(980 kg)
Empty Weight
3,153 lb
(1,430 kg)
MTOW
Design Balance
The three qualities reflected below are altitude, speed, and range. The more full the box, the more balanced the design.
RANGE
ALT
SPEED
Armament
Available supported armament and special-mission equipment featured in the design of the Tupolev I-4 (ANT-5) Biplane Fighter Aircraft .
STANDARD: OPTIONAL:
2 x 7.62mm machine guns fitted over the nose and synchronized to fire through the spinning propeller blades.
Rockets fitted on rails at the upper wing assembly.
Variants
Notable series variants as part of the Tupolev I-4 (ANT-5) family line.
I-4 - Base Series Designation; initial production model.
ANT 5 - Developmental designation.
I-4Z - Reduced span lower wing element.
I-4bis - Monoplane-winged form (sans lower wing span).
I-4P - Floatplane/seaplane derivative.
Operators
Global customers who have evaluated and/or operated the Tupolev I-4 (ANT-5). Nations are displayed by flag, each linked to their respective national aircraft listing.
Total Production: 369 Units
Contractor(s): Tupolev OKB - Soviet Union
[ Soviet Union ]
Relative Max Speed
Hi: 200mph
Lo: 100mph
Aircraft Max Listed Speed (160mph).
Graph Average of 150 MPH.
Era Crossover
Showcasing Aircraft Era Crossover (if any)
Max Alt Visualization
Production Comparison
369
36183
44000
Entry compared against Ilyushin IL-2 (military) and Cessna 172 (civilian) total production.
MACH Regime (Sonic)
Sub
Trans
Super
Hyper
HiHyper
ReEntry
♦
RANGES (MPH) Subsonic: <614mph | Transonic: 614-921 | Supersonic: 921-3836 | Hypersonic: 3836-7673 | Hi-Hypersonic: 7673-19180 | Reentry: >19030
Aviation Timeline
EarlyYrs
WWI
Interwar
WWII
ColdWar
Postwar
Modern
Future
♦
Mission Roles
Some designs are single-minded in their approach while others offer a more versatile solution to airborne requirements.
AIR-TO-AIR COMBAT
Recognition
Some designs stand the test of time while others are doomed to never advance beyond the drawing board; let history be their judge.
Going Further...
The Tupolev I-4 (ANT-5) Biplane Fighter Aircraft appears in the following collections:
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