Settings

Theme

Flying a single-engine Antonov An-2 over the Atlantic Ocean

dmax.de

57 points by foehrenwald 4 years ago · 30 comments

Reader

sschueller 4 years ago

Michael Manousakis and his Morlock Motors is nuts but hilarious to watch.

[2] https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steel_Buddies_%E2%80%93_Stahlh... (Sorry German only)

aww_dang 4 years ago

Unfortunately geoblocked here. Is there another link?

vintermann 4 years ago

The Germans sure like geoblocking, don't they?

zatarc 4 years ago

Katastrophe!

malwarebytess 4 years ago

There's talk that the only an-2 produced, that resides in Ukraine, was damaged or destroyed.

  • cstross 4 years ago

    The An-2 (NATO reporting name: "Cock") is a single-engined utility biplane used throughout the former Warsaw Pact as a light airliner, cargo plane, and crop duster. Its general performance is comparable to the ancient Douglas DC-3, with the added twist that it generates so much lift at low speeds that it can land and take off from very rough, unprepared fields.

    Wikipedia article here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antonov_An-2

    The An-225 Mriya is so much bigger that if you could cram them in, it could carry 77 An-2s as passengers :-)

  • swraysford 4 years ago

    You're confusing the AN-2 which is a biplane, single engined mass-produced aircraft weighing about 3000kg, with the AN-225, which is a six-engined one-of-a-kind behemoth weighing about 285,000kg

  • sendfoods 4 years ago

    Very sad, yes, this is the best source I could find https://edition.cnn.com/travel/article/antonov-an-225-larges...

    I'm honestly surprised it was destroyed. Why wouldn't the Russians want to use this plane in the future?

    EDIT: an-2 != an-225.

    • georgecmu 4 years ago

      It was based at the Antonov airfield, which was captured very early by the Russian special forces and then held for several days under massive assaults from the Ukrainian forces. Whichever side actually destroyed the plane (I would assume it was a Ukrainian artillery barrage), it was almost certainly not done purposefully.

      https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Antonov_Airport

    • sandworm101 4 years ago

      >> Why wouldn't the Russians want to use this plane in the future?

      Russian-owned and operated transport aircraft arent going to be flying much internationally for a while. Many of the an-225's customers are on the other side of sanctions walls.

    • corny2 4 years ago

      Years ago there were rumors, that they are developing their own super-heavy cargo plane. https://vimeo.com/103542677 Not sure if that project ever went further than the demo video though

    • gambiting 4 years ago

      It's also an incredibly powerful symbol of Ukrainian engineering and flight expertise. Antonov is a Ukrainian company.

      • georgecmu 4 years ago

        It was built in 1988. If anything, it was an incredibly powerful symbol of Soviet engineering and flight expertise.

        • gambiting 4 years ago

          Contrary to popular view, people living in the Soviet Union didn't lose their national identities.

          • georgecmu 4 years ago

            I don't see a lot of value in this line of argument, but want to make several things clear. You impute a single national identity to the plane designers and engineers based on their physical location. Setting aside the fact that the construction bureau itself was relocated to Kiev from Novosibirsk in the late 50s, the people who worked there came from all over in the Soviet Union. Tolmachev and Antonov certainly did not have the national identity you impute.

            Regardless, it was a Soviet engineering outfit, not a Russian or Ukrainian one. Just like Chernobyl was a Soviet project and failure, not a Russian or Ukrainian one.

            • sofixa 4 years ago

              It's hame is in Ukrainian, not Russian, so yes, there's certainly a national identity to the plane :)

              • georgecmu 4 years ago

                Ah, to the plane! Yes, of course -- just like the national identity of Hughes H-4 is Greco-Roman. :)

                • sofixa 4 years ago

                  If the Hughes H-4 were built and designed in a state of Greco-Romans, and were the first airplane authorized to have a non-American name, you could make that argument.

  • corny2 4 years ago

    I think you're talking about the An-225, no? the giant one. the An-2 is not a big plane and nearly 20 thousand were built of them.

  • gerikson 4 years ago

    That's another Antonov design , the An-225.

Keyboard Shortcuts

j
Next item
k
Previous item
o / Enter
Open selected item
?
Show this help
Esc
Close modal / clear selection