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  • This is the largest American helicopter.

  • But back in 1971, this is what the Soviet Union brought to the Paris Airshow.

  • A helicopter so large, it baffled observers.

  • Because it could carry nearly two hundred passengers, and set world records for lifting

  • power that still stand to this day.

  • But after returning to the Soviet Union, the world's largest helicopter seemingly disappeared.

  • In the Soviet Union, the helicopter emerged as an indispensable tool.

  • A machine that could go where no other machine could, lifting people and supplies into remote

  • regions that were once virtually inaccessible.

  • And in a country as vast as the Soviet Union, the helicopter would help build a nation.

  • By 1960, the Soviets were building some of the largest and most technically advanced

  • helicopters in the world.

  • But at the height of the Cold War, the need to build a truly enormous helicopter would

  • become a matter of national security.

  • By 1960, American spy planes were beginning to uncover the location of Soviet Intercontinental

  • Ballistic Missiles.

  • For years, the Soviets had been hiding their nuclear missiles by building launch sites

  • deep in the remote wilderness.

  • But the only way to move heavy first-generation nuclear missiles was by train.

  • And it meant building a rail line out to each launch site.

  • The Americans soon learned that to find the missile sites, they simply needed to follow

  • the rail lines.

  • Keeping nuclear missiles hidden was a matter of national security.

  • So the Soviets devised a bold plan.

  • Instead of using trains or roads, they'd airlift their missiles to remote locations.

  • If helicopters could deploy missiles deep into the remote wilderness, it would be virtually

  • impossible for American spy planes to spot them.

  • But in 1960, even the largest helicopter in the world was nowhere near powerful enough

  • to lift a 25 ton ballistic missile.

  • The Soviets would need to design a new helicopter with at least twice the lifting power of anything

  • before it.

  • One option was to take what was already the largest helicopter in the world

  • and scale it up.

  • Enlarging the Mi-6's fuselage so that it could safely carry a nuclear missile.

  • But a larger helicopter would also require developing a new more powerful engine and

  • larger rotor.

  • To save development time, another option was to reuse the engines, rotor and gearbox from

  • the Mi-6, but use two sets of them.

  • It was a configuration that had already been popularized by the Americans.

  • But the approach wouldn't work for soviet designers.

  • In a tandem configuration, exhaust from the forward set of engines would interfere with

  • airflow to the aft engines.

  • The solution would be to arrange the rotors transversely, mounting the assemblies on a

  • set of wings.

  • This would allow engineers to reuse the Mi6's rotors, engines and gearboxes entirely to

  • build a truly enormous helicopter.

  • They would designate the prototype as the V-12

  • The enormous machine would end up looking like a half-helicopter, half-airplane with

  • inversely tapered wings supporting the two rotors.

  • To keep the helicopter stable, the rotor blades would spin in opposite directions, cancelling

  • out reaction torque.

  • During hover, directional control was achieved by variably tilting each rotor.

  • And at higher speeds, the V-12's large tailplane further enhanced maneuverability.

  • Operating the giant machine required a crew of six.

  • With a pilot, co-pilot and flight engineer seated in a lower level cockpit and a navigator,

  • radio operator and electrical engineer on a second level.

  • The V-12's enormous cargo hold could carry combat matériel and machinery, or be converted

  • into a civilian transport with seating for up to 196 passengers.

  • But the V-12's primary role would be to deploy intercontinental ballistic missiles.

  • And the first step would be to load ICBMs onto cargo planes that would then fly thousands

  • of kilometers to remote landing strips.

  • From there, the missiles would be transferred onto waiting V-12's and airlifted with support

  • crew and equipment to locations hundreds of kilometers into the remote wilderness.

  • With more than 12 million square kilometers of forest across the Soviet Union, American

  • spy planes would be searching for a needle in a haystack.

  • When the V-12 appeared at the 1971 Paris Airshow, it had already broken world records.

  • Including lifting an incredible 44 tones of payload up to over six thousand feet in 1969.

  • The equivalent weight of 25 mid size cars.

  • Western observers could only speculate as to the V-12's true purpose, But many were

  • expecting hundreds to be pressed into service.

  • In reality, by 1971, impressing the west was about the only use the Soviets had left for

  • the giant machine.

  • Developing the V-12 had taken the better part of a decade, with design studies beginning

  • in 1959 and the official go ahead given in 1962.

  • But construction of the first prototype didn't start until 1965, with the first successful

  • flight occurring three years later.

  • A machine this large comes with compromises.

  • And engineers had to work through numerous challenges around control and stability.

  • But the biggest problem was that by 1971, the V-12 no longer had a purpose.

  • The Amercians launched the first spy satellite into orbit in 1959.

  • And in a single day it could photograph more Soviet territory than all earlier spy plane

  • missions combined, making it far more difficult for the Soviets to hide their ICBMs.

  • And by the 1970s, the Soviets were developing a new generation of ICMBs small enough to

  • fit on trucks, which could evade reconnaissance by simply moving around.

  • The V-12 was just too large and cumbersome to be useful beyond its original mission.

  • There were just too few scenarios that called for lifting 44 tons of cargo or 200 passengers

  • in a single helicopter.

  • In 1974, development of the V-12 was ended after only

  • two prototypes had been built.

  • With many technical problems still unresolved, the program was cancelled in favor of developing

  • a new heavy-lift helicopter with a more conventional single rotor design.

  • Soviet Engineers weren't afraid to think outside the box, and while the V-12 was still

  • under development, engineers over at the MiG design Bureau had another crazy idea.

  • To turn a MiG-25 into the world's fastest VIP transport, swapping out the MiG's radar

  • and missiles for a passenger cabin.

  • You can learn more about this crazy Soviet proposal in my latest video available right

  • now, on Nebula.

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  • It's also home to a growing number of original shows.

  • And a personal favourite of mine is the Logics of D-day.

  • An ongoing series produced by Brian from Real Engineering.

  • With high production values and indepth research, each episode explores a fascinating aspect

  • to one of the most ambitious military operations in history.

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This Insane Helicopter Was The Largest Ever Built: The Mil V-12 Story

  • 18 1
    joey joey に公開 2021 年 05 月 28 日
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