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Mikoyan

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Russian Aircraft Corporation MiG

<tr><td colspan="2" style="text-align:center; padding:16px 0 16px 0;">Image:MiG logo web.gif</td></tr>

Type Joint stock company
Founded December, 1939 (As OKB-155 in 1942)
Headquarters Moscow, Russia

<tr><th style="text-align:right; padding-right:0.75em;">Key people</th><td>Artem Mikoyan and Mikhail Gurevich, founder</td></tr><tr><th style="text-align:right; padding-right:0.75em;">Industry</th><td>Aerospace and defense</td></tr><tr><th style="text-align:right; padding-right:0.75em;">Products</th><td>Military aircraft
Civil airliners</td></tr><tr><th style="text-align:right; padding-right:0.75em;">Website</th><td>Official Website</td></tr>

Mikoyan, formerly Mikoyan-Gurevich (Russian: Микоян-Гуревич, МиГ), is a Russian military aircraft design bureau, primarily for fighter aircraft. It was formerly a Soviet design bureau, and was founded by Artem Mikoyan and Mikhail Gurevich as "Mikoyan-Gurevich" and its bureau prefix is "MiG." Upon Mikoyan's death in 1970, Gurevich's name was dropped from the name of the bureau, although the bureau prefix remains MiG. The Russian government is planning to merge Mikoyan with Ilyushin, Irkut, Sukhoi, Tupolev, and Yakovlev as a new company named United Aircraft Building Corporation.<ref name="nyt_united_aircraft">"Russian Aircraft Industry Seeks Revival Through Merger." The New York Times. February 22, 2006.</ref> The firm also operates several machine-building and design bureaus, including the Kamov helicopter plant.

Contents

[edit] List of MiG Aircraft

Image:MiG-15 RB1.jpg Image:1 Pucki Dywizjon Lotniczy MiG-21 bis.jpg Image:MiG-25 fig2agrau USAF.jpg Image:Soviet MiG-29 DF-ST-99-04977.JPG Image:Mig29M-OVT.jpg

[edit] Production

[edit] Experimental

  • MiG-8, 1945
  • MiG-I270, 1946
  • MiG-23 - (first used) early name of E-8 (E-8/1 and E-8/2). 1960.
  • MiG-AT, 1992
  • MiG-110, 1995
  • MiG MFI objekt 1.44/1.42 'Flatpack', 1986-2000 (Please note: MiG-35/MiG-37 designations are journalisms or PR-names for 1.42/1.44 MFI (multirole frontline fighter) and LFI (lightweight frontline fighter) projects of the bureau, not necessary in this order.)
  • MiG LFI project

[edit] Never completed

[edit] Naming Conventions

MiGs follow the convention of using odd numbers for fighter aircraft. Although the MiG-8 and MiG-110 exist, they are not fighters. The MiG-105 "Spiral" was designed as an orbital intercepter, whose contemporary was the U.S. Air Force's cancelled X-20 Dyna-Soar project.

The NATO reporting name convention uses nicknames starting with the letter "F" for fighters ("B" for bombers, "C" for cargo, etc.).

[edit] Fictional

MiGs were the best-known Soviet fighters during the Cold War, and as a result there are a number of fictional MiGs in Western popular culture.

See also: List of military aircraft of the Soviet Union and the CIS

[edit] References

<references/>

[edit] External links

United Aircraft Building Corporation

Ilyushin | Irkut | Mikoyan | Sukhoi | Tupolev | Yakovlev

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