Tue, Nov 5, 5:53 PM CST

Polikarpov I-16 Rata.....(for Neil)

Photography Aviation posted on Oct 06, 2011
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Description


Greetings, First of all, sorry Neil, this should have gone up yesterday for you, but I was busy mate.. Here it is now.. Remember this? lol Taken at last years Flying Legends show at Duxford, this is an original (not a replica) Rata.. At the start of Spanish Civil War in 1936, Republican forces pleaded for fighter aircraft. After receiving payment in gold, Joseph Stalin dispatched around 475 I-16 Type 5s and Type 6s. The first I-16s appeared in Spanish skies in November 1936. The Polikarpov monoplanes had their baptism of fire on the 13 November 1936, when 12 I-16s intercepted a Nationalist bombing raid on Madrid. Soviet pilots claimed four air victories. Two Germans Heinkel He 51 pilots were indeed killed. But the Soviets suffered losses too; the group commander collided with an enemy aircraft and another I-16 pilot crash landed. The Polikarpovs immediately began dominating the enemy He 51s, Arado Ar 68 and Fiat CR.32 biplanes, and remained unchallenged until the introduction of the Messerschmitt Bf 109. The arrival of the newest Bf 109Bs and the overwhelming numerical superiority of Nationalist fighters were the primary cause of the heavy combat losses suffered by I-15s and I-16s throughout 1937. A number of aviation publications called the new Soviet fighter a 'Boeing' due to the incorrect assumption that it was based on the Boeing P-26's design. The Nationalists nicknamed the stubby fighter Rata (Rat), while the Republicans affectionately called it Mosca (Fly). Combat experience showed that the I-16 had deficiencies; several aircraft were lost after structural failure of the wings which was quickly remedied by reinforced structures. Heavy machine gun bullets could sometimes penetrate the armored backrest and fuel tanks occasionally caught fire in spite of being protected. The hot Spanish climate required the addition of oil radiators, and dust adversely affected the life of the engines. Although some aircraft accumulated up to 400 hours of flying time, the average life of an I-16 was 87 days, of which one sixth was spent on maintenance. The biggest complaint in service was the light armament of only two 7.62 mm (0.30 in) machine guns. This was urgently addressed with Type 6 which added a third ShKAS in the bottom of the fuselage. The four-gun Type 10 was nicknamed 'Super Mosca' or simply 'Super'. The total number of I-16s delivered to Spain in 1936-1938 amounted to 276. When the war ended, on 1 April 1939, 187 Ratas had been lost in Spain: 112 lost in combat, one shot down by anti-aircraft fire, 11 destroyed on the ground, one force-landed and 62 lost in accidents. This is only a brief part of the Ratas history.. You are looking at a German owned aircraft, note the registration numbers (D = Germany (Deutschland). Hope you like.. Rob

Comments (19)


)

flavia49

11:44AM | Thu, 06 October 2011

marvelous!!

)

Buffalo1

11:59AM | Thu, 06 October 2011

Cool pic and fine history!

)

neiwil

12:01PM | Thu, 06 October 2011

Thank you! thank you!.....brilliant capture at a great angle...(gonna have to do something about my textures, look at those stains...)This is marvelous, really appreciate the dedi mate..(I've sent sitemail re: Ace of Diamonds :-) I think Tara will love this too, I'm sure she tried to talk Bill into buying one of these instead of the camper van :-) Thanks again Rob, really do appreciate this......

)

2121

12:21PM | Thu, 06 October 2011

excellent shot

)

lunchlady

12:21PM | Thu, 06 October 2011

Great pov Rob!!!!

)

jayfar

1:09PM | Thu, 06 October 2011

Super pic and info Rob. If you are able to send me Neils email address I will pass the aircraft email on to him for yourself.

)

blinkings

2:31PM | Thu, 06 October 2011

Great shot of what I 'think' was also known as an Ishak.

)

goodoleboy

6:50PM | Thu, 06 October 2011

A sharp-as-a-tack capture of this old timer, Rob, which does resemble a Boeing P-26 Peashooter. I didn't think that any of these guys were still around. And thanks for the consumate description of its history. Other than photos and statistics on its construction, this is the first historical information I've read on it.

)

Faemike55

7:07PM | Thu, 06 October 2011

very cool photo and great history

naterry

8:06PM | Thu, 06 October 2011

i did not know there was one in flying condtion

)

magnus073

9:47PM | Thu, 06 October 2011

Really great photo Rob, and a marvelous dedi also

)

auntietk

11:17PM | Thu, 06 October 2011

Neil is right ... this IS one of my all-time favorite planes! I've never seen one fly. We missed that fly day this year. I remember being bummed, but don't remember what got in our way of going. Great shot! :)

)

fallen21

2:48AM | Fri, 07 October 2011

Fantastic capture.

)

Rainastorm

5:11AM | Fri, 07 October 2011

WHAT A VIEW WOW! Was it close or was this s zoom?

)

HADCANCER

8:10PM | Fri, 07 October 2011

Dirty little bird huh?

)

RodS Online Now!

9:56PM | Fri, 07 October 2011

A cool shot, Rob, and some great information!

)

Briney

12:56AM | Sat, 08 October 2011

What's Russian for "Wash me!" Great photo and background info.

)

junge1

1:48AM | Sun, 09 October 2011

Great capture and a fantastic historical accounting Rob. All new to me!

)

PSDuck

11:08PM | Fri, 21 October 2011

Great photo! I didn't know any of these things were still in the air! Sixty two lost in accidents? Not a very safe machine to fly, not at all! :O


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Photograph Details
F Numberf/5.6
MakeNIKON CORPORATION
ModelNIKON D40
Shutter Speed1/1000
ISO Speed200
Focal Length300

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