Lavochkin-Gorbunov-Gudkov LaGG-3

National origin:- Soviet Union
Role:- Fighter
Manufacturer:- Lavochkin-Gorbunov-Gudkov
Built by:- 21 (Gorky), 31 (Taganrog/Tbilisi), 23/153 (Leningrad/Novosibirsk)
Designer:- V. P. Gorbunov
First flight:- 28th March 1940
Introduction:- early 1941
Status:- Retired 1944
Produced:- 1941-1944
Number built:- 6,528
Primary users:- Soviet Air Force
Sceondary users:- Finnish Air Force; Luftwaffe
Developed into:- Lavochkin La-5

The Lavochkin-Gorbunov-Gudkov LaGG-3 (Лавочкин-Горбунов-Гудков ЛаГГ-3) was a Soviet fighter aircraft of World War II. It was a refinement of the earlier LaGG-1 and was one of the most modern aircraft available to the Soviet Air Force at the time of Germany's invasion in 1941. Despite its wooden construction, it was both overweight and underpowered. At one point in the war, on average 12 LaGG-3s were being completed daily and 6,528 had been built in total when Factory 31 in Tbilisi switched production to the Yak-3 in 1944.[1]

Design and development

Design and development

The prototype of the LaGG-3 was called the I-301 and was designed by Semyon A. Lavochkin, Vladimir P. Gorbunov and Mikhail I. Gudkov. The prototype was later renamed the LaGG-1 and production aircraft were called the LaGG-3. The prototype was designed and produced by the GAZ-301 factory in Khimki to the North West of Moscow. The design was approved for production in January of 1940 and in the prototype's name the I- prefix stood for istrebitel 'destroyer' and the number signified the design bureau responsible (which in this case was the GAZ-301 factory). The I-301 was a single-seat, low-wing monoplane, with a semi-monocoque fuselage, and skinned with birch veneer and plywood.[2]

The I-301 airframe was partially made of 'delta wood': a material composed of very thin (0.35-0.55 mm) layers of birch or pine wood veneer, and a phenol-formaldehyde resin known as VIAM-B-3, which together were baked at high temperatures and pressures. Delta wood was used for critical parts of the airframe. This novel construction material had tensile strength comparable to that of non-hardened aluminum alloys and only 30% lower than that of precipitation hardened D-1A grade duralumin. It was also incombustible and completely invulnerable to rot, with service life measured in decades in adverse conditions. During production of the prototype, it was discovered that the adhesive used in delta wood caused skin irritation and safety procedures needed to be devised for workers.[2]

The full wooden wing (with plywood surfaces) was analogous to that of the Yak-1. The only difference was that the LaGG's wings were built from two spars. The fuselage was of similar construction to the MiG-1.[3]

The I-301 was armed with one axial mounted MP-6 23 mm autocannon designed by Ya. Taubin which fired through a hollow propeller shaft in the 'vee' between the engine cylinders and two synchronized 12.7 mm (0.50 in) Berezin UBS machine guns in the cowl. The MP-6 had 81 rounds of ammunition while the Berezin UBS had 230 rounds per gun. The MP-6 was abandoned after the prototype due to excessive recoil forces that damaged engine fittings. The I-301 used a Klimov M-105P engine of 780 kW (1,050 hp) a licensed derivative of the Hispano-Suiza HS 12Y with a two-speed two-stage supercharger. At 2,968 kg (6,543 lb) it was heavier than its competitors the Yak-1 and MiG-1, which meant its ceiling of 9,800 m (32,000 ft) was less than both. The I-301 took to the air for the first time on 30 March 1940 and by 12 June 1940 the manufacturer's tests were completed. The test pilot, A. Nikashin, reported that the fit and finish of the prototype was very good, it handled well, was maneuverable, and could be mastered by pilots of average ability.[2]

On 14 June 1940 state acceptance trials began and it reached 510 km/h (320 mph) at sea level, 584 km/h (363 mph) at 4,700 m (15,400 ft), and climbed to 5,000 m (16,400 ft) in 5.85 minutes. Later, the I-301 reached 604 km/h (375 mph) at 4,950 m (16,250 ft) with its radiator doors shut making it the fastest M-105P powered aircraft. The I-301 had a fuel capacity of 340 L (90 US gal) carried in three self-sealing fuel tanks between the wing spars in the wing's center-section giving it a range of 600 km (373 mi). During testing the state specification was increased to a maximum range of 1,000 km (620 mi) and fuel capacity was increased to 450 L (119 US gal). Aircraft with this fuel capacity were designated as LaGG-3's while the prototype was re-designated as the LaGG-1. The test flights revealed 114 faults that needed to be fixed but the project was given high priority so most of these faults were to be addressed in production aircraft.[2]

Operational history

Operational history

On 29 June 1940 the LaGG-3 was accepted for production and the first plant to build LaGG-3's was Plant No.23 in Leningrad and was tested in December 1940. As soon they were built, the first aircraft were sent to their units in Soviet Asia.[4] The LaGG-3 proved immensely unpopular with pilots. It was somewhat hard to control as it reacted sluggishly to stick forces. In particular, it was difficult to pull out of a dive, and if the stick was pulled too hard it tended to fall into a spin. As a consequence, sharp turns were difficult to perform.[3] Moreover, pilots reported several imperfections: badly made hydraulic systems, broken connecting rods, oil leaks, engine overheating, rapid engine wear and loss of power. Other faults included, defective landing gear, tail wheel failure, poor quality cockpit glass, poorly finished cowling panels, and poor quality delta wood panels due to rushed production, as a result of the German invasion. The quality of aircraft varied widely from factory to factory.[2]

As reports of these problems came back to Lavochkin's Experimental Design Bureau (OKB), in February 1941, no less than 2,228 modifications were ordered to be introduced into the series.[4] Actually, despite the military's doubts, the Soviet government ordered 66 series of the Lavochkin fighter, which underwent a host of successive improvements in engines, propeller, and armament.[4] The airframe was lightened as well. The LaGG team re-examined the design and pared down the structure as much as possible. Moreover, automatic slats were added to the wings to improve climb and maneuverability on the 35th Series and further weight was saved by installing lighter armament (the first four series were equipped with one axial Berezin machine gun firing through a hollow propeller shaft, two more synchronized cowl mounted Berezin machine guns with 200 rounds per gun and two synchronized 7.62 mm (0.3 in) ShKAS machine guns above and to the rear of the cowling with 325 rounds per gun; from 8th Series the axial Berezin was replaced by a 20 mm (0.79 in) ShVAK, coupled with a port Berezin in the cowling.[4] But the improvement was slight and, thus, without an alternative powerplant, when the LaGG-3 was first committed to combat in July 1941, it was effective against bombers but it was completely outclassed by the Messerschmitt Bf 109 F.[3]

In combat, the main advantage of the LaGG-3 was the strength of its airframe and the fact that it did not easily catch fire, despite the extensive use of wood. However, the laminated wooden panels did tend to shatter when hit by high explosive rounds and Soviet pilots nicknamed the plane Lakirovanny Garantirovanny Grob, or 'guaranteed varnished coffin'.[4]

On the whole, pilots disliked the type. Pilot Viktor M. Sinaisky recalled:
It was an unpleasant customer! Preparing the LaGG-3 for flight demanded more time in comparison with other planes. All cylinders were ... to be synchronized: God forbid you should change the gas distribution! We were strictly forbidden to touch the engine ... [T]here were constant problems with [the] water-cooled engines in winter... [T]here was no anti-freeze liquid [and y]ou couldn't keep the engine running all night long, so you had to pour hot water into the cooling system ... in the morning. ... [P]ilots didn't like flying the LaGG-3 - a heavy beast with a weak ... engine... [T]hey got used to it ... [but] we had higher losses on LaGG-3 than on I-16s.[3]

Later in 1941, the LaGG-3 appeared with an internally balanced rudder, retractable ski landing gear for the winter, retractable tailwheel and plumbed for drop tanks.[5] The result was still not good enough. Even with the lighter airframe and revised supercharged engine, the LaGG-3 was underpowered. However, despite its limitations, some Soviet pilots managed to reach the status of ace flying the LaGG-3. G. I. Grigor'yev, from 178th IAP, was credited of at least 11 air victories plus two shared. But pictures of his LaGG-3 'Yellow 6', in November-December 1941, show 15 'stars', so his score was probably higher.[6] Experiments with fitting a Shvetsov M-82 radial engine to the LaGG-3 airframe finally solved the power problem and led to the Lavochkin La-5 and La-7.[7]

Variants

Variants Series production

1st Series

Production of the 1st Series progressed slowly and there were teething problems with the aircraft due to an untrained workforce with no aircraft manufacturing experience, unfamiliarity with the delta wood structure, incomplete technical drawings, a lack of jigs, and some factories hadn't fully converted from producing the Polikarpov I-16 and I-153 to the LaGG-3. Production LaGG-3's differed from the prototype by having strengthened landing gear, 10 mm (0.39 in) seat armor, enlarged carburetor air intake, and were armed with three Berezin UBS and two ShKAS machine guns. The 1st Series also had a 5-channel RSI-3 transmitter/receiver and antenna which was normally fitted to only flight leader aircraft while other aircraft in the flight only had receivers or no radio.[8]

Mass balance weights were added above and below the rudder to eliminate control surface flutter. In addition to three self-sealing fuel tanks the LaGG-3 had a unique fire suppression system which collected exhaust via a tube on the port side of the exhaust manifold that ran to a condenser where the gasses were cooled and pumped into the empty fuel tanks. The 1st Series used the Klimov M-105P engine of 820 kW (1,100 hp) with a centrifugal two-speed two-stage supercharger.[8]

Due to the addition of equipment the 1st Series was heavier than the prototype which negatively effected wing loading, rate of climb, ceiling, and maneuverability. As a result, the LaGG-3 was slow: its top speed was just 549 km/h (341 mph) at 5,000 m (16,500 ft) which was 55 km/h (34 mph) slower than the prototype's 604 km/h (375 mph) while climb to that altitude was 8.6 minutes instead of 5.85 for the prototype. Its rate of climb at ground level was as slow as 8.5 m/s (28 ft/s).[4]

The take-off run was at least 500 m (1,600 ft), compared to 355 m (1,165 ft) for the prototype because flaps could not be used due to the propeller speed governor which could not exceed 2,400 rpm instead of the engine's rated 2,700 rpm. Neither of the LaGG-3's competitors experienced as dramatic a performance decrease between prototype and production aircraft.

Aircraft Prototype Production
I-200/MiG-3 630 km/h (390 mph) 615 km/h (382 mph)
I-26/Yak-1 586 km/h (364 mph) 560 km/h (348 mph)
I-301/LaGG-3 604 km/h (375 mph) 549 km/h (341 mph)[2]

4th Series

The 4th Series of fighters incorporated several changes such as replacing the Berezin machine gun firing through the propeller hub with a ShVAK 20 mm with 120 rounds, deletion of the starboard cowl mounted Berezin machine gun, taller antenna mast, enlarged wing root intakes, and enlarged oil cooler intake. The 4th Series used a Klimov M-105PA engine of 890 kW (1,200 hp) During 1941 2,463 LaGG-3's were produced with 2,141 being built after their factories were relocated to the East. The counterweight at the bottom of the rudder from the 1st Series was deleted of the 4th Series.[8] In an effort to improve performance the fuel capacity was reduced from 904 lb (410 kg) to 749 lb (340 kg) and range was reduced to 438 mi (705 km).[2]

8th Series

The 8th Series reduced the armament of the LaGG-3 by removing the two cowl mounted ShKAS machine guns and standardizing on the axially mounted ShVAK and one Berezin machine gun. The ShKAS machine guns were removed because they were believed to be dead weight because the 7.62 mm only caused minor damage to control surfaces, oil coolers, and radiators of enemy aircraft. A few had a 23 mm (0.91 in) VYa-23 cannon in place of a ShVAK depending on availability.[8]

11th Series

The 11th Series was similar to the 8th Series except it was modified as a ground attack aircraft. The conversion included adding two wing-mounted D3-40 bomb racks and six RO-82 launch rails for RS-82 or RS-132 rockets. The D3-40 bomb racks could carry 50 kg (110 lb) bombs such as the FAB-50 or 83 L (22 US gal) drop tanks. The racks could also be used for chemical weapon dispensers or napalm dispensers. The LaGG-3 could also be modified to use ski landing gear and when combined with external stores this caused further performance degradation.[8]

23rd Series horn-balanced [aerodynamic] vs aerodynamically unbalanced [straight] rudder. Deleted mass balance and revised antenna.

23rd Series

The rudder of the 23rd series could be differentiated from earlier aircraft because it now had an aerodynamic horn balance in front of the hinge line at the top of the rudder while the previous rudder was aerodynamically unbalanced with no protrusion in front of the hinge line [straight]. During the production of the 23rd Series, some factories switched to producing the more effective Yakovlev Yak-1 and Yak-7.[8]

29th Series

29th Series

The 29th Series introduced the Klimov M-105PF engine of 940 kW (1,260 hp). The difference between the PA and PF was the PA was rated to 4,000 m (13,123 ft) where the PF was rated to 2,700 m (8,858 ft) since the majority of air combat on the Eastern Front happened below 2,700 m (9,000 ft). The 29th series also deleted the exhaust collector tube on the earlier series and had three exhaust ports. 29th Series aircraft also switched to variable frequency RSI-4 series radios because the previous RSI-3 radios were poor quality. A combination of lighter weight and more engine power meant the top speed of the 29th Series rose by 31 km/h (19 mph) to 565 km/h (351 mph) and its rate of climb improved.[8]

Early hard wing vs 35th Series leading edge slats.

33rd Series

The 33rd Series switched to the new VISh-105SV propeller with a larger spinner.[8]

34th Series

The 34th Series was built in limited numbers and replaced the 20 mm ShVAK cannon with a 37 mm (1.5 in) Nudelman-Suranov NS-37 with twenty rounds. The 34th Series was intended to be an anti-tank aircraft and 40 were deployed to Stalingrad for combat evaluation. However, it was not a success because the weight of the gun shifted the center of gravity forward and the recoil forces damaged the engine.[8]

35th Series

The 35th Series introduced automatic leading-edge slats on the outer wings to improve handling, a retractable tail wheel, and enlarged radiator.[8]

66th Series

The 66th Series was the last series of the LaGG-3 produced before production was switched to the radial engine Lavochkin La-5 and was 175 kg (385 lb) lighter than previous aircraft. The 66th Series can be visually identified by its four exhaust stacks, short antenna, new windscreen, reshaped radiator, and reshaped oil cooler. The 66th Series was the fastest of all LaGG-3's at 591 km/h (367 mph) and its light weight meant it was the most maneuverable and had the best climb rate. However, despite its improvements, it was outclassed by its Yakovlev competitors or enemy aircraft such as the Messerschmitt Me-109 and the Focke-Wulf Fw 190.[8]

Minor variants

LaGG-3 M-107

In a bid to improve the LaGG-3 and keep it in production Lavochkin fitted a Klimov VK-107 engine capable of 970 kW (1,300 hp) at 5,000 m (16,400 ft) to a LaGG-3. All 33 test flights were cut short due to persistent engine overheating and when run at lower rpm it offered no performance advantage over the Klimov M-105P.[2]

Gudkov Gu-82

As an insurance policy against the failure of the Klimov VK-107 a single LaGG-3 was fitted with a 1,150 kW (1,540 hp) Shvetsov M-82 14-cylinder radial air-cooled engine and propeller from a Sukhoi Su-2. This eventually led to the La-5.

Gudkov K-37

1st Series anti-tank aircraft with a Shpitalny Sh-37 axial cannon firing through the spinner hub; 20 were built in the summer of 1942 and delivered to the 42nd IAP. The Sh-37 was powerful enough to down an enemy fighter with a single hit. Its shell could punch a hole with an area of over 1 m2 (11 sq ft).[9][10]

Gorbunov 105

In May 1943 a new variant of the LaGG-3 designed by Gorbunov and was designated the Gorbunov 105. This new variant introduced a number of improvements such as better streamlining, lighter weight, cut down rear fuselage, and new canopy to improve rear vision. An area of emphasis for the 105 was improved streamlining of the sheet metal nose sections but still powered by the Klimov M-105PF with test data supplied from the Yak-1M. The takeoff weight was 2,875 kg (6,338 lb) versus the 2,999 kg (6,611 lb) for 66th Series aircraft and had a top speed of 618 km/h (384 mph) at 3,400 m (11,200 ft) versus 589 km/h (366 mph) for 66th Series aircraft. This lighter weight and streamlining improved the rate of climb and maneuverability with a turn taking 16 seconds and time to 5,000 m (16,400 ft) dropping to 4.7 minutes. Despite not having wing slats like late series LaGG-3s the test pilot reported that the Gorbunov 105 was 'superior to all Messerschmitt variants in terms of trouble free handling and maneuverability'.[2]

Gorbunov 105-2

A second Gorbunov prototype the 105-2 power by a Klimov M-105PF-2 of 970 kW (1,300 hp) and armed with one VYa-23 and one Berezin UBS was completed in February 1944. During testing in May-June of 1944 the test pilot said 'In terms of maximum speed and climb rate the Gorbunov 105-2 is inferior to the Yak-lM tested at the NIl in October 1943 ... because of oil and water overheating, flight at maximum speed can be sustained for only three or four minutes'. Despite having a more powerful engine performance wasn't improved and it was decided to produce the Yak-3 and La-5 instead.[2]

LaGG-3IT

66th Series aircraft with a Nudelman-Suranov NS-37 cannon.

Operators

Operators

Finland

Finnish Air Force - operated three captured examples, mainly as bomber interceptors.[11] WO Eino Koskinen scored the sole kill achieved by a LaGG-3 in Finnish colors, when he downed a Soviet LaGG-3 on 16 February 1944 in the plane marked as LG-1.[12]

Nazi Germany

Luftwaffe - operated captured examples for tests. One captured example was used for a propaganda movie in 1943.[8]

Japan

Imperial Japanese Army Air Service - operated one flown into Manchuria by a defector. It was used for testing.[13]

Soviet Union

Soviet Air Forces

Surviving aircraft

Surviving aircraft

After Stalin's post-war cleanup in the 1950s, many ANT-40s that survived the Second World War were scrapped. In the late 1970s, however, Vozdushni Transport (A Soviet aviation newspaper) sent an expedition led by Evgeny Konoplev to survey an ANT-40 that was forced to land during a snow storm near the Yuzhne Muiski mountain range in the Baikal region. Konoplev considered what they found encouraging, with the aircraft being in fairly decent condition, in turn leading a team of VVS pilots to recover the airplane. It was returned to Moscow and restored by a group of volunteer Tupolev employees. The restored aircraft was unveiled in April 1982 at the Central Air Force Museum at Monino Airfield. Another ANT-40 is displayed in Verhnyaya Pyshma.[57]

A reproduction of an SB-2 is under construction by the La Senia Airfield Association in La Sénia, Catalonia.[58]

Specifications LaGG-3 (data for 66th Series LaGG-3)

Data from Jane's Fighting Aircraft of World War II[14]

General characteristics

    Crew: 1
    Length: 8.81 m (28 ft 11 in)
    Wingspan: 9.8 m (32 ft 2 in)
    Height: 2.54 m (8 ft 4 in)
    Wing area: 17.4 m2 (187 sq ft)
    Empty weight: 2,205 kg (4,861 lb)
    Gross weight: 2,620 kg (5,776 lb)
    Max takeoff weight: 3,190 kg (7,033 lb)
    Powerplant: 1 × Klimov M-105PF V-12 liquid-cooled piston engine, 924 kW (1,239 hp)
    Propellers: 3-bladed constant-speed propeller

Performance

    Maximum speed: 589 km/h (366 mph, 318 kn)
    Range: 1,000 km (620 mi, 540 nmi)
    Service ceiling: 9,700 m (31,800 ft)
    Rate of climb: 14.9 m/s (2,930 ft/min)
    Wing loading: 150 kg/m2 (31 lb/sq ft)
    Power/mass: 0.350 kW/kg (0.213 hp/lb)

Armament

    Guns:
    1 × 12.7 mm (0.50 in) Berezin BS machine gun
    1 × 20 mm ShVAK cannon
    External stores:
    2 × 50 kg (110 lb) bombs or
    2 × 83 L (22 gal) drop tanks or
    6 × RS-82 or RS-132 rockets

Photo's and Profiles



ASISBIZ I'd like to give special thanks to Massimo Tessitori who's artistic works have appeared in many published articles and who's website is full of information. There's not to many sites in English that offer information on Soviet Aircraft to the degree his site does. He has uploaded many high res profiles that are in my opinion accurate and ideal for creating game skins or for modelling alike. Please check his site out:
http://massimotessitori.altervista.org/sovietwarplanes/pages/index.html



10/07/2021, 12:22 am
Hi Matthew, it's not a problem to share images for non commercial purposes.
A link or a credit to my site would be welcome.
Best regards
Massimo

 Flight Simulators
 

   IL-2 Sturmovik 'Cliff's of Dover' Blitz

   IL-2 Sturmovik Battle of Stalingrad

   DCS World - has no 3D model

 



 

 Moscow Russia Map

 

    Tupolev SB or Tupolev ANT-40 Citations

  1. Wheeler, Barry C. (1994). Military Aircraft Markings : The Hamlyn Guide To. London: Chancellor Press an imprint of Reed Consumer Books Limited. p. 73. ISBN 1-85152-582-3.
  2. Yefim, Gordon (1998). Soviet combat aircraft of the Second World War. Khazanov, Dmitri. Leicester: Midland Publishing. pp. 22-35. ISBN 1857800834. OCLC 40494691.
  3. Drabkin, Artem; Summerville, Christopher; Mikhail Bykov; Bair Irincheev; Alexei Pekarsh (2007). The Red Air Force at War : Barbarossa and the Retreat to Moscow : Recollections of Soviet Fighter Pilots on the Eastern Front. Barnsley: Pen & Sword Aviation. pp. 73, 146-147. ISBN 978-1-84415-563-7.
  4. McKay, Alan; Herbert Léonard (2005). Chronological encyclopaedia of Soviet single-engined fighters, 1939-1951 : piston-engines or mixed power-plants : studies, projects, prototypes series and variants. Paris: Histoire & collections. pp. 42-46. ISBN 2-915239-60-6.
  5. Gunston, Bill (1980). Aircraft of World War 2. London: Octopus Books. p. 132. ISBN 0-7064-1287-7.
  6. Scutts, Jerry; Enzo DeIanni (1999). Gli assi dei caccia notturni tedeschi della seconda Guerra Mondiale. Madrid: Edizioni del Prado. p. 28. ISBN 84-8372-203-8.
  7. Gordon, Yefim; Komissarov, Dmitriy; Komissarov, Sergey (2003). Lavochkin's Piston-engined fighters. Hinckley: Midland Pub. p. 37. ISBN 1-85780-151-2.
  8. Stapfer, Hans-Heiri (1996). LaGG Fighters in action. Illustrated by Cumpian, Ernesto, Sewell, Joe and Greer, Don (colorist). Carrollton, Tex.: Squadron/Signal Publications. ISBN 0-89747-364-7.
  9. Yefim Gordon; Dmitriĭ Komissarov; E. Gordon; Sergey Komissarov (2004). OKB Ilyushin: A History Of The Design Bureau And Its Aircraft. Midland Publishing Limited. p. 35. ISBN 978-1-85780-187-3.
  10. George Mellinger (2012). Yakovlev Aces of World War 2. Osprey Publishing. p. 12. ISBN 978-1-78200-553-7.
  11. Keskinen, Kalevi; Kari Stenman; Klaus Niska (1977). Venäläiset hävittäjät = [Soviet fighters]. Espoo, Finland: Tietoteos Publishing Company. pp. 74-87, 124. ISBN 951-9035-25-7.
  12. Mellinger, George (2003). LaGG & Lavochkin : aces of World War 2. Oxford: Osprey. p. 28. ISBN 978-1841766096.
  13. Green, William; Swanborough, Gordon (1977). Soviet Air Force fighters : Part one. London: Macdonald and Jane's. p. 13. ISBN 0-354-01026-3.
  14. Bridgman, edited by Leonard (1989). Jane's fighting aircraft of World War II (1995 ed.). New York: Military Press. pp. 194-195. ISBN 0517679647.

    Tupolev SB or Tupolev ANT-40 Bibliography:

  • Abanshin, Michael E. and Nina Gut. Fighting Lavochkin, Eagles of the East No.1. Lynnwood, WA: Aviation International, 1993. ISBN unknown.
  • Gordon, Yefim and Dmitri Khazanov. Soviet Combat Aircraft of the Second World War, Volume One: Single-Engined Fighters. Earl Shilton, Leicester, UK: Midland Publishing Ltd., 1998. ISBN 1-85780-083-4.
  • Gunston, Bill. The Osprey Encyclopaedia of Russian Aircraft 1875-1995. London: Osprey, 1995. ISBN 1-85532-405-9.
  • Green, William. Warplanes of the Second World War, Volume Three: Fighters. London: Macdonald & Co. (Publishers) Ltd., 1961 (seventh impression 1973). ISBN 0-356-01447-9.
  • Kotelnikov, Vladimir, Mikhail Orlov and Nikolay Yakubovich. LaGG-3 (Wydawnictwo Militaria 249) (in Polish). Warszawa, Poland: Wydawnictwo Militaria, 2006. ISBN 83-7219-249-9.

    Magazine References: +

  • Airfix Magazines (English) - http://www.airfix.com/
  • Avions (French) - http://www.aerostories.org/~aerobiblio/rubrique10.html
  • FlyPast (English) - http://www.flypast.com/
  • Flugzeug Publikations GmbH (German) - http://vdmedien.com/flugzeug-publikations-gmbh-hersteller_verlag-vdm-heinz-nickel-33.html
  • Flugzeug Classic (German) - http://www.flugzeugclassic.de/
  • Klassiker (German) - http://shop.flugrevue.de/abo/klassiker-der-luftfahrt
  • Le Fana de L'Aviation (French) - http://boutique.editions-lariviere.fr/site/abonnement-le-fana-de-l-aviation-626-4-6.html
  • Le Fana de L'Aviation (French) - http://www.pdfmagazines.org/tags/Le+Fana+De+L+Aviation/
  • Osprey (English) - http://www.ospreypublishing.com/
  • Revi Magazines (Czech) - http://www.revi.cz/

    Web References: +

  • History of RAF Organisation: http://www.rafweb.org
  • Wikipedia - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tupolev_SB
  • Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/

 

This webpage was updated 27th June 2021