Site Navigation
Categories:
Soviet military trainer aircraft 1940-1949
Soviet civil trainer aircraft 1940-1949
Yakovlev aircraft
Low wing aircraft
Propeller aircraft
Single engine aircraft

Summary Of: Yak-18

The Yak-18 became the standard trainer for Air Force flying schools and DOSAAF... The Yak-18 was built under licence in China as the CJ...

Encyclodia Page On: Yak-18

These Are Links To Other Documents
| Polish Aviation Museum | Yakovlev | China Nanchang Aircraft Manufacturing Corporation | China Nanchang Aircraft Manufacturing Corporation | 1946 | 1946 | Soviet Air Force | DOSAAF | People's Liberation Army Air Force | Polish Air Force | Yakovlev Yak-18T | Nanchang CJ-6 | Yakovlev | Russian | NATO reporting name | Soviet | trainer aircraft | Shvetsov M-11 | radial piston engine | 1946 | China | Alexander S. Yakovlev | Yakovlev UT-2 | Yak-5 | Soviet Air Forces | DOSAAF | Shvetsov M-11 | landing gear | China | undercarriage | | | Borki airfield | | | | | USSR | Ivchenko AI-14 | Yak-18T | Aeroflot | | | | AFG | Afghan Air Force | | Albania | Albanian Air Force | | Algeria | | Bangladesh | | Bulgaria | | Cambodia | | China | People's Liberation Army Air Force | Nanchang CJ-6 | | Czechoslovakia | | East Germany | | Egypt | | Guinea | | Hungary | | Iraq | | Laos | | Mali | | Mongolia | | North Korea | | Poland | Polish Air Force | | Romania | | Somalia | | Soviet Union | DOSAAF | Soviet Air Force | | Syria | | Turkmenistan | | Vietnam | | Yemen | | Zambia | Wingspan | Max takeoff weight | Ivchenko AI-14 | Maximum speed | Range | Service ceiling | Rate of climb | Wing loading | Power/mass | Nanchang CJ-6 | Zlin Trener | LWD Junak | De Havilland Chipmunk | Percival Prentice | GFDL | v | d | Yakovlev | Yak-6 | Yak-12 | Yak-14 | Yak-40 | Yak-42 | Yak-112 | Yak-1 | Yak-3 | Yak-7 | Yak-9 | Yak-15 | Yak-17 | Yak-23 | Yak-25 (II) | Yak-28 | Yak-38 | Yak-2 | Yak-4 | Yak-28 | Yak-25 | Yak-27 | Pchela | Yak-24 | UT-1 | UT-2 | Yak-7 | Yak-11 | Yak-17 | Yak-28 | Yak-30 (II) | Yak-32 | Yak-50 (II) | Yak-52 | Yak-53 | Yak-54 | Yak-55 | Yak-130 | EG | Yak-5 | Yak-19 | Yak-25 (I) | Yak-26 | Yak-30 (I) | Yak-36 | Yak-41 | Yak-43 | Yak-44 | Yak-46 | Yak-50 (I) | v | d | PLAAF | PLANAF | CJ-6 | JL-8 | JL-9 | L-15 | v | d | aviation | Timeline of aviation | Aircraft | manufacturers | Aircraft engines | manufacturers | Airports | Airlines | Air forces | Aircraft weapons | Missiles | Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) | Experimental aircraft | General | Military | Commercial (airliners) | Deaths | Airspeed | Distance | Altitude | Endurance | Most-produced aircraft | Categories | Soviet military trainer aircraft 1940-1949 | Soviet civil trainer aircraft 1940-1949 | Yakovlev aircraft | Low wing aircraft | Propeller aircraft | Single engine aircraft |
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Yak-18".