Tupolev Tu-16 Badger — Soviet Strategic Bomber
The Tupolev Tu-16 (NATO reporting name: Badger) is one of the most significant Soviet aircraft of the Cold War era — a twin-engine, swept-wing strategic and naval bomber that first flew in April 1952 and entered service in 1954. Designed by the Tupolev OKB under Project 88, the Tu-16 served as the backbone of Soviet Long-Range and Naval Aviation for decades, was produced under license in China as the Xian H-6, and laid the aerodynamic foundation for the Tu-104 jet transport. Variants of the design remained in active service into the mid-2020s.
What This Collection Contains
This living collection brings together primary-source English-language technical documentation on the Tu-16, sourced from declassified U.S. intelligence translations and original Soviet service manuals. Documents cover the full spectrum of aircraft systems — airframe, powerplant, avionics, armament, and flight operations.
Document Manifest
- Aircraft Ty-16 — Description of Design, Book I: Aircraft Performance Characteristics
- Tu-16 Badger — Flight Manual: Operating Limitations, Pre-Flight Inspection, Engine Starting, Taxiing, Pattern Flying, Landing, Advanced Manoeuvres
- Tu-16 Badger — Aircraft Service Manual, Book II: Navigation Equipment, Autopilot, Oxygen, Electrical, Photo and Radio Equipment
- Aircraft Tu-16 — Technical Description, Book IV, Part 1: Electrical, Radio and Camera Equipment
- Aircraft TU-16 — Maintenance Instructions, Book III: Bombing Equipment (English Language)
- CIA Intelligence Report — Soviet Manual on Maintenance of Bombing Equipment on the TU-16 Aircraft (February 1964, Declassified)
Technical Highlights
Aerodynamics & Airflow
The Tu-16 employs a 35° leading-edge wing sweep to mitigate shockwave drag in the high-subsonic flight regime. Wing fences and a semi-monocoque aluminum fuselage define its aerodynamic profile. Primary flight controls are manually operated with hydraulic boost augmentation and trim tabs.
Powerplant
Two Mikulin AM-3 turbojets (approx. 85.3 kN / 19,180 lbf each) in early production; upgraded to RD-3M-500 turbojets (approx. 93.2 kN / 21,000 lbf each) in later missile-carrying variants. Engines are buried in the wing roots with optimized circular intakes at the fuselage-wing junction.
Handling & Stability
Flight test studies documented Dutch roll tendencies addressed by an integrated yaw damper in the autopilot. A rearward aerodynamic center shift occurs near Mach 0.85, requiring nose-up trim adjustment. Aeroelastic bending and torsional flexibility studies were integral to the aircraft's certification.
Performance Data
| Specification | Value |
|---|---|
| Crew | 6–7 (Pilot, Co-pilot, Navigator, Bombardier, Gunners, EW Operator) |
| Max Takeoff Weight | 79,000 kg (174,165 lb) |
| Max Speed | 1,050 km/h (Mach 0.85) |
| Service Ceiling | 12,800–13,716 m (42,000–45,000 ft) |
| Range (max payload) | approx. 3,900 nmi (7,200 km) |
| Max Bomb Load | 9,000 kg (19,800 lb) |
| Defensive Armament | 6–7 × 23mm AM-23 cannons (dorsal, ventral, tail turrets) |
Engineering Bulletins
Service documentation covers structural fatigue and life-cycle directives, missile conversion modifications (Badger-A to Badger-B/C/G variants), and pitot-static system integrity requirements for defensive turret and radar system operation.
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