An-24 | |
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Volga-Avia Antonov An-24 | |
Role | Transport aircraft / Turboprop Regional airliner |
National origin | Soviet Union |
Manufacturer | Antonov |
First flight | 29 October 1959[1] |
Introduction | 1962 |
Status | Active service |
Primary users | UTair Cargo Angara Airlines IrAero Yakutia Airlines Air Koryo |
Produced | 1959–1979 |
Number built | 1,367 (including the Chinese Y-7)[1] |
Variants | Antonov An-26 Antonov An-30 Antonov An-32 |
Developed into | Xian Y-7 |
The Antonov An-24 (Russian/Ukrainian: Антонов Ан-24) (NATO reporting name: Coke) is a 44-seat twin turboprop transport/passenger aircraft designed in 1957 in the Soviet Union by the Antonov Design Bureau[1] and manufactured by Kyiv, Irkutsk and Ulan-Ude Aviation Factories.
First flown in 1959, the An-24 was produced in some 1,000 units of various versions; in 2023 there are 93 still in service worldwide, mostly in the CIS and Africa.[2]
It was designed to replace the veteran piston Ilyushin Il-14 transport on short to medium haul trips, optimised for operating from rough strips and unprepared airports in remote locations.[3] The high-wing layout protects engines and blades from debris, the power-to-weight ratio is higher than that of many comparable aircraft and the machine is rugged, requiring minimal ground support equipment.
Due to its rugged airframe and good performance, the An-24 was adapted to perform many secondary missions such as ice reconnaissance and engine/propeller test-bed, as well as further development to produce the An-26 tactical transport, An-30 photo-mapping/survey aircraft and An-32 tactical transport with more powerful engines. Various projects were envisaged such as a four jet short/medium haul airliner and various iterations of powerplant.
The main production line was at the Kyiv-Svyatoshino (later renamed "Aviant") aircraft production plant which built 985, with 180 built at Ulan Ude and a further 197 An-24T tactical transport/freighters at Irkutsk. Production in the USSR was shut down by 1978.
Production continues at China's Xi'an Aircraft Industrial Corporation which makes licensed, reverse-engineered and redesigned aircraft as the Xian Y-7, and its derivatives. Manufacture of the Y-7, in civil form, has now been supplanted by the MA60 derivative with western engines and avionics, to improve performance and economy, and widen the export appeal.
Total Production (Not including Chinese Y-7)[4] | 1979 | 1978 | 1977 | 1976 | 1975 | 1974 | 1973 | 1972 | 1971 | 1970 | 1969 | 1968 | 1967 | 1966 | 1965 | 1964 | 1963 | 1962 | 1961 | 1960 | 1959 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1285 | 1 | 2 | 15 | 25 | 45 | 88 | 83 | 82 | 91 | 135 | 136 | 158 | 166 | 112 | 62 | 44 | 25 | 9 | 1 | 4 | 1 |
As of July 2018, 86 An-24s were in airline service.[31]
Following fatal incidents in July 2011 Russian President (now Prime Minister) Dmitry Medvedev proposed the accelerated decommissioning of An-24s,[32] which resulted in a ban for this type from scheduled flights inside Russia.[33] However, later the ban was cancelled and, as of 2023, An-24 are still in limited commercial service in Russia.
(Top) History Destinations Codeshare agreements Fleet Incidents and accidents References External links
Civil operators have included:
UGA – (Oopravleniye Grazhdahnskoy Aviahtsii - Civil Aviation Directorate) |
OAO – (Otdel'nyy Aviaotryad – independent flight detachment) | LO – (Lyotnyy Otryad – flight squad) / (Aviaeskadril'ya – squadrons) | Home base | CIS (Commonwealth of Independent States) Airline |
---|---|---|---|---|
Arkhangel'sk | 2nd Arkhangel'sk | 392nd | Arkhangel'sk-Vas'kovo | AVL Arkhangelsk Airlines |
Azerbaijan | Baku | 360th / 1st & 3rd squadrons | Baku-Bina | AZAL (no An-24s) |
Belorussian | Gomel' | 105th / 1st squadron | Gomel' | Gomelavia |
1st Minsk | 353rd | Minsk-Loshitsa (Minsk-1) | Belavia;Minsk-Avia | |
Mogilyov | Mogilyov | Mogilyov-Avia | ||
Central Regions | Belgorod | Belgorod | Belgorod Air Enterprise (no An-24s) | |
Bryansk | Bryansk | Bravia (Bryansk-Avia) | ||
Bykovo | 61st | Moscow-Bykovo | Bykovo Avia | |
Ivanovo | Ivanovo-Yuzhnyy (Zhukovka) | IGAP (Ivanovo State Air Enterprise) | ||
Kostroma | Kostroma | Kostroma Air Enterprise | ||
Kursk | Kursk | Kurskavia | ||
Ryazan' | Ryazan' | Ryazan'aviatrans | ||
Tambov | 169th | Tambov-Donskoye | Aviata (Avalinii Tambova) | |
Tula | 294th | Tula | Tula Air Enterprise | |
Voronezh | 243rd | Voronezh | Voronezhavia | |
Vladimir | Vladimir | Vladimir Air Enterprise / Avialeso'okhrana | ||
East Siberian | Bobaido | Bobaido | Bobaido Air Enterprise | |
Chita | 136th / 1st Squadron | Chita | Chita Avia | |
Irkutsk | 134th | Irkutsk-1 | Baikal Airlines | |
Ust'-Ilimsk | Ust'-Ilimsk | Ust'-Ilimsk Air Enterprise | ||
Ust'-Kut | Ust'-Kut | Ust'-Kut Air Enterprise | ||
Ulan-Ude | 138th | Ulan-Ude / Mukhino | Buryatia Airlines | |
Far Eastern | Sakhalin CAPA / Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk UAD | 147th / 1st Squadron | Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk / Khomutvo | Sakhalinskiye Aviatrassy |
1st Khabarovsk | 289th | Khabarovsk | Dalavia Far East Airlines Khabarovsk | |
Kazakh | Chimkent | 158th | Chimkent | Kazakhstan Airlines;Chimkent-Avia |
Gur'yev | 156th | Gur'yev | Kazakhstan Airlines;Atyrau Air Ways | |
Karaganda | 14th | Karaganda | Kazakhstan Airlines | |
Kustanay | 155th | Kustanay | Kazakhstan Airlines | |
Tselinograd | 239th | Tselinograd | Kazakhstan Airlines;Air Astana | |
Kirghiz | (dissolved by 1987) | |||
Komi | Syktyvkar | 366th | Syktyvkar | Komiavia;Komiinteravia |
Krasnoyarsk | Abakan | 130th | Abakan | Khakassia Airlines (Abakan A.E.) |
Latvian | Riga | 106th / 2nd Squadron | Riga-Spilve | Latavio |
Leningrad | Pskov | 320th / 2nd Squadron | Pskov | |
Lithuanian | Vilnius | 277th / 4th Squadron | Vilnius | Lithuanian Airlines |
Magadan | Anadyr' | Anadyr'-Ugol'nyy | Chukotavia | |
Chaunskoye | 6th | Chaunskoye | Chaunskoye Air Enterprise | |
1st Magadan | 185th / (1st or 3rd Squadron) | Magadan-Sokol | Kolyma-Avia | |
Moldavian | Kishinyov | 407th | Kishinyov | Air Moldova |
North Caucasian | Astrakhan' | 110th | Astrakhan'-Narimanovo | Astrakhan' Airlines |
Krasnodar | 241st/ 3rd Squadron | Krasnodar | ALK Kuban Airlines | |
Makhachkala | 111th | Makhachkala | Daghestan Airlines | |
Stavropol' | Stavropol' | SAAK (Stavropol' Joint Stock AL) | ||
Taganrog | Taganrog | Tavia | ||
Tajik | Leninabad | 292nd / 2nd Squadron | Leninabad | Tajikistan Airlines |
Training Establishments Directorate | KVLUGA (Kirovograd Civil Aviation Higher Flying School) | Kirovograd | Ukraine State Flight Academy | |
Turkmen | Ashkhabad | 165th / 1st Squadron | Ashkhabad | Turkmenistan Airlines/Akhal |
Krasnovodsk | 360th / 1st Squadron | Krasnovodsk | Turkmenistan Airlines/Khazar | |
Mary Composite Independent Air Squadron | Mary | |||
Tashauz | Tashauz | |||
Tyumen' | Salekhard | Salekhard | Tyumen' Avia Trans | |
Surgut | 358th | Surgut | Surgut Avia | |
Ukrainian | Donetsk | Donetsk | Donbas – East Ukrainian Airlines | |
Kyiv | 86th / 2nd Squadron | Kyiv-Zhulyany | Air Ukraine / Avialinïi Ukraïny | |
Kirovograd | Kirovograd-Khmelyovoye | Air URGA | ||
L'vov | 88th | L'vov | Lviv Airlines | |
Simferopol | 84th | Simferopol | Aviakompaniya Krym / Crimea AL | |
Voroshilovgrad | Voroshilovgrad | |||
Urals | Izhevsk | Izhevsk | Izhavia | |
Kirov | Kirov | Kirov Air Enterprises (no An-24s) | ||
Magnitogorsk | Magnitogorsk | Magnitogorsk Air Enterprise | ||
1st Perm' | Perm'-Bolshoye Savino | Perm Airlines | ||
1st Sverdlovsk | Sverdlovsk-Kol'tsovo | Ural Airlines [Yekaterinburg] | ||
Uzbek | Samarkand | 163rd | Samarkand | Uzbekistan Airways |
Tashkent | 160th | Tashkent-Yuzhnyy | Uzbekistan Airways | |
Volga | Cheboksary | Cheboksary | Cheboksary Air Enterprise | |
Cheboksary | Nizhnekamsk Independent air Squadron | Nizhnekamsk | Nizhnekamsk Air Enterprise | |
Gor'kiy | Gor'kiy-Strigino | Nizhegorodskie Airlines (sic) | ||
TatarCAPA / 1st Kazan' | 408th | Kazan' | Tatarstan Airlines | |
Orenburg | 195th / 2nd Squadron | Orenburg-Tsentral'nyy | Orenburg Airlines | |
Penza | 396th | Penza | Penza Air Enterprise | |
Saransk | Saransk | |||
Saratov | Saratov | |||
Ufa | 415th | Ufa | BAL Bashkirian Airlines | |
Yoshkar-Ola | Yoshkar-Ola | |||
West Siberian | Kemerovo | 196th | Kemerovo | |
Kolpashevo | Kolpashevo | |||
Novosibirsk | 6th(?) | Novosibirsk-Severnyy | 2nd Novosibirsk Air Enterprise | |
Tolmachevo | 448th | Novosibirsk-Tolmachevo | Sibir' | |
Novokuznetsk | 184th | Novokuznetsk | Aerokuznetsk | |
Omsk | 365th / 2nd Squadron | Omsk | Omsk-Avia | |
Tomsk | 119trh | Tomsk | Tomsk Avia | |
Yakutian | Yakutsk | 271st | Yakutsk | Sakha Avia |
Mirny | Mirny | Almazy Rossii – Sakha (Alrosa) | ||
GosNII GVF ("state scientific test institute for civil air fleet") | Moscow - Sheremetyevo-1 |
Main article: List of accidents and incidents involving the Antonov An-24 |
Data from Jane's All the World's Aircraft 1976–77[35]
General characteristics
Performance