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Did Russia or the Soviet Union ever have their own experimental or military rocket planes (other than the Buran), or did their military merely use jets and other non-rocket aircraft? America flew those many experimental X-planes, did the Soviet Union have any similar planes? Afaik all MiGs are jets.

Giovanni
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    Are you asking if the Soviets ever built any rocket airplane? If so it's a yes/no answer, it would make a better question if you were more specific about the uses of the rocket airplane. – GdD May 14 '21 at 18:12
  • @GdD I clearly wrote "experimental or military rocket planes". This may include suborbital spaceplanes similar to the X-2 and the X-15. But Mike Sowsun actually answered my question, and the question and answers in ymb1's link are interesting too. – Giovanni May 15 '21 at 05:02
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    5 minutes or less of searching would have supplied you with an answer, why didn't you bother to do that? – jwenting May 16 '21 at 12:53
  • @jwenting You're one of the "friendlier" persons around here, right? – Giovanni May 16 '21 at 16:13
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    @Giovanni I try to be, but I like most people here, have not much time for people who don't show any attempts to solve their own problems before asking for help. – jwenting May 17 '21 at 11:33
  • @jwenting Why did you take your time then? I didn't know what exactly to google, and I didn't know of any Russian rocket planes so far. I thought it's best to ask here to get a definite answer. It doesn't hurt you if I ask this. If you don't wanna answer, don't do it (the question had been answered anyway, your comment was entirely superfluous, only good for showing detest). – Giovanni May 17 '21 at 12:07
  • Also I'm asking specifically about experimental planes like the X-planes, not just any rocket plane. – Giovanni May 19 '21 at 07:47

1 Answers1

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Yes

First, we should clarify the fact that a "rocket engine" is a variant of a jet engine. A rocket engine is usually understood as a jet engine that requires external supply of all components of combustion, including the oxidizer.

In a way, that makes things easier, and this is why rocket engines were commonly used at the early stages of jet propulsion development.

Early examples include rocket boosters for traditional piston-driven airplanes. This method is still in use to shorten the take-off distance (down to zero in some cases), but early on it was tried for "regular" emergency power and, of course, research. (Ram jets also had some limited use then).

The first Soviet 100% jet was BI-1 (БИ-1) in early 1942.

BI-1 wiki Commons

BI-1 had a rocket engine burning kerosene and nitric acid. Even though the airplane was designated as "fighter" and had a space provision for guns, it was really a research ariplane, with the maximum time under power of only a few minutes (it never reached even two minutes in real tests).

The first one was corroded away by the acid. The third one (BI-3) was lost, and the test pilot Bakhchivandzhi died, presumably due to Mach tuck, which was not understood then.

In the later times, during the "true" jet era, there was much less cooperation between the aviation and space industries than in the West. This is one of the reasons why "rocket planes" were a rarity in the USSR, even for research.

Zeus
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