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Home Base: Brantford, ONT
Operation: Central and Eastern USA and Canada
Model: Yak-52
Wing Span:
30' 6"
Length: 25' 5"
Height: 8' 10"
Max Speed: 226 knots
Gross Weight: 2,877 lbs
Power Plant: VMKB (Vedenyev) M-14P radial piston engine
Horsepower: 360
Fuel Capacity: 120 litres/31 gallons
Armament: none

Martin Mattes' Yakovlev Yak-52



Martin Mattes
, of Brantford, Ontario, Canada, owns and operates this beautiful Yakovlev Yak-52 that is available for airshows, flybys, film and also with model Dany Ried (www.dany-ried.com).

The Yakovlev Yak-52 first flew in 1976, and is still being produced in Bacau, Romania, by Aerostar. Designed originally as a primary advanced trainer for students who would later transition to Soviet jet aircraft, the aerobatics-capable (+7g / -5g) Yak-52 is now often seen in the hands of sports flying enthusiasts from the United States to New Zealand.

A descendant of the single-seat champion aerobatic Yak-50, but with a tricycle-geared undercarriage that makes it appear more like the earlier Yak-18, the two-seat, all-metal Yak-52 is powered by a 360hp radial engine, the Ivchenko M-14P, with an inverted fuel system that permits inverted flight for as long as two minutes, while drawing fuel from a 5-gallon reserve tank. The engine drives a two-bladed counter-clockwise rotating, variable-pitch, wooden propeller.

An easy airplane to fly, with a fast roll rate, especially to the right, the Yak-52 takes some taxiing adjustment for flyers accustomed to hydraulics, because the plane uses air pressure to operate the brakes (as well as the flaps and landing gear), and also because the non-steerable nosewheel calls for differential braking. Air lines to each cylinder, used for starting the engine, may easily be mistaken for a fuel injection arrangement.

At 2,200 lbs. empty weight, the plane is quite light and agile. While the landing gear is fully retractable, it remains partially-exposed in the retracted position, affording a measure of protection should the plane be forced to land "wheels up". Capable of operating from
unimproved grass runways, the aircraft is easily maintained, even "in the field."

Over 1,800 Yak-52 were built, with over 1,200 still airworthy.

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