List of Mikoyan and MiG aircraft
This is a list of aircraft produced by Russian Aircraft Corporation MiG previously Mikoyan, a Russian aircraft manufacturer.
Production
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MiG-29OVT
- MiG-1 - 1940 fighter
- MiG-3 - 1940 fighter and interceptor
- MiG-9 - 1946 fighter, MiG's first jet
- MiG-15 - 1947 fighter
- MiG-17 - 1950 fighter (based on the MiG-15)
- MiG-19 - 1952 fighter, MiG's first supersonic fighter.
- MiG-21 - 1956 fighter and interceptor that would be widely exported and become the backbone of dozens of air forces.
- MiG-23 - 1967 fighter and fighter-bomber
- MiG-25 - 1964 interceptor and reconnaissance aircraft
- MiG-27 - 1970 ground-attack aircraft derived from the MiG-23.
- MiG-29 - 1977 air superiority fighter and multirole fighter
- MiG-31 - 1975 interceptor (based on the MiG-25)
- MiG-35 - 2007 multirole fighter and air superiority fighter (based on the MiG-29)
Experimental
- DIS/MiG-5, 1941 (escort fighter)
- MiG-6, 1940 (reconnaissance/ground attack aircraft)
- MiG-7, 1944
- MiG-8 Utka, 1945
- MiG I-200, 1939, prototype for MiG-1
- MiG IP-201, 1941, MiG-1 modified into a testbed for an experimental machine gun
- MiG I-210/MiG-9, 1941, MiG-3 modified with a Shvetsov M-82 radial engine
- MiG I-211/MiG-9E, 1942, prototype high-altitude fighter developed from the I-210
- MiG I-220/MiG-11, 1943
- MiG I-221, 1943, high-altitude interceptor based on I-210
- MiG I-222, 1944, I-221 modified with a pressurized cockpit
- MiG I-224, 1944
- MiG I-225, 1944
- MiG I-230/MiG-3U, 1942, improved MiG-3
- MiG I-231, 1943
- MiG I-250 (N), 1945 (aka "MiG-13"), motorjet fighter prototype
- MiG I-270 (Zh), 1947
- MiG I-300, 1945, prototype for MiG-9
- MiG I-301T/MiG-9UTI, 1947, prototype trainer version of MiG-9
- MiG I-302, 1947, MiG-9 with relocated cannon
- MiG I-305, 1947, MiG-9 with a single Lyulka TR-1 engine
- MiG I-307, 1947, MiG-9 with RD-20F or RD-21 engines
- MiG I-310, 1947, prototype for MiG-15
- MiG I-320 (R), 1949
- MiG I-340, 1952, MiG-17 with Lyulka AM-5F engines
- MiG I-350 (M), 1951
- MiG I-360, 1952, precursor of MiG-19
- MiG I-370/I-1, 1955
- MiG I-380/I-3, 1953
- MiG I-410/I-3P, 1954
- MiG I-420/I-3U, 1956
- MiG I-7U, 1957, heavy interceptor fighter
- MiG I-75, 1958, swept-wing interceptor developed from the I-3
- MiG SM-12, 1957, developed into the MiG-21
- MiG SN, 1953
- Ye-2, 1955
- Ye-4/Ye-5, 1955
- Ye-8, 1962, experimental fighter aircraft
- Ye-50, 1956
- Ye-150, 1958
- Ye-151, cannon armed version of Ye-150
- Ye-152, 1959, fighter
- Ye-166, fictitious designation of Ye-152-1
- MiG-23 – (first use of designation) production designation of Mikoyan-Gurevich Ye-2A, 1956
- MiG-23 – (second use of designation) early name of Mikoyan-Gurevich Ye-8 (E-8/1 and E-8/2), 1960
- MiG-AT, 1996
- MiG-110, 1995
- MiG MFI objekt 1.44/1.42, 1986–2000
- MiG LFI project
- MiG-105 Spiral, 1965
- MiG-33
- Mikoyan LMFS
Planned aircraft
UAVs and drones
Naming conventions
MiGs follow the convention of using odd numbers for fighter aircraft. However, this naming convention is maintained not directly by MiG, but by ordering institutions, such as Ministry of Defence or Council of Ministers' Military-Industrial Commission (while in Soviet Union). The original designations for MiG aircraft are 2- or 3-digit numbers, separated by a dot. 1.44 or 1.42 is an example of original naming. Although the MiG-8 and MiG-110 exist, they are not fighters. The MiG-105 "Spiral" was designed as an orbital interceptor, contemporaneous with the U.S. Air Force's cancelled X-20 Dyna-Soar.
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