
Mil Mi-10 - Wikipedia
The Mil Mi-10 (NATO reporting name Harke), given the product number izdeliye 60, is a Soviet military transport helicopter of flying crane configuration, developed from the Mi-6, entering service in 1963.
The Largest Soviet Flying Crane Helicopter - Mil Mi-10 "Harke"
Designed in the late 1950s at the request of the Soviet government, the Mil Mi-10 (NATO reporting name Harke) was designed to carry its loads externally – unlike the Mi-6. This meant that...
Aircrafttotal Encyclopedia
The Mil Mi-10 (NATO reporting name Harke), given the product number izdeliye 60, is a Soviet military transport helicopter of flying crane configuration, developed from the Mi-6, entering service in 1963.
50 years of serial produced Mi-10 maiden flight - Helis.com
The first serial-produced Mi-10 helicopter made its first flight in September 1964. Several modifications of the Mi-10 were produced: the Mi-10GR ELINT helicopter, the Mi-10UPL universal field laboratory transporter, and the Mi-10P helicopter designed to provide airborne electronic counter-measures and targeting support during combat.
Mil Mi-10 - Specifications - Technical Data / Description
The Mil Mi-10 is a twin-engined heavy transport-helicopter and crane-helicopter developed by the Soviet manufacturer Mil OKB, today MIL Moscow helicopter plant, JSC (Russia).
Mil Mi-10 Harke - Helis.com
Mi-10 Harke News 50 Years of Mi-10 record-setting load-carrying capacity 27-Jan-15 - In 1965, the Mi-10, piloted by test pilot Raphael Kaprelyan, lifted a weight of 15 tons to a height of 2840 meters, as well as a 5-ton load to 7151 meters.
Mi-10 Harke (MIL) - GlobalSecurity.org
Mar 22, 2018 · The Mil Mi-10 (NATO reporting name Harke) was a Soviet military transport helicopter of flying crane configuration, developed in 1962 from the Mi-6. It entered service in 1963. It was also...
Mil Mi-10 - Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mil Mi-10 (Russian: Мил Ми-8; NATO reporting name: Harke) is a Soviet military transport helicopter prodiced by Mil.
Mil Mi-10 helicopter - development history, photos, technical data
First demonstrated publicly at Tushino in July 1961, the Mi-10 is a flying crane development of the Mi-6, with which it shares a common powerplant and rotor system. The fuselage has been redesigned with a shallower cabin and a deeper tailboom to give a level and flat under-surface against which its various loads can be hoisted.
Soviets' Strange Flyer: The History Of The Crane Helicopter Mi-10
Sep 19, 2023 · First demonstrated in July of 1961, the Mil Mi-10 was the world's largest helicopter. Towering at a height of 25.6 feet, a length of 137 feet, and a main rotor diameter of 114.8 feet, this...
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