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Fighter

Sukhoi Su-27 Flanker

The definitive Soviet air superiority fighter: long-legged, powerful, and agile enough to define a generation of Russian aviation design.

Mach 2.35 Top Speed at altitude
Sukhoi Su-27 Flanker
01 — Overview

History & background.

The Sukhoi Su-27 Flanker is one of the most significant fighter aircraft of the Cold War era and the foundation for the largest family of combat aircraft in Russian aviation history. Developed in the 1970s in direct response to the American F-15 Eagle, the Su-27 entered service in 1985 and redefined Western assessments of Soviet aerospace capability.

The design philosophy behind the Su-27 was unusual: rather than the blended wing-body construction common in Western fighters of the period, the Sukhoi design bureau created an airframe with an exceptionally generous lifting body, where the entire fuselage contributes meaningfully to lift. Combined with two powerful AL-31F turbofans producing over 245 kN of combined thrust and a highly negative static stability margin managed by a fly-by-wire system, the result was an aircraft with agility that genuinely surprised Western analysts when it was first seen at the 1989 Paris Air Show.

At that show, chief test pilot Viktor Pugachev demonstrated the manoeuvre that would bear his name — the Cobra — in which the Su-27 pitched to nearly 120 degrees nose-up while maintaining forward momentum, a feat that would have destroyed most contemporary fighters. The demonstration made clear that Soviet aerodynamic research had taken a different path from Western efforts and arrived somewhere equally capable.

The Su-27’s range, 3,530 km ferry range with internal fuel alone, was another surprise. Western intelligence had underestimated the aircraft’s reach, which gave Soviet air defence forces the ability to contest airspace far beyond what the F-15 could patrol without tanker support.

The Flanker family expanded dramatically after the Cold War, spawning the carrier-capable Su-33, the multi-role Su-30 series (produced in variants for India, China, Algeria, Malaysia, and others), the dedicated ground-attack Su-34, and the advanced Su-35S with 3D thrust-vectoring engines. More than 800 aircraft of all variants remain in service worldwide as of 2026.

02 — Technical Data

Specifications & performance.

cannon1× GSh-30-1 (30 mm, 150 rounds)
combat radius1,340 km
engine2× Saturn AL-31F (122.6 kN each with afterburner)
ferry range3,530 km
first flightMay 20, 1977
hardpoints10 (6× underwing, 2× wingtip, 2× under-fuselage)
introduced1985
length21.9 m
max speedMach 2.35 (2,500 km/h) at altitude
mtow30,000 kg
primary usersRussia, China, India, Ukraine, Belarus
service ceiling19,000 m (62,336 ft)
statusIn service (1985–present, multiple variants)
wingspan14.7 m
03 — Gallery

In the Aviation Guide app.

Su-27 plan view
Pugachev's Cobra
Cockpit
04 — Questions

Frequently asked about Sukhoi Su-27 Flanker.

What is the Su-27's most famous maneuver?+
The Pugachev's Cobra, first demonstrated publicly at the 1989 Paris Air Show. In this maneuver, the pilot pulls back sharply until the aircraft pitches to 90–120 degrees nose-up — nearly perpendicular to the flight path — while maintaining forward momentum, then recovers to level flight. The maneuver demonstrates exceptional aerodynamic stability and control authority at extreme angles of attack, though its tactical value in air combat is debated.
How does the Su-27 compare to the F-15 Eagle?+
The Su-27 was specifically designed to counter the F-15. Both are twin-engine, high-thrust air superiority fighters with long range. The Su-27 is slightly faster (Mach 2.35 vs 2.5 for the F-15C), carries a similar weapons load, and is broadly comparable in combat radius. The key differences: the F-15 has superior avionics and radar in its original form; the Su-27 has better raw aerodynamic agility at high angles of attack. Later derivatives — the Su-30MK, Su-35S — introduced thrust vectoring and substantially upgraded avionics.
What are the main Su-27 variants?+
The Su-27 family is exceptionally large. The baseline Su-27S is a single-seat air superiority fighter. The Su-27UB is the two-seat trainer. The Su-30 introduced two seats and multi-role capability. The Su-33 is a carrier-capable variant with folding wings. The Su-35S (Su-27M) is the most advanced single-seat derivative, with 3D thrust vectoring, an IRBIS-E phased array radar, and substantially increased range. The Su-34 is a dedicated strike variant with a side-by-side cockpit.

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