Kharkiv State Aircraft Manufacturing Company or Kharkiv Aviation Factory (KSAMC or KhAZ; Ukrainian: Ха́рківське держа́вне авіаці́йне виробни́че підприємс́тво) is a Ukrainian aircraft manufacturing company. During the Soviet era, the plant was known as Aircraft Production Plant 135 and the Central Intelligence Agency classified it as Kharkiv Airframe Plant 135.[1]
Native name | Ха́рківське держа́вне авіаці́йне виробни́че підприємс́тво |
---|---|
Company type | State-owned |
Industry | |
Founded | 17 September 1926 |
Headquarters | , Ukraine |
Products | passenger, transport, military transport aircraft construction |
Number of employees | 7569 (2016) |
Parent | Ukroboronprom |
Website | www |
History
editKhAZ was established on September 17, 1926, following the foundation of Kharkiv aircraft repair facilities, which had been established in 1923.[2] These facilities were originally constructed by the German aviation company Junkers Flugzeug und Motorenwerke AG prior to Adolf Hitler's rise to power. This undertaking was part of Weimar Germany's strategy to conceal its military cooperation with the Soviet Union, aiming to circumvent the limitations imposed on the German Armed Forces by the Treaty of Versailles.[3]
The manufacturing facility has its own aerodrome, known as Kharkiv North Airport (ICAO: UKHV), alternatively recognized as Kharkiv Sokilnyky Airport.
Notable aircraft
editFighters
editTrainer
editTransport
editPassenger
edit- Kalinin K-2
- Kalinin K-3
- Kalinin K-4
- Kalinin K-5
- Tupolev Tu-104
- Tupolev Tu-124
- Tupolev Tu-134
- Tupolev Tu-141
Ultralight
editExperimental
editSee also
editReferences
edit- ^ "Basic Imagery Interpretation Report, Kharkov Airframe Plant 135 (S), Strategic Weapons Industrial Facilities, USSR" (PDF). National Photographic Interpretation Center, Central Intelligence Agency. February 1985. Retrieved 24 October 2023.
- ^ "Харківське державне авіаційне виробниче підприємство". Мілітарний (in Ukrainian). Retrieved 2023-10-24.
- ^ C. K. Daly, John. "Kharkiv State Aviation Production Enterprise Enters Freefall". Jamestown Foundation. Retrieved 2023-10-23.