Romania's Hong 5 Is No Ilyushin
Making its first, and probably last, appearance at an international
European air show, the unfamiliar shape of the Romanian air force's
Hong 5 twin-turbojet bomber at Le Bourget is a reminder of the
Cold War, when similar aircraft would have been part of the Warsaw
Pact's tactical nuclear and conventional strike forces.
If it looks remarkably like the Ilyushin Il-28 "Beagle,"
it is because it is literally a Chinese copy. Having received
about 500 Il-28s from production by the Soviet GAZ factories beginning
around 1950, in the early 1960s the Chinese air force (AF/PLA)
tasked the Harbin Aircraft Factory with their local production.
In one of several periods of strained relations between China
and the USSR, Harbin had access to only about 60% of available
drawings from its Il-28 overhaul work. While reverse-engineering
the remainder, Harbin introduced several major modifications and
some improvements to the mainplanes and tail assembly. Other changes
included new Chinese surveillance/mapping radar and IFF. Powerplants
remained two 6,000-pounds-thrust VK-1 Nene-derived centrifugal
turbojets, known in China as the WP5A.
H-5 flight development started in China in September 1966, and
initial production included versions modified for nuclear weapons
delivery. Harbin eventually exported several hundred H-5s, although
Albania and Romania were believed to be the only recipients in
Europe.
The Romanian aircraft have been operated since 1958 by Escadrila
38 Aviatie Cercetare (38 Search Aviation Squadron), later redesignated
Escadrila 38 Reconuastere (38 Reconnaissance Squadron) from Air
Base 86 at Borcea-Fetesti. Most have now been withdrawn, leaving
only two H-5s currently in service, equipped with vertical camera
in bomb-bay and oblique camera in the port side of the rear fuselage,
plus ventral mapping radar. A third H-5 has been undergoing a
major overhaul with Aerostar at Bacau, for continued service,
planned until about 2003.
By John Fricker