When the Soviet Union fell in December 1991, there were close to 3,500
assorted Soviet-built airliners that could be deemed operational -- more
than there had ever been before. The vast majority of these Antonovs,
Ilyushins, Tupolevs, and Yaks flew for Aeroflot, and were scattered far
and wide at bases across the Soviet Union. Thirty years later, they have
almost all disappeared. Now dominated by state-of-the-art Airbuses and
Boeings, the world's airports and airways will never be the same again
without the noise, smoke and charisma of these iconic designs from
Soviet times.
This book follows the fortunes of the great Soviet airliners over the
last three decades and looks at what happened to this immense fleet: the
fragmentation of Aeroflot into a myriad of new operators in the 1990s,
the bankruptcies and consolidation of so many airlines that followed,
and then the slow, inevitable disappearance of these aircraft from our
skies. Illustrated with 220 photographs, most of which have never been
published before, and supported by many anecdotes, facts and figures,
this book conveys the nostalgia and wonder of this special, tumultuous
time in aviation history.