4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Mostly pictures, limited text, July 19, 2005
This review is from: Tupolev Tu-22M (Russian Aircraft in Action) (Hardcover)
Yefim Gordon is the foremost author on Soviet/Russian aviation today. He writes about airplane projects that were almost completely unknown in the West as late as the 1980s, and his books are filled with amazing detail.
During the latter 1970s the Tu-22M "Backfire" bomber was a major source of controversy within the arms control community. The Soviets designed it as a medium-range bomber. But the fact that some versions were equipped for in-flight refueling meant that it could theoretically reach the United States and it was therefore possibly a strategic bomber. The United States insisted that the Backfire be counted as a strategic bomber in arms control treaties. Meanwhile, the naval version of this aircraft was a major threat to U.S. Navy aircraft carriers.
This book is primarily a picture book. It only has four pages of text providing an overview of the program. The rest are photographs, primarily in black and white with some in color. These are interesting photos showing the exteriors of many aircraft. This should be useful for model-builders.
But there are several problems with the book. First, the photo reproduction is not great. It is not bad or awful, but occasionally the contrast is not as good as it should be. For instance, the early models of the bomber had an unusual landing gear configuration with a forward "toe" on each main gear. But this is not really visible in the photographs and is usually lost in shadow. In addition, the paper is thin and some of the photos bleed through to the other side of the page. Second, many of the photos are not really distinguishable from each other. We don't get to see these planes in many action shots or with people fueling or servicing them. We primarily see the planes parked or occasionally in flight and this gets rather boring. Although we no longer have to face outright censorship, what we get to see of these planes is not very revealing. There are no shots of pilots in the cockpit or good shots of the planes in maintenance or operations. Finally, there are a lot of typos in the photo captions and these are very annoying. A simple copy editing would have caught these.
If you are interested in the Backfire and its history, this book provides a minimum of detail and leaves a lot of things out. For instance, nowhere does the text mention how many aircraft were actually built. But it has a lot of pictures.
I suggest getting Gordon's other Tu-22M Backfire book: "Tupelov Tu-22 `Blinder' Tu-22m `Backfire': Russia's Long Range Supersonic Bombers." It is available from Aerofax.
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