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Russia Eyeing to Produce Ilyushin Passenger Planes in Iran

Aramagedon

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TEHRAN (FNA)- Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak underlined that his country is willing to produce its light passenger planes in Iran.
"Russia has presented a proposal to Iran for the joint production of its Ilyushin II-114 planes in Iran," Novak said on Thursday.

He reiterated that Moscow was interested in launching a production line in Iran to produce spare parts and the equipment required for Russian planes.

Novak, meantime, said that his country was preparing to sell 12 Sukhoi Superjet 100 passenger planes to Iran.

In relevant remarks on Wednesday, Iranian Road and Urban Development Minister Abbas Akhoundi underlined that his ministry and the world's leading turboprop manufacturer ATR were in the final stages of a passenger plane deal.

"Negotiations for the purchase of aircraft from ATR have reached the final stage and at the moment, the two sides are at the stage of exchanging documents," Akhoundi said.

He said that with the finalization of document exchange, the introduction of the first ATR aircraft into Iran’s air fleet will begin to be followed up through official channels.

The deal was first signed in February 2016 in Tehran following the commercial discussions held in Rome and Paris during visit of Iranian President Hassan Rouhani Akhoundi to those countries.

Earlier in February, Iranian Deputy Road and Urban Development Minister Asqar Fakhriyeh Kashan declared that ATR will deliver three or four passenger planes to Iran Air, Iran's national flag air carrier, by the end of the current Iranian calendar (will end on March 20).

He reiterated that after finalization of the deal valued at $400 million for 20 passenger planes, the aircraft will be delivered to Iran.

On January 11, French Airbus also delivered the first plane to Iran under the deal between Iran and Airbus to purchase 100 passenger planes from the French manufacturer of civil aircraft.

Airbus sealed a contract with Iran Air in December to sell 100 of its passenger planes, worth over $18 billion.

The announcement came after Iran Air Managing Director Farhad Parvaresh and Airbus President Fabrice Bregier finalized a deal which was initially signed in Paris back in January 2016.

The agreement covered 46 Airbus A320 planes, 38 A330 planes and 16 A350 XWB aircraft, with deliveries due to begin in early 2017.

Airbus is the world’s Number 2 jet maker after Boeing, a US-based multinational plane manufacturer.

Bregier described the deal as “a significant first step in the overall modernization of Iran’s commercial aviation sector,” saying it also includes pilot training, airport operations and air traffic management.

Parvaresh, for his part, expressed delight at cooperation with Airbus, stressing it has paved the way “for more practical steps to follow for Iran Air’s fleet renewal.”

"Iran Air considers this agreement an important step towards a stronger international presence in civil aviation. We hope this success signals to the world that the commercial goals of Iran and its counterparts are better achieved with international cooperation and collaboration,” he added.

The deal with Airbus received the go-ahead from the US Treasury Department in November.

Earlier in December, Iran Air finalized a deal for 80 jetliners from US plane maker Boeing Co., with the planes scheduled to start arriving in 2018.

The deals were made possible after the US removed a ban on selling Iran passenger aircraft and spare parts following the nuclear deal, known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA).

Tehran and the six world powers (the US, Russia, China, France, Britain and Germany) hammered out the nuclear accord in July 2015.

It went into effect in January 2016 and resolved a long-running dispute over Iran’s peaceful nuclear program.

http://en.farsnews.com/newstext.aspx?nn=13951205000711
 
fast comparison b/w Superjet 100 and ll-114 by Wikipedia
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Uzbekistan_Airways_Ilyushin_Il-114_Dyubin.jpg

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What on earth would iran want with the il14,unless of course they`re considering it as an alternative to the failed iran-140,which would be ironic as the russians are looking at the il14 as a replacement for the patrol version of the an-140

Ahh!.....the il96,truly one of the most beautiful airliners to ever fly...,its a great pity that iran didnt buy a few of them 10 years ago when they were looking at the tu204 they would`ve been an excellent replacement for irans clapped out 747s,now if only the russians had modernised them....
 
What on earth would iran want with the il14,unless of course they`re considering it as an alternative to the failed iran-140,which would be ironic as the russians are looking at the il14 as a replacement for the patrol version of the an-140


Ahh!.....the il96,truly one of the most beautiful airliners to ever fly...,its a great pity that iran didnt buy a few of them 10 years ago when they were looking at the tu204 they would`ve been an excellent replacement for irans clapped out 747s,now if only the russians had modernised them....
Russia is an advanced country. Waaay more advanced than Iran. But honestly i wouldn't fly with a civil-plane made in Russia. They're simply not as reliable as their western counterparts
One of the phobias that i have is dying in a plane crash.
As amazing as this offer sounds and as much as we need to do this (technology wise), i wouldn't dare getting on board a Russian or Chinese plane ( the comac project)
 
soon all of these bullsh!ts will pass. Airbus and Ilyushin altogether!
 
They are registered in Iran.
We will see.


The list price of the airbus aircraft is, tops, $20 billion. But because it is a large purchase, the price was $10 billion.
I'm talking about the cost of our destroyed nuclear infrastructures. though you gave them for free, That's not how we got them!
 
Frankly, this is a waste of money. We have IrAntonov formerly known as Iran-140 for further developments.
This F government has no idea about home made planes, even if there will be some imports, we must develop our own for obvious reasons. During the years of upcoming sanctions we cannot expect other countries to sacrifice their own benefits because of us. That's the truth and truth hurts as usual.

@SubWater , bro
Is SU-100 super jet a product of Illyushin family?
 
We will see.



I'm talking about the cost of our destroyed nuclear infrastructures. though you gave them for free, That's not how we got them!
EP-IFA, EP-IJA are Iranian regs.
 
Frankly, this is a waste of money. We have IrAntonov formerly known as Iran-140 for further developments.
This F government has no idea about home made planes, even if there will be some imports, we must develop our own for obvious reasons. During the years of upcoming sanctions we cannot expect other countries to sacrifice their own benefits because of us. That's the truth and truth hurts as usual.

@SubWater , bro
Is SU-100 super jet a product of Illyushin family?
An-140 is shit... it killed dozens, remember!
 
What happened to that ATR deal?Aren't buying something like 20 planes from them?
 
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Frankly, this is a waste of money. We have IrAntonov formerly known as Iran-140 for further developments.
This F government has no idea about home made planes, even if there will be some imports, we must develop our own for obvious reasons. During the years of upcoming sanctions we cannot expect other countries to sacrifice their own benefits because of us. That's the truth and truth hurts as usual.

@SubWater , bro
Is SU-100 super jet a product of Illyushin family?
I don't have any expert info about civil airplanes however wiki says that:

  • Development of the Sukhoi Superjet 100 began in 2000.[11] On 19 December 2002, Sukhoi Civil Aircraft and Boeing Commercial Airplanes signed a medium-term Cooperation Agreement to work together on the design. Boeing consultants had already been advising Sukhoi for a year.[12] On 10 October 2003, the technical board of the project selected the suppliers of major subsystems.[13] The project officially passed its third stage of development on 12 March 2004, meaning that Sukhoi could now start selling the Superjet 100 to customers.[14] On 13 November 2004, the Superjet 100 passed the fourth stage of development, implying that the Superjet 100 was now ready for commencing of prototype production.[15] In August 2005, a contract between the Russian government and Sukhoi was signed. Under the agreement, the Superjet 100 project would receive 7.9 billion rubles of research and development financing under the Federal Program titled Development of Civil Aviation in Russia in 2005–2009.[16]

An-140 is shit... it killed dozens, remember!
An-140 is good airplanes in cold and mild weather of Ukraine and Russia but its engines have problem with warm and humid weather of Iran specially south of Iran and they are unable to produce enough power.

Unfortunately, they understand that so late and that cause many problems.​
 
An-140 is good airplanes in cold and mild weather of Ukraine and Russia but its engines have problem with warm and humid weather of Iran specially south of Iran and they are unable to produce enough power.

Unfortunately, they understand that so late and that cause many problems.​
Great analysis. Do you happen to have some source as well?
 
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