Russia's Mach 5 MiG-41 Fighter Might Fire Laser Beams (If It Ever Flies)

MiG-41
August 17, 2024 Topic: Security Region: Europe Blog Brand: The Buzz Tags: MiG-41MiG-31RussiaMilitaryAviationDefenseRussian Air Force

Russia's Mach 5 MiG-41 Fighter Might Fire Laser Beams (If It Ever Flies)

Russia's proposed sixth-generation MiG-41 fighter promises extreme capabilities like MACH 4 to MACH 5 speeds, stealth, hypersonic weapons, and satellite destruction at near-space altitudes.

 

Most Important Points: Russia's proposed sixth-generation MiG-41 fighter promises extreme capabilities like MACH 4 to MACH 5 speeds, stealth, hypersonic weapons, and satellite destruction at near-space altitudes.

-Intended to replace the MiG-31 by 2030, the MiG-41 remains in the research phase, with little evidence of tangible progress.

 

-Technical challenges like extreme heat, friction, and fuel demands make the project highly speculative.

-The ongoing war in Ukraine has diverted funding and resources, making it unlikely that this aircraft will materialize anytime soon. The MiG-41, for now, remains more concept than reality.

MiG-41: Russia's Supersonic Dream Fighter That May Never Fly

Is there a Russian fighter that can reach speeds of MACH 4 to MACH 5? That’s what Russia wants for its sixth-generation MiG-41 fighter.

This proposed warplane checks the boxes on a wish list of 21st Century attributes – utmost stealthiness, ultra-high speed, a ramjet engine, the ability to fire and shoot down hypersonic weapons, lasers, and flying to near-space altitudes to destroy satellites.

But, alas, it will likely never fly. 

MiG-41: Replacing the MiG-31? 

The MiG-41 is expected to take the place of the speedy and capable MiG-31 Foxhound by 2030.

The first flight of the MiG-41 will be in 2025 if designers and engineers from Mikoyan OKB have their way. The MiG-41 project is codenamed the PAK DP or “Prospective Air Complex for Long-range Interception.” 

What Acquisition Stage Is the MiG-41 In?

This proposed mega high-speed interceptor would easily enable air superiority over other fighters if its specifications can be believed. But this program is still in experimental/ research and development mode. It is a future technology demonstrator at best. 

Little public commentary has been offered by the manufacturer. In 2018, Mikoyan Director-General Ilya Tarasenko said the MiG-41 was entering the “experimental design stage.” So far, the MiG-41 is more vaporware than reality.

 

This Much Speed Has Its Drawbacks 

At such a high speed, the airframe and canopy would require specialized designs to achieve. It would need to withstand amazing levels of heat using specialized materials when flying above MACH 4 at such a high altitude. If it could approach the performance of the SR-71 Blackbird, it would need ample maintenance to keep it in the air. At speeds between MACH 4 and MACH 5, the fighter would need specialized weapons, likely hypersonic missiles, that can be air-launched from the MiG-41. It is not clear if these new models would be air-to-air or air-to-surface munitions.

Difficult Design Choices

The MiG-41 could take after the American SR-72 Darkstar “Son of Blackbird” the next-generation ultra-high speed and high-altitude spy plane developed by Lockheed Martin. Or it could be built on a MiG-31 platform. But completely replacing the MiG-31 by the end of the decade is likely a bridge too far.

Don’t Believe the Hype 

It is difficult to foresee a scenario in which the MiG-41 emerges from just hype and propaganda in the near future. Russia already has its hands full with the Su-57, of which few have been built and deployed. The Su-75 is looking for an international partner or buyer to fund its future development. The Russian aerospace industrial base is just stretched too thin to give the MiG-41 the kind of attention that it needs to make it from concept to prototype to serial production. The program is assuming a level of technological advancement that does not exist.

Fuel Requirements Would Hurt Range    

At such high speeds, the MiG-41 would need to store significant amounts of fuel. This would require aerial refueling and limiting the range of the fighter. The heat from the exhaust could also increase its radar signature, keeping it from being as stealthy as Russia has claimed.

Where Will Russia Find the Money?

Monetary resources are in short supply these days with the war in Ukraine taking priority over whiz-bang projects like the MiG-41. In peacetime, one could foresee an environment in which the Russian air force would throw rubles at the MiG-41 concept to bring it to prototype status. Even though Russian military brass has claimed the program is not “mythical,” that is actually a word that best describes the status of this aspirational project to date.  

The MiG-41 would have to answer numerous challenges with heat, friction, radar signature, weapons development, and dependence on technology that does not yet exist. Score this one as a pipe dream for Russian aviation. The only thing it has going for it at this point is an artist's rendering.

Expert Biography

Dr. Brent M. Eastwood is the author of Humans, Machines, and Data: Future Trends in Warfare. He is an Emerging Threats expert and former U.S. Army Infantry officer. You can follow him on Twitter @BMEastwood. He holds a Ph.D. in Political Science and Foreign Policy/ International Relations.

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