Before the SR-71 Blackbird ever ripped across the sky, a Soviet aircraft designer was already trying to build something to beat it. His name was Pavel Tsybin, and his creation — the RSR — was meant to streak over the United States at three times the speed of sound, photographing everything below from the edge of space.
Five of them were very nearly finished. Not a single one ever flew.
The Tsybin RSR is one of aviation’s great ghosts: a Mach 3 spy plane, conceived ahead of its American rival, killed at the last moment by politics and the limits of 1950s technology. Almost no images of it survive — which somehow only adds to the mystery.
Designer: Pavel Tsybin, OKB-256
Goal: Mach 3 at roughly 30 km altitude — overfly the USA
Analog flown: NM-1 aerodynamic prototype, first flight 7 April 1959
Built: Five R-020 airframes nearly complete by 1961 (10 more planned)
Fate: Cancelled by Khrushchev — none ever flew
A Spy Plane Before the Blackbird
The project began in 1954 as the RS, an exotic ramjet-powered supersonic bomber. By 1957 it had been reshaped into a pure reconnaissance aircraft — the RSR — designed to do exactly what the Americans would later build the U-2 and SR-71 to do: fly so high and so fast that nothing could touch it, while cameras swept the ground far below.

Radical by Any Standard
Everything about the RSR was built for one thing: straight, high, blisteringly fast flight. The fuselage was almost absurdly slender, with a fineness ratio of 18.6 — long and needle-like. The wing was a razor, just 2.5% thick and swept 58 degrees. The structure mixed aluminium with beryllium to save weight, the engines hung at the wingtips, and the controls were fully powered. It was stressed for a gentle load factor of 2.5 — this was no dogfighter; it was a thoroughbred sprinter.

The video below tells the full story of how close the Soviets came.
The Analog That Flew
To prove the daring layout, Tsybin’s team built the NM-1 — a full-size, low-speed aerodynamic stand-in — which first flew on 7 April 1959. It validated the shape. But the real RSR needed high-performance engines to reach Mach 3, and those engines simply were not ready.
Five Airframes, No Engines, No Future
By April 1961, five R-020 airframes stood virtually complete on the factory floor, waiting only for their powerplants, with ten more planned. Then Nikita Khrushchev pulled the plug. Convinced the future belonged to ballistic missiles and reconnaissance satellites rather than manned spy planes, he cancelled the programme outright. The nearly finished aircraft never flew.
A few years later, the SR-71 became one of the most famous aircraft ever built. The Tsybin RSR became a footnote and a handful of line drawings. It is a quietly haunting kind of story — machines completed in metal, sitting ready, and never given the engines to draw a single breath of flight.
Sources: Wikipedia (Tsybin RSR); testpilot.ru; The National Interest; 19FortyFive; Hush-Kit.




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