Sukhoi Su-27 Flanker — History, Specs & Stories

Sukhoi Su-27 Flanker heavy air-superiority fighter in flight
Aircraft MuseumAir-Superiority FighterSu-27

Sukhoi Su-27
“Flanker”

The Soviet answer to the F-15 — a big, long-legged air-superiority fighter so agile it could stop in mid-air. Its “Cobra” stunned the West at Paris in 1989, and its descendants still anchor Russian and Chinese air power today.

Mach 2.35Top speed at altitude
~680+Baseline Su-27s built
1977–nowFirst flight to frontline service
~110°Angle of attack in the Cobra
Photo: Vitaly V. Kuzmin · CC BY-SA 4.0
RoleHeavy air-superiority fighterEraCold War – presentMotor2 × Saturn/Lyulka AL-31FOriginUSSR · SukhoiStatusFrontline (Russia/China)Can a civilian fly the Su-27?
A História

The fighter that stopped in mid-air

The Su-27 was born from the Soviet PFI program of the early 1970s — the USSR’s direct answer to the American “FX” that produced the F-15 Eagle. As costs grew, PFI split into two aircraft: a heavy long-range fighter that became the Su-27, and a lighter one that became the MiG-29. The Flanker was the heavy half — built to sweep and hold airspace across the vast Soviet frontier.

The first prototype, the T-10-1, flew on 20 May 1977, but flight testing exposed serious aerodynamic and structural flaws, and a prototype was lost in a fatal crash in 1978. Rather than patch it, Sukhoi effectively started over: the heavily redesigned T-10S flew in 1981 with the definitive blended airframe, canted twin tails and squared wingtips. The type entered service in 1985.

At the 1989 Paris Air Show, test pilot Viktor Pugachev reared the jet nose-up past vertical, hung it tail-low at roughly 110° angle of attack, then flew away level. “Pugachev’s Cobra” rebranded the Flanker overnight from a Cold War silhouette into the most agile heavy fighter on Earth — and seeded one of the largest fighter families in history: the Su-30, Su-33, Su-34, Su-35 and the Su-57.

Four decades on, that airframe — through its many descendants — still anchors Russian air power and, via China’s J-11 series, a large share of Chinese fighter strength.Russian DNA, global reach — why the Flanker still matters
01The Su-27’s origin: how the Soviet answer to the F-15 nearly failed, then started over

The Su-27 exists because of the F-15. When the U.S. launched its “FX” heavy-fighter program, the USSR responded with PFI, later split into the heavy Su-27 and the light MiG-29 — a high/low mix mirroring the American F-15/F-16 pairing. But the first T-10 prototype was aerodynamically flawed and cost a test pilot his life in 1978.

Sukhoi made a bold call: instead of refining the T-10, they rebuilt it almost wholesale into the T-10S (1981), with a new wing, outward-canted twin tails and a refined blended lifting body. That gamble produced one of the finest airframes of its era — and the template for a dynasty of Flanker derivatives that Russia and China still build today.


Design & Engineering

What makes the Su-27 special

01

A wing that is the whole airplane

The Su-27’s fuselage and wing blend into a single lifting body, and large leading-edge root extensions (LERX) shed powerful vortices at high angle of attack. The result is extreme agility — the Cobra is a byproduct — plus enormous internal volume for a very large fuel load, giving intercontinental-class range without external tanks.

02

Twin AL-31F turbofans

Two widely-spaced Saturn/Lyulka AL-31F afterburning turbofans (~122 kN each in reheat) give a thrust-to-weight ratio near or above 1:1 at combat weight, plus redundancy and survivability. The wide spacing also keeps the intakes in clean air at high alpha — part of why the Flanker stays controllable where other fighters depart.

03

IRST, helmet sight and the R-73

A nose-offset infrared search-and-track sensor lets the Flanker hunt passively without radar emissions, while a helmet-mounted sight slaves the highly agile R-73 (AA-11 Archer) short-range missile to the pilot’s line of sight for off-boresight shots. The medium-range R-27 (AA-10 Alamo) handles beyond-visual-range work.

02The Su-27’s Cobra: what ~110° angle of attack actually proves

In Pugachev’s Cobra the Su-27 pitches nose-up past vertical to roughly 110–120° angle of attack — momentarily flying tail-first, nose to the sky — then drops back to level flight without losing control or much altitude. It has no direct combat use anyone can reliably name, but it screams control authority and low-speed stability: proof the Soviets had built a genuinely world-class dogfighter. The maneuver became the Flanker’s calling card overnight.

03The Su-27’s eyes without emissions: hunting with IRST

Radar makes a fighter visible the moment it switches on. The Su-27’s infrared search-and-track sensor sidesteps that: it detects the heat of a target and cues a shot without the Flanker ever radiating. Paired with a helmet-mounted sight that lets the pilot cue the off-boresight R-73 wherever he looks, the Su-27 could fight passively and lethally — a combination the early F-15 lacked, and one that made the Flanker dangerous well inside visual range.


Technical Data

Full specifications

Airframe & Performance

Equipe
1 (two-seat trainers exist)
Comprimento
~21.9 m
Envergadura
~14.7 m
Altura
~5.9 m
Peso vazio
~16,300 kg
Max takeoff weight
~30,000 kg
Max speed
Mach 2.35 · ~2,500 km/h
Teto de serviço
~18,500 m
Raio de combate
~1,300–1,340 km

Propulsion & Systems

Motor
2 × Saturn/Lyulka AL-31F
Thrust
~122 kN (~12,500 kgf) each, reheat
Cannon
1 × 30 mm GSh-30-1 (150 rds)
Missiles
R-27 (AA-10) + R-73 (AA-11); up to 10 hardpoints
First flight
20 May 1977 (T-10-1)
Built
~680+ baseline (some counts ~800)
Unit cost
~US$30 million (approx.)
Cost per flight hour
No reliable public figure
04The Su-27’s numbers: why the specs come with asterisks

Firm figures for the Su-27 are slippery. Sources give maximum takeoff weight anywhere from ~28 to ~30 tonnes depending on how “normal” versus “maximum” loadout is counted; combat radius is variously quoted from ~1,300 to ~1,500 km depending on altitude and profile; and unit cost (~US$30 million) is an approximation with no single authoritative figure, varying by variant, year and export deal. Production totals depend on whether you count only baseline Su-27s (~680+) or fold in two-seat and export subvariants (~800). Treat the round numbers here as good working figures, not settled fact.


Timeline

The Su-27 through the decades

Early 1970s

PFI requirement

The Soviet PFI program is issued as an answer to the U.S. F-15; it splits into the heavy TPFI (Su-27) and light LPFI (MiG-29).

20 May 1977

First flight

The T-10-1 prototype flies with test pilot Vladimir Ilyushin at the controls.

1978

Fatal crash, rethink

A prototype is lost and design shortfalls force Sukhoi to redesign the aircraft almost wholesale.

1981

The definitive T-10S

The redesigned T-10S flies, introducing the blended body, canted twin tails and squared wingtips of the production Flanker.

1984–85

Enters service

The Su-27 (Flanker-B) enters Soviet service as a long-range heavy air-superiority fighter.

13 Sept 1987

The Barents Sea bump

A Soviet Su-27 collides with a Norwegian P-3B Orion over the Barents Sea; both aircraft land safely.

1989

Pugachev’s Cobra

Viktor Pugachev debuts the Cobra maneuver at the Paris Air Show, stunning Western observers.

1999–2000

Flanker vs Fulcrum

Ethiopian Su-27s defeat Eritrean MiG-29s — the only confirmed Su-27-vs-MiG-29 duel in history.

2022–

Fighting itself

The Su-27 flies on both sides of the Russo-Ukrainian War; Flankers are lost by both air forces.


Stories & Eyewitnesses

From the flight line: twelve Flanker stories

Airshow

The Cobra that shocked the West

Paris, 1989: a fighter that stopped in mid-air.

Read the full story
Viktor Pugachev hauled his Su-27 nose-up past vertical, hung tail-low at roughly 110° angle of attack, then flew away level. The maneuver had no combat use anyone could name, but it screamed control authority and low-speed stability — proof the Soviets had built a genuinely world-class dogfighter. The Cobra became the Flanker’s calling card overnight.
Redesign

Start over: T-10 to T-10S

How failure built a legend.

Read the full story
The original T-10 flew in 1977 but was aerodynamically flawed and cost a pilot his life. Instead of patching it, Sukhoi rebuilt the jet almost wholesale into the T-10S (1981): new wing, canted twin tails, refined blended body. The gamble produced one of the finest airframes of the era — and the basis for an entire fighter dynasty.
Combat

Flanker vs Fulcrum over Africa

The only time Russia’s two great fighters fought each other.

Read the full story
In 1999–2000 Ethiopian Su-27s met Eritrean MiG-29s in the skies over the Horn of Africa. The heavier, longer-legged Flanker won decisively — commonly cited as roughly five to seven Fulcrums downed for no Su-27 losses — the only confirmed Su-27-vs-MiG-29 duel in history. Kill totals and pilot identities remain disputed.
Incident

The Barents Sea bump

A Flanker sliced a NATO patrol plane’s propeller — with its tail.

Read the full story
On 13 September 1987, Soviet pilot Vasiliy Tsymbal shadowed a Norwegian P-3B Orion so aggressively that his fin struck the Orion’s No. 4 propeller. Both aircraft landed safely; the Su-27 later carried a P-3 “kill” silhouette. A vivid snapshot of Cold War intercept brinkmanship.
Family

The biggest fighter dynasty

One airframe, an entire air force.

Read the full story
The Su-27 spawned the Su-30, carrier-borne Su-33, strike-optimized Su-34, “Super Flanker” Su-35 and even seeded the fifth-generation Su-57. Thousands of Flanker-family jets have been built, making it one of the most prolific and influential fighter lineages ever designed.
Copy

China’s Flanker: the J-11 story

A licence that outgrew its contract.

Read the full story
China imported Su-27SK/UBK fighters, then license-built the type as the J-11. When Beijing began fielding indigenous, unlicensed derivatives with home-grown avionics and engines, Moscow cried foul. Today Flanker-derived jets form a backbone of Chinese air power — Russian DNA, Chinese production. Exact J-11-versus-Su-27 counts are contested.
War

The jet that fights itself

Ukraine 2022: Su-27 vs Su-27.

Read the full story
When Russia invaded, both air forces flew the same fighter. Ukrainian Flankers scrambled against Russian Flanker-family jets, and Su-27s were lost on both sides — an eerie civil-war-within-a-type playing out over Kyiv and the Black Sea. Wartime loss counts are contested and should be read as claims.
Design

A wing that is the whole airplane

Why the Flanker turns like nothing its size.

Read the full story
The Su-27’s fuselage and wing blend into one giant lifting body, with vortex-shedding root extensions that keep it flying at absurd angles of attack. The same shape swallows a huge internal fuel load — agility and range built into one structure, without a drop tank in sight.
Endurance

The long-range hunter

Built to own airspace no one else could reach.

Read the full story
Where light fighters needed drop tanks, the Su-27 carried its war deep inside. Its combat radius — well over 1,000 km — let it patrol the vast Soviet frontier and escort bombers far out to sea. It was the heavy half of the high/low fighter mix, designed to hold airspace, not just defend a point.
Tech

Eyes without emissions

The Flanker can hunt in silence.

Read the full story
An infrared search-and-track sensor lets the Su-27 detect and engage targets without switching on its radar, while a helmet-mounted sight cues its off-boresight R-73 missile wherever the pilot looks. Passive, lethal, and well ahead of its time when the Flanker entered service.
Aerobatics

The Russian Knights

Flankers as national showpiece.

Read the full story
Russia’s premier display team flies Su-27s in full combat trim, throwing 30-tonne fighters through close-formation loops and rolls. The jet’s docile-yet-explosive handling makes it a favorite of the world’s airshow circuit decades after it entered service.
Legacy

Still frontline at 40+

A Cold War design that never left.

Read the full story
Conceived to counter the F-15, the Su-27 and its offspring still fly frontline missions in the 2020s across Russia, China, Ukraine and a dozen more air forces — one of the longest-serving, most-copied air-superiority fighters in history.

Gallery

The Flanker in pictures

A Sukhoi Su-27 Flanker in flight  the heavy air-superiority fighter that answered the F-15.
A Sukhoi Su-27 Flanker in flight — the heavy air-superiority fighter that answered the F-15.Photo: Vitaly V. Kuzmin · CC BY-SA 4.0
A Russian Air Force Su-27P banking in flight over the countryside.
A Russian Air Force Su-27P banking in flight over the countryside.Photo: Alex Beltyukov – RuSpotters Team · CC BY-SA 3.0
A Su-27 Flanker performing a single-ship airshow display.
A Su-27 Flanker performing a single-ship airshow display.Photo: SSGT Mitch Fuqua, USAF · Public domain
A Russian Air Force Su-27SM3 armed with air-to-air missiles.
A Russian Air Force Su-27SM3 armed with air-to-air missiles.Photo: Toshi Aoki – JP Spotters · CC BY-SA 3.0
Inside the cockpit of a Sukhoi Su-27 Flanker.
Inside the cockpit of a Sukhoi Su-27 Flanker.Photo: Vitaly V. Kuzmin · CC BY-SA 4.0
Two Russian Su-27 Flanker aircraft in flight during a NATO-area intercept.
Two Russian Su-27 Flanker aircraft in flight during a NATO-area intercept.Photo: Mike Humphreys, U.S. Army · Public domain

Watch

The Su-27 Flanker in motion

A verified video is coming soon. The classic 1989 Paris Air Show clip that shows Pugachev’s Cobra is still being source-checked — channel, view count and embed rights — before we place it here.


Operations

Where the Flanker flies


Combat Record

Flanker vs Fulcrum, and a war against itself

The Su-27’s combat record is thinner than its fame — and unusually contested. Its signature episode is the 1999–2000 Ethiopia–Eritrea War, and its strangest is the Russo-Ukrainian War, where the same fighter flies on both sides. Treat all kill and loss figures below as claims, not settled scores.

~5–7Eritrean MiG-29s claimed downed for no Su-27 loss (1999–2000)
Both sidesSu-27 flown by Russia and Ukraine since 2022
1 of 1Only confirmed Su-27-vs-MiG-29 duel in history

The Ethiopia–Eritrea kill totals and pilot identities are disputed, and wartime Ukrainian and Russian loss counts are contested and shifting. Compare the combat record of every military aircraft. Figures as of July 2026.


Questions & Answers

Everything people ask about the Su-27

Can I fly in a Su-27?
No — not with MiGFlug. MiGFlug does not currently offer a Su-27 flight. However you can fly several genuine military jets today — from the L-39 Albatros to the F-104 Starfighter, MiG-15 and more. See the current lineup at migflug.com/flights-prices/.
Is the Su-27 fast?
Yes — top speed about Mach 2.35 (~2,500 km/h) at altitude, with a service ceiling near 18,500 m.
What is Pugachev’s Cobra?
A maneuver in which the Su-27 pitches nose-up past vertical (~110°+ angle of attack) and back to level flight without stalling — first shown publicly by Viktor Pugachev at Paris in 1989.
Is the Su-27 still in service?
Yes. Baseline Su-27s and their many derivatives remain frontline aircraft in 2026 with Russia, China (as the J-11 series), Ukraine and others.
How does it compare to the F-15?
The Su-27 was the direct Soviet counter to the F-15 Eagle: broadly comparable in speed and reach, generally regarded as more maneuverable at low speed and high angle of attack, and carrying an IRST plus helmet-sight/R-73 combination the early F-15 lacked.
What is the Flanker family?
The lineage spun from the Su-27: the Su-30, carrier-borne Su-33, strike-optimized Su-34, “Super Flanker” Su-35 and the fifth-generation Su-57 — thousands of aircraft in total.
How many Su-27s were built?
Roughly 680+ baseline Su-27s (some counts reach ~800 including two-seat and export subvariants), plus thousands more across the wider Flanker family.
Can a civilian fly the Su-27?
Civilian Su-27 rides have existed historically, but there is no current MiGFlug Su-27 offering. If you want to fly a real fighter jet today, MiGFlug’s current experiences are listed at migflug.com/flights-prices/.

Sources & Further Reading

Every fact, checked