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GRAVITY-DEFYING WORKHORSE
While the Mriya continues to shift huge quantities of cargo, its incomplete, bigger “twin”, is still eagerly awaited by An-225 fans, keen to see its completed form since construction started in 1989.
When CNN visited the warehouse storing the airplane pieces near Kiev, it described seeing the shells of a “beast of a thing”.
The Antonov An-225’s wings would span 88.4metres, once finally attached.
And the massive fuselage, if ever completed, would stretch 276 feet (84 metres), nine metres longer than the iconic Airbus A380 superjumbo double-decker passenger jet.
Construction of the second An-225 began two years before the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991. And work on the aircraft ground to a halt in 1994.
CNN explains that the end of Soviet funding for the megaplane project meant that Antonov was left “in limbo”.
Also, relations between Ukraine and Russia collapsed following the annexation of Crimea in 2014 – Antonov had been importing more than 60 per cent of its plane parts from Russia.
China told Antonov it wanted to get involved in restarting production of the massive airborne workhorse, with the aim of completing the An-225 by this year.
However, this plan hasn’t come to fruition, because it proved too difficult to take the plane parts to China.
Aviation Tribune adds that, when eventually fully built, the An-225 will contribute much to the air cargo sector, because it will be able to transport huge loads and reduce the need for multiple trips by its much smaller counterparts.
Antonov’s An-225 hopeful programme director told CNN last year: “When there is a need to solve such a problem [transporting heavy payloads] there will be a demand for the completion of the second aircraft and the investors will appear.”