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The Airbus A321 is a member of the Airbus A320 family of short to medium range, narrow-body, commercial passenger twin engine jet airliners; [b] it carries 185 to 236 passengers.
The aircraft was on a training flight from Tambov to Balashov. Some 15-20 minutes into the flight, while over Sukhotinka, the aircraft was following a road at low altitude when it entered clouds. The aircraft rolled to the left, descended to the ground and crashed. [64] 26 December 1936: Mount Akh-Dag: R-5 СССР-М50 Transcaucasian W/O: 1 /1
Aeroflot-Nord Flight 821 was a scheduled domestic passenger flight operated by Aeroflot-Nord in a service agreement with Aeroflot and as its subsidiary. On 14 September 2008, the aircraft operating the flight crashed on approach to Perm International Airport at 5:10 local time . All 82 passengers and six crew members were killed.
Aeroflot became the first airline in the world with sustained jet aircraft service, when it introduced the Tupolev Tu-104 in 1956. Aeroflot's route network had extended to 295,400 kilometres (183,600 mi) by 1950, and it carried 1,603,700 passengers, 151,070 tonnes (333,050,000 lb) of freight and 30,580 tonnes (67,420,000 lb) of mail that year.
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The Aeroflot fleet, excluding that of subsidiaries, comprises the following aircraft, including 112 Airbus planes and 59 Boeing planes. [2] As a result of International sanctions during the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the company has ordered over 300 Russian-made jets and plans on making the Yakovlev MC-21 its flagship plane, [1] [2] with deliveries expected to start in 2025 or 2026.
Crashed as Flight AI101: 1 1982 Crashed as Flight AI403: Boeing 737-200: 5 2007 2011 Airbus A320: Boeing 747-200B: 9 1971 2004 Boeing 747-400 Boeing 777-200 Boeing 777-200ER: VT-EGC forward fuselage preserved at Thakur Polytechnic, Mumbai [citation needed] Some converted to Cargo use for Air India Cargo. 1 1978 None Crashed as Flight AI855: 1 1985
The 1981 Zheleznogorsk mid-air collision was an accident involving a Yakovlev Yak-40 jet and a Mil Mi-8T helicopter, both operated by the Russian airline Aeroflot, 11 km (6.9 miles) east of Zheleznogorsk-Ilimskiy Airport, Soviet Union, on 18 September 1981. None of the combined 40 passengers and crew on either aircraft survived.