Anatoly Kvochur | |
Birth Date: | 16 April 1952 |
Birth Place: | Mazurovka, Chernivtsi Raion, Vinnytsia Oblast, Ukrainian SSR, USSR |
Death Place: | Zhukovsky, Moscow Oblast, Russia |
Rank: | Air Force Colonel |
Awards: | Hero of the Russian Federation (1992) |
Birth Name: | Anatoly Nikolayevich Kvochur |
Native Name Lang: | ru |
Anatoly Nikolayevich Kvochur (Russian: Анатолий Николаевич Квочур; 16 April 1952 – 15 April 2024) was a Soviet and Russian test pilot. He was awarded the awards Honoured Test Pilot of the USSR (1990) and Hero of the Russian Federation (1992).
Anatoly Kvochur was born on 16 April 1952, in the village of Mazurovka, Mohyliv-Podilskyi in the Vinnytsia Oblast of Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic.[1]
Kvochur studied at the V. M. Komarov Higher Military Flying School at Yeysk, graduating in 1973. He began service as a pilot in the Group of Soviet Forces in Germany. He served for two years before he was discharged from the Soviet Armed Forces in 1977 with a recommendation for admittance to the Fedotov Test Pilot School. He graduated from the school in 1978. From 1978 to 1981 he worked as a test pilot at Komsomolsk-on-Amur, testing Su-17 aircraft and its modifications. He also studied further at the Moscow Aviation Institute, from whence he graduated in 1981.[2] [3]
Kvochur was transferred to the Mikoyan Design Bureau where he participated in the testing of more than 80 types of aircraft, including MiG-21, MiG-23, MiG-27, MiG-29, MiG-31, as well as air-to-air and air-to-surface missiles.[1] He later appeared in numerous international air shows, showcasing Russian aircraft.
In 1995 Kvochur participated in a very long range flight demonstration of Su-27PD and Su-27PU Flankers featuring an inflight refueling probe. He led an aerobatic team, known as the Test Pilots Team (Lyotchiki-Ispyttahteli), which also included the pilots Vladimir Loginovsky and Alexander Garnaev.[4] Kvochur died on 15 April 2024, one day before his 72nd birthday.[5] He was buried at the Federal Military Memorial Cemetery on 17 April 2024.[6]
Kvochur was involved in an air show accident on 8 June 1989 at the Paris Air Show. He was flying a single-seater Mikoyan MiG-29 Fulcrum 'Blue 303', the latest fighter aircraft of the Soviet Union at the time. While executing a low-speed, high-angle attack portion of his routine,[7] a bird was sucked into the turbofan of his right engine (a bird strike), causing the engine to burst into flames. Kvochur immediately turned the remaining engine to full afterburner. However his speed, at 180km/h, was too slow to maintain stability on one engine. Despite his efforts, the stricken aircraft went into a steep dive. Kvochur managed to steer the MiG away from the crowd and eject 2.5 seconds before impact. He landed 30m (100feet) away from the fireball of the crashed plane.[8] The incident was caught on video and is featured on the reality television series World's Most Amazing Videos[9] and in the film World War III where the footage is used as part of the fictional alternate universe World War III where Cold War tensions in 1989 lead to a war over East Germany in 1990 and the footage of Kvochur escaping his plane was to represent a Soviet pilot who was shot down during the war.
The aircraft Kvochur was in, had a Zvezda K-36D ejection seat at that time.[10] The same ejection seat also helped save the lives of the pilots of two MiG-29s that collided mid-air at the Royal International Air Tattoo four years later, on 24 July 1993,[11] and the pilot and navigator of a Sukhoi Su-30 that crashed from a tail-strike at the Paris Air Show on 12 June 1999 (which was also captured on video).[12]
In 1988 Kvochur joined the lineup of performers at the Farnborough Air Show. While performing in his MIG-29 Fulcurm he began a vertical climb to perform another routine stall maneuver. Instead of performing the intended stunt, Kvochur accidentally performed the first Stunt that would later be named after him, the Kvochur bell.