Arkady Shvetsov
Soviet aircraft engine designer (1892–1953)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Arkady Dmitrievich Shvetsov (Russian: Аркадий Дмитриевич Швецов) (January 1892, Nizhniye Sergi, today's Sverdlovsk Oblast - 19 March 1953, Moscow) was a Soviet aircraft engine designer whose OKB was founded in Perm, USSR, in 1934, to produce the Wright Cyclone-derived Shvetsov M-25 engine. Under Shvetsov, his OKB became the primary provider of radial piston engines for Soviet aircraft industry (Mikulin's and Klimov's OKB were assigned to creation of in-line engines). After his death in 1953, the OKB was taken over by Pavel Soloviev.[1] Four Stalin Prizes (1942, 1943, 1946, 1948). Hero of Socialist Labour (1942).
BornJanuary 1892
Nizhniye Sergi, Sverdlovsk Oblast
Died19 March 1953 (aged 61)
Moscow
OccupationAircraft engine designer
KnownforProducer of Shvetsov M-25 engine
Arkady Dmitrievich Shvetsov | |
|---|---|
| Born | January 1892 Nizhniye Sergi, Sverdlovsk Oblast |
| Died | 19 March 1953 (aged 61) Moscow |
| Occupation | Aircraft engine designer |
| Known for | Producer of Shvetsov M-25 engine |
| Awards | Hero of Socialist Labour |