PA Pivdenmash
Native name | Южмаш |
---|---|
Romanized name | Yuzhmash |
Company type | State-owned enterprise |
Genre | Defense industry Space industry Aerospace industry |
Founded | July 21, 1944Dnipropetrovsk, USSR | in
Headquarters | 1, Kryvorizhska street, , |
Products | Launch vehicles, ballistic missiles, rocket engines, spacecrafts, landing gears, tractors, trolleybuses, castings, forgings |
Parent | State Space Agency of Ukraine |
Website | yuzhmash.com |
The Production Association Yuzhny Machine-Building Plant named after A.M. Makarov, PA Pivdenmash or PA Yuzhmash (Ukrainian: Виробниче Об'єднання Південний Машинобудівний Завод імені А.М. Макарова; Russian: Производственное Объединение Южный Машиностроительный Завод имени А.М. Макарова; literally: Production Union Southern Machine-Building Plant named after A.M. Makarov) is a Ukrainian state-owned aerospace manufacturer. It produces spacecraft, launch vehicles (rockets), liquid-propellant rockets, landing gears, castings, forgings, tractors, tools, and industrial products. The company is headquartered in Dnipro, and reports to the State Space Agency of Ukraine. It works with international aerospace partners in 23 countries.
History
Yuzhmash operated initially as "plant 586" in the Soviet Union. In 1954 Russian aviation engineer Mikhail Yangel established the autonomous design bureau designated OKB-586, from the former chief designer's division of plant 586. Yangel had previously headed OKB-1 (today RKK Energiya) and was primarily a supporter of liquid fuel technology – unlike Sergei Korolev at OKB-1, who was a supporter of missiles using cryogenic fuels. To pursue development of ballistic missiles using storable liquid fuels, Mikhail Yangel had received authorization to convert the chief designer's division of the plant into an autonomous design bureau. Following this, OKB-586 was designated Southern Design Bureau (better known as Pivdenne) and plant 586 was renamed Southern Machine-Building Plant in 1966, with a focus on the design and production of ballistic missiles. The plant was later renamed Southern Machine-Building Production Union, or Yuzhmash.
Missiles produced at Yuzhmash included the first nuclear armed Soviet rocket R-5M (SS-3 'Shyster'), the R-12 Dvina (SS-4 'Sandal'), the R-14 Chusovaya (SS-5 'Skean'), the first widely deployed Soviet ICBM R-16 (SS-7 'Saddler'), the R-36 (SS-9 'Scarp'), the MR-UR-100 Sotka (SS-17 'Spanker'), and the R-36M (SS-18 'Satan'). During the Soviet era, the plant was capable of producing of up to 120 ICBMs a year. In the late 1980s, Yuzhmash was selected to be the main production facility of the RT-2PM2 Topol-M ICBM (SS-27 "Sickle B").
After the beginning of perestroika, demand for military production declined significantly, and the Yuzhmash product line was expanded to include non-military uses such as civilian machinery.
One line of products added after 1992 are trolleybuses. Models include the articulated YuMZ T1 (1992–2008), its non-articulated brother YuMZ T2 (1993–2008) and more modern YuMZ E-186 (2005–2006) which features a low floor cabin.
Leonid Kuchma, long-time chief manager (1986–1992) of the company, became the Prime Minister in 1992, and later President of Ukraine in 1994.
In addition to production facilities in Dnipro, Pivdenne Production Association includes the Pavlohrad Mechanical Plant, which specializes in producing solid-fuel missiles. Pivdenmash's importance was further bolstered by its links to Ukraine's former President Leonid Kuchma, who worked at Pivdenmash between 1975 and 1992. He was the plant's general manager from 1986 to 1991.[citation needed]
In February 2015, following a year of strained relations, Russia announced that it would sever its "joint program with Ukraine to launch Dnepr rockets and [was] no longer interested in buying Ukrainian Zenit boosters, deepening problems for [Ukraine's] space program and its struggling Yuzhmash factory."[1]
With the loss of Russian business some thought that the only hope for the company was increased international business which seemed unlikely in the time frame available.[2] Bankruptcy seemed certain as of February 2015, but was averted.[2]
Today
On August 14, 2017, the Institute of International Strategic Studies issued a report presenting evidence that "North Korea has acquired a high-performance liquid-propellant engine from illicit networks in Russia and Ukraine", likely produced by Yuzhmash facilities.[3] Both the company[4] and the Ukrainian government[5] denied the allegation.
An Antares rocket using a Yuzhmash core was launched from Wallops Island in October 2016 to deliver supplies to the ISS.[6] A Zenit rocket was launched in December 2017, after a two-year hiatus, to deliver AngoSat 1.[7]
In March February 2018 Yuzhmash announced plans to develop a testing platform for Hyperloop that was scheduled for completion in 2019 in Dnipro.[8] In September 2019 the (new) Minister of Infrastructure of Ukraine, Vladyslav Krykliy, cancelled this (according to him "absurd") project.[9]
Structure
- Factory of missile and aviation aggregates (created in 2010 through organization)
- Pavlohrad Mechanical Factory (located in Pavlohrad)
- Dnipro Tractor Factory
- Factory of Technological Equipment
- Production Complex "Metalurhiya"
- Production Complex "Yuzhmashenergo"
- Construction and Installation Complex
- Sports Complex Meteor
- Social and domestic administration
- Sanatoriums "Dubrava" (Bila Tserkva) and "Druzhba" (Alushta), Hotel Pivdennyi, Mashynobudivnykiv Palace of Culture
- Airline Yuzhmashavia
Military and space industry
Yuzhmash is known for its military and space industry products, and earned the city of Dnipro the nickname of "Rocket City".
Missiles
The company had been the key missile producer for Soviet ICBM and space exploration programs. Historic and Yuzhmash launch systems included:
- the R-5M – the Soviet Union's first nuclear armed missile
- the R-12 Dvina theatre ballistic missile
- the R-14 Chusovaya theatre ballistic missile
- the R-16 – the first widely deployed ICBM of the Soviet Union
- the R-36 (8K67) ICBM
- the RT-20, the first mobile ICBM (not deployed)
- the R-36orb, the first ICBM with orbital warhead (not deployed)
- the R-36M ICBM family (converted to Dnepr rocket)
- the MR-UR-100 ICBM family
- the 15A11 missile for Perimetr system
- the RT-23 Molodets ICBM family
- the Grom (missile system) mobile short-range ballistic missile system
Space Launch Vehicles
- Kosmos (rocket family)
- Dnepr
- Tsyklon (based on R-36/8K67)
- Zenit
- Boosters for Energia (based on Zenit first stage)
Rocket engines
Automatic nuclear-control system
Dead Hand (nuclear war) -A similar system existed in the US known as the Emergency Rocket Communications System (ERCS)
Vehicles manufacturing
Created in 1944 as Dnipropetrovsk Tractor Factory, it was later expanded.
Trolleybuses
- YuMZ-T1 (1992–2008)
- YuMZ-T2 (1993–2008)
- YuMZ-T2.09 (1998–2007)
- YuMZ E186 (2005–2006)
Tractors
- YuMZ-2 (1954–1958)
- YuMZ-5 (1957–1962)
- YuMZ-6 (1971–2001)
- YuMZ 8040.2
- YuMZ 8244.2
- YuMZ 8080
See also
- Pivdenne Design Bureau – a major missile designer closely co-operating with Pivdenmash
- National Space Agency of Ukraine
References
- ^ Messier, Doug (6 February 2015). "Russia Severing Ties With Ukraine on Dnepr, Zenit Launch Programs". Parabolic Arc. Retrieved 8 February 2015.
- ^ a b Doug Messier (February 10, 2015). "Ukraine Space Industry on Verge of Collapse". Parabolic Arc. Retrieved February 14, 2015.
- ^ Elleman, Michael. "The secret to North Korea's ICBM success". iiss.org. International Institute for Strategic Studies. Retrieved 14 August 2017.
- ^ "The refutation of publication of The New York Times". yuzhmash.com. PA Yuzhny Machine-Building Plant named after A. Makarov. Retrieved 14 August 2017.
- ^ "Oleksandr Turchynov: Ukrainian defense-industrial complex did not supply weapons and military technology to North Korea". National Security and Defense Council of Ukraine. Retrieved 14 August 2017.
- ^ Henry, Caleb. "Orbital ATK's Antares Returns to Flight Using RD-181 Engines". satellitetoday.com. Via Satellite. Retrieved 27 January 2018.
- ^ Zak, Anatoly. "Zenit delivers Angosat-1, but the spacecraft breaks contact with ground control". Russian Space Web. Retrieved 28 December 2017.
- ^ Xuequan, Mu. "Ukraine to launch testing platform for Hyperloop: minister". Xinhua. Xinhua. Retrieved 19 March 2018.
- ^ "There will be no hyper-hole in Ukraine - Krykliy". Ukrainska Pravda (in Ukrainian). Retrieved September 20, 2019.
External links
- Yuzhmash
- Companies based in Dnipro
- 1944 establishments in Ukraine
- Ukrainian brands
- Manufacturing companies of the Soviet Union
- Defence companies of the Soviet Union
- Trolleybus manufacturers
- Aircraft component manufacturers
- Bus manufacturers of Ukraine
- Tractor manufacturers of Ukraine
- Ukrainian space institutions
- Aerospace companies of Ukraine
- State Space Agency of Ukraine
- Electric vehicle manufacturers of Ukraine