this post was submitted on 08 Dec 2025
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This is the correct answer. When I read the article, they make it seem like a su34, but later on write that it was a su24/or 34. Many Russian pilots have been injured from this specific design defect in the SU 24.
In the video they say that only one of the two pilots were ejected back then in 1975, so at least in those days a Su-24 would not eject both seats with one ejection command. This one did, so it probably was not a Su-24.
The video also mentions that this happened because the other joystick was made shorter than usual. Therefore, it might indeed have been a weird technical defect, but I don't think we have a good reason to assume it was the same as shown on this video, as the result was slightly different.
You might be right. I was pretty sure that the ejection system was changed when they added the new zero/zero Zvezda 36 seats later on. I seem to remember that the Russians tested sequential ejection and the rockets burned the other pilot when done that way, so they switched to simultaneous ejection on both th SU24 and the 34. The 34, as far as I know, does not need the helpers to keep the elevators up keeping it from interfering with the stick and catch the ejection handle. The airframe on a SU34 is based on the SU 27 and had an all new and larger cockpit section installed.
Would you happen to know which Russian bomber planes have more than just one person in the crew?