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Working under the threat of execution, Petlyakov’s team met the impossible deadline. They stripped the VI-100 of its pressurized cabin, added dive brakes, and modified the fuselage to hold a bomb bay. Stalin was so impressed with the result that he granted Petlyakov his freedom.
: Its handling allowed pilots to be exceptionally accurate, with some famously able to "plant a bomb down a chimney stack". Working under the threat of execution, Petlyakov’s team
The aircraft was a technical marvel for its time, featuring a pressurized cabin and all-metal construction. However, after witnessing the terrifying effectiveness of German "Stuka" dive bombers during the invasion of France in 1940, Stalin personally ordered Petlyakov to scrap the fighter and redesign it as a —and he gave him just 45 days to do it. A Masterpiece Under Pressure : Its handling allowed pilots to be exceptionally
The story of the , famously nicknamed the " Peshka " (Pawn), is one of the most remarkable tales of aviation history, beginning not in a high-tech lab, but inside a Soviet prison. The Prison Design Bureau A Masterpiece Under Pressure The story of the