Yak-17
0 sources
Yak-17
Summary
Yak-17 is an aircraft family[1]. Yak-17 draws 195 Wikipedia views per month (aircraft_family category, ranking #587 of 1,568).[2]
Key Facts
- Yak-17's image is recorded as Jak-17UTI.JPG[3].
- Yak-17's instance of is recorded as aircraft family[4].
- Yak-17's operator is recorded as Soviet Air Forces[5].
- Yak-17's operator is recorded as People's Liberation Army Air Force[6].
- Yak-17's operator is recorded as Bulgarian Air Force[7].
- Yak-17's operator is recorded as Burkina Faso military[8].
- Yak-17's operator is recorded as Czechoslovak Air Force[9].
- Yak-17's operator is recorded as Hungarian Air Force[10].
- Yak-17's operator is recorded as Polish Air Force[11].
- Yak-17's operator is recorded as Romanian Air Force[12].
- Yak-17's operator is recorded as Poland[13].
- Yak-17's operator is recorded as Romania[14].
- Yak-17's operator is recorded as People's Republic of China[15].
- Yak-17's based on is recorded as Yakovlev Yak-15[16].
- Yak-17's manufacturer is recorded as Yakovlev[17].
- Yak-17's manufacturer is recorded as Tbilisi Aircraft Manufacturing[18].
- Yak-17's developer is recorded as Yakovlev[19].
- Yak-17's subclass of is recorded as Yakovlev Yak-15[20].
- Yak-17's subclass of is recorded as single-seat fighter[21].
- Yak-17's Commons category is recorded as Yakovlev Yak-17[22].
- Yak-17's powered by is recorded as Junkers Jumo 004[23].
- Yak-17's armament is recorded as Nudelman-Suranov NS-23[24].
- Yak-17's NATO reporting name is recorded as Feather[25].
- Yak-17's NATO reporting name is recorded as Magnet[26].
- Yak-17's first flight is recorded as +1947-06-00T00:00:00Z[27].
Body
Designation and Status
Yak-17's instance of is recorded as aircraft family[4].
Why It Matters
Yak-17 draws 195 Wikipedia views per month (aircraft_family category, ranking #587 of 1,568).[2] Yak-17 has Wikipedia articles in 21 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] Yak-17 is known by 8 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]