The Su-22M3 was an export variant of the Su-17 strike aircraft developed by the Soviet Union. Used by different nations around the globe, the Su-22M3 variant employed the airframe of the Su-17M3 and adapted it to use a similar engine to that of the export variants of the MiG-23, in this case, the Tumansky R-29BS-300 engine. The M3 variant was primarily exported to Syria and Hungary, where they served a long and fruitful life. The Hungarian People's Republic acquired 12 single-seater Su-22M3s and three dual-seat trainer Su-22UM3s in 1983 for the Hungarian Air Force. When the Hungarian People's Republic reformed into Hungary after the dissolution of the USSR in 1991, the Hungarian Air Force found itself with 10 single-seater Su-22M3s and two twin-seat trainer Su-22UM3 (as two single-seaters and one trainer had been lost in accidents previously). These aircraft served in reserve backlines until 1997, when they were withdrawn and retired. While the Hungarian Fitters never saw the amount of combat that the Syrian ones did at first, Hungary eventually sold some of their Su-22M3s to Syria sometime in the late '90s, as Syria was looking to replenish some of their Su-22 losses. These Su-22M3s would be upgraded with more KDS-12 flare dispensers in Syrian service.
The Su-22M3 (Italy) was introduced in Update "Alpha Strike" in the Hungarian sub-tree of the Italian tech tree, and is identical to the Syrian Su-22M3 in the Soviet tree. The Su-22M3 uses a Tumansky R-29 engine similar to the MiG-23MF in the same tree, and the airframe is that of the Su-17M3, featuring a new forward fuselage layout modified from a two-seat trainer variant. The Su-22M3 has enhanced payload options for the Fitter family: it can carry up to six all-aspect R-60M missiles for air-to-air combat and up to four Kh-25ML or two Kh-29L for ground striking, along with a large amount of various unguided bombs and rockets for blanket strikes and carpet bombing. Players must take caution when flying this variant of the Fitter, due to the low amount of countermeasures; 12 flares/chaff is often not enough to defend more than one threat at this battle rating, but they still make the Su-22M3 a less vulnerable target to incoming missiles when conserved correctly. All in all, the Su-22M3 provides a nice backbone of support to the Italian tech tree at this battle rating, with its high speed interdiction capabilities filling the gap of performance that the AMX can not achieve.
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Belt | Belt filling | Armor penetration (mm) at a distance: | |||||
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10 m | 100 m | 500 m | 1000 m | 1500 m | 2000 m | ||
HEF-I/AP-T/HEF-I/APHE | 48 | 47 | 40 | 33 | 27 | 22 | |
APHE/AP-T/HEF-I | 48 | 47 | 40 | 33 | 27 | 22 | |
APHE/HEF-I/HEF-I/HEFI-T | 37 | 36 | 31 | 25 | 21 | 17 |
Name | Weight | Slot | ||||||||
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5 × | 570 kg | |||||||||
250 kg | ||||||||||
508.3 kg | ||||||||||
275 kg | ||||||||||
515 kg | ||||||||||
374 kg | ||||||||||
235 kg | ||||||||||
297 kg | ||||||||||
289 kg | ||||||||||
370 kg | ||||||||||
410 kg | ||||||||||
7 × | 216.5 kg | |||||||||
20 × | 376 kg | |||||||||
Drop tank (820 liters.) | 59.4 kg | |||||||||
43.5 kg | ||||||||||
44 kg | ||||||||||
114 kg | ||||||||||
2 × | 87 kg | |||||||||
2 × | 88 kg | |||||||||
94.3 kg | ||||||||||
4 × | 456 kg | |||||||||
3 × | 750 kg | |||||||||
2 × | 1,016.6 kg | |||||||||
3 × | 825 kg | |||||||||
2 × | 1,030 kg | |||||||||
657 kg | ||||||||||
Delta-NG targeting pod | 20 kg |
Flight performance |
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Survivability |
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Weaponry | ||||
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