"3150.0"^^ . . "1913"^^ . "17.5 m"@en . . "36.8"^^ . "* Various numbers and combinations of guns at different points during the war, including 12.7 mm, 15.3 mm, 25 mm, 37 mm, and 7.62 mm guns, Maxim guns, Lewis guns, Madsen guns, Colt machine guns and Leonid Kurchevsky's experimental recoilless guns among them.\n* Various loads of 50 kg, 100 kg and 656 kg bombs depending on fuel, armament and crew carried. With three crew and two defensive machine guns, a V type Ilya Muromets could carry 500 kg of bombs."@en . "36000.0"^^ . . . "398.78000000000003"^^ . "Igor Sikorskyi"@en . . "1350.0"^^ . "V8 engines"@en . "Sikorsky Ilya Muromets"@en . "ref|Originally measured as 150 PS|group=N"@en . "3,000 m"@en . . "125.0"^^ . "2100.58"^^ . "148.0"^^ . . "85"^^ . "4600.0"^^ . . . . "68.0"^^ . "7.7"^^ . "4 m"@en . "four to eight"@en . . . "The Ilya Muromets () refers to a class of Russian pre-World War I large four-engine commercial airliners and heavy military bombing aircraft used during World War I by the Russian Empire. The aircraft series was named after Ilya Muromets, a hero from Russian mythology. The series was based on the Russky Vityaz or Le Grand, the world's first four-engined aircraft, designed by Igor Sikorsky. The Ilya Muromets aircraft as it appeared in 1913 was a revolutionary design, intended for commercial service with its spacious fuselage incorporating a passenger saloon and washroom on board. During World War I, it became the first four-engine bomber to equip a dedicated strategic bombing unit. This heavy bomber was unrivaled in the early stages of the war, as the Central Powers had no aircraft capable enough to rival it until much later, with the 1916-17 origin Zeppelin-Staaken R.VI, the only example of any of the Imperial German Riesenflugzeug airframe designs to be produced in any quantity during World War I."@en . "1922"^^ . "7.5"^^ . "1750.0600000000002"^^ . . . "* Fuel and oil: 600 kg"@en . . "1260.0"^^ . "1913-12-11"^^ . "Heavy Bomber"@en . "plane"@en . "The Ilya Muromets () refers to a class of Russian pre-World War I large four-engine commercial airliners and heavy military bombing aircraft used during World War I by the Russian Empire. The aircraft series was named after Ilya Muromets, a hero from Russian mythology. The series was based on the Russky Vityaz or Le Grand, the world's first four-engined aircraft, designed by Igor Sikorsky. The Ilya Muromets aircraft as it appeared in 1913 was a revolutionary design, intended for commercial service with its spacious fuselage incorporating a passenger saloon and washroom on board. During World War I, it became the first four-engine bomber to equip a dedicated strategic bombing unit. This heavy bomber was unrivaled in the early stages of the war, as the Central Powers had no aircraft capable "@en . "6930.0"^^ . "12000.0"^^ . "4"^^ . . . . "prop"@en . "9840.0"^^ . . "16.9"^^ . . "Russo-Baltic Wagon Company"@en . . "110.0"^^ . . "110.0"^^ . . .