[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"$fYPueZjOL8A_jBYElmytY58fPI_wLt60vo6E4-MXjTv4":3},{"slug":4,"manufacturer":5,"model":6,"category":7,"isCurated":8,"imageUrl":9,"attribution":10,"specifications":11,"descriptionEn":20,"seoTitleEn":21,"seoDescriptionEn":22},"yakovlev-yak-9","Yakovlev","Yak-9","Military",false,"https:\u002F\u002Fkmghuekgzyfrnbanbsra.supabase.co\u002Fstorage\u002Fv1\u002Fobject\u002Fpublic\u002Faircraft-images\u002FYakovlev_Yak_9_f49d33ff.webp?","Wikimedia Commons",{"roleText":12,"nationalOrigin":13,"crew":14,"engineCount":14,"firstFlightYear":15,"lengthM":16,"wingspanM":17,"maxSpeedKmh":18,"rangeKm":19},"Fighter","Soviet Union",1,1942,8.6,9.7,690,675,"The 1942 Yakovlev Yak-9 fighter was a single-seat, single-engine monoplane with 9.7-metre wingspan and 8.6-metre fuselage. Achieving 690 km\u002Fh and 675-kilometre range, it became one of World War II's most produced fighters with outstanding performance. The Yak-9 remains iconic in Soviet aviation history.","Yakovlev Yak-9 — Fighter Aircraft","1942 Soviet fighter; 690 km\u002Fh; 675km range; single-seat; legendary wartime design."]