There are two variants of the Il-96. The Il-96-300 was launched in 1985 with introduction into service in 1993. The Il-96M was launched in 1993 with introduction into service in 2000.
Il-96-300 Il-96-300 in 2011 The Il-96-300 is the initial variant and is fitted with
Aviadvigatel (Soloviev) PS-90A turbofans with a thrust rating of 16,000
kgf (157
kN, 35,300
lbf). Development started in the mid-1980s while the first prototype flew on 28 September 1988. Range with 262 passengers and fuel reserves (for holding 75 minutes at an altitude of 450 m) in a two-class configuration is about 11,000 km (5,940 nmi), allowing flights from
Moscow to
US west coast cities, a great improvement over the Ilyushin Il-86.
Il-96-300PU Il-96-300 A highly customized version of the Il-96-300, called the Il-96-300PU (
PU in
Russian stands for
command post), is used as the primary aircraft in the
Russian presidential aircraft fleet. A total of five planes were used by Russian presidents
Boris Yeltsin,
Vladimir Putin, and by
Dmitry Medvedev as VIP planes. The VIP aircraft are operated by a special squadron of the
Rossiya Airlines. The
Cuban leadership uses the IL-96-300.
Il-96-300V There were plans to produce a variant dubbed
Il-96-300V which would include two sets of
airstairs in it.
Il-96M The Il-96M is a stretched variant of the Il-96-300. It features a 10 m (30 ft) fuselage stretch, is 15 tonnes (33,000 lb) heavier, is fitted with Western-style avionics, and is powered by four
Pratt & Whitney PW2337 engines with a thrust rating of 165 kN (37,000 lbf). Range with 312 passengers in a three-class configuration or 92 tonne (203,000 lb) payload is about 10,400 km (5,600 nmi). This turned it into a true and vastly more capable Il-86 successor. Development on the M/T variant stalled when the
US Export–Import Bank suspended talks on financing the engines and avionics, following pressure from
Boeing. The dispute was later settled following an Aeroflot order for ten Boeing 737-400s—placed in April 1997 in a deal worth US$440 million that were granted a tax exemption by the Russian government. Nevertheless, the financing was blocked again when four Boeing 767-300ERs also ordered by Aeroflot were not included in the accorded exemption. The deal was never realised.
Il-96-400T This is the freighter version of the Il-96-400. It is powered by four
Aviadvigatel PS-90A1 engines. Only a handful of Il-96-400T aircraft were built and most of them were in storage until the outbreak of the Ukraine war. Sanctions on Russia by Boeing and Airbus have changed the situation though and in December 2023, Sky Gates who are owned by Red Wings leased an IL-96-400T and started using it to carry cargo to and from Russia. The plane received an overhaul prior to being leased in order to make sure it met air worthiness standards. Russian media suggest a second Il-96-400T is being overhauled in late 2023 and it too will be leased to Sky Gates in early 2024, once the overhaul is complete.
Il-96-400 The Il-96-400 is similar to the Il-96M, but features Russian avionics and engines. It is powered by four
Aviadvigatel PS-90A1 turbofans and can carry up to 436 passengers. Typical two-class configuration will have 386 passengers. Range with 315 passengers in a three-class configuration is about 10,000 km. A special version, dubbed Il-96-400VT, was reported on Friday 19 March 2010 by the Wall Street Journal to bid on the US$40 billion Air Force Tanker Program contract. In February 2013,
Cubana signed a deal for the order of three 350-seater Ilyushin Il-96-400s.
Il-96-400VPU One modified Il-96-400, the Il-96-400VPU is being converted to serve as an
Airborne Command Post by the
Russian Aerospace Forces as part of "Project Zveno-3S" calling for two such aircraft to enter service to replace the current
Il-80-based planes.
Il-96-400M colors In February 2017, it was announced that Russia's United Aircraft Corporation had signed a contract with its subsidiary Ilyushin Aviation Complex for the development of a new version of Ilyushin Il-96-400 wide-body passenger airliner to compete with the
Boeing 777-9 and
Airbus A350-1000. The Il-96-400M is the passenger version of the Il-96-400T cargo aircraft. Its fuselage is 9.65 m longer than the existing Il-96-300 passenger variant. The new interior will fit with overhead compartment, and the planned seating capacity is 390 passengers. In 2017, the
Russian Government injected ₽3.6 billion ($ million) into the Ilyushin Il-96-400M. By January 2020, the first test-flight airframe was in final assembly and the wing and fuselage were joined, to be finished at the end of 2020 before a first flight in 2021, but by April 2021 it was announced that the aircraft will not enter mass production as expected, only two will be produced, because of "lack of interest from the airlines and the worldwide idling of the long-range fleet due to the pandemic". Still, due to sanctions, on 15 August 2022, it was announced that the first flight of the Il-96-400M was planned. On 7 June 2023, the United Aircraft Corporation rolled out Russia's future wide-body passenger airliner. It made its first flight on 1 November 2023, but the engine is still PS-90. Starting in 2025, this model will be included in the national plan to prepare for mass production.
Il-96-400TZ In January 2015, a new tanker variant of the Il-96, designated the Il-96-400TZ (Russian:
ТЗ for
топливозаправщик – fuel replenisher), was proposed, with an initial order for two aircraft placed by the Russian Ministry of Defense. The new tanker would have been able to transfer more than 65 tons (IL-78M 40 tons) of fuel at a distance of up to 3500 km (Il-78M 3000 km). Universal aviation refueling systems ORM-1, proven on existing combat aircraft tankers Il-78/78М, would have been installed on the aircraft. According to Alexei Krivoruchko, Russian Deputy Minister of Defense, factory trials of the Il-96-400TZ are expected to be completed in May, 2020. However this is previously cancelled due to differences between Russian MoD and Ilyushin, and in favor of much proven Il-76MD-90A platform, which is the Il-78M-90A.
Il-96-500T Projected freighter version of Il-96 with an enlarged fuselage to transport oversize cargo.
Il-96-550 Projected
double-deck version of Il-96 for 550–600 passengers. Intended to be powered by
Kuznetsov NK-93 propfan engines, which underwent flight testing in 2007 before the project was cancelled. Development of the Il-96-550 did not proceed further. ==Operators==