The first prototype of the plane, with a factory designation
KhAI-5 (ХАІ-5), flew in June
1936. Despite a lower performance, the aircraft won a contest against another reconnaissance plane design, the
Kochyerigin R-9, and was accepted for a production with the military designation
R-10 ('R' indicated
razvyedchik meaning reconnaissance in Russian). It was a modern design for the time. 493 R-10s were manufactured in the
Kharkiv and
Saratov aviation plants by early 1940. The first series showed some teething problems, which resulted in Iosif Nyeman being arrested by the
NKVD on December 11, 1938 under the accusation of
sabotage and espionage, a common accusation at the time. In
1938 a variant, the
KhAI-5bis was tested with an M-25E engine, achieving a speed of . In 1938, the KhAI-52 ground
attack aircraft, based on the R-10, was also developed. It was powered by a
Shvetsov M-63 radial engine and armed with seven
machine guns and bombs. A production run of an experimental series of 10 aircraft was prepared, but it was cancelled with Nyeman's arrest. Some production R-10s were fitted with more powerful
Tumansky M-88,
Shvetsov M-62 and M-63 engines. Over 60 aircraft, withdrawn from the Air Force, were used from 1940 as mail carriers by
Aeroflot, under the designation
PS-5 (Russian: ПС-5), with 3 passenger seats. ==Combat use==