The MAI-890 design originated and was developed by the Experimental Aircraft design section, known as OSKBES, of the School of Aeronautics at the MAI. From about 1990 the MAI design bureau became part of the Aviatika joint-stock company to facilitate aircraft production, so that for much of the 1990s the 890 was an Aviatika product. In 1998 MAI acquired the production rights from Aviatika and marketed it as the Aviatika-MAI-890. The starting point was the open cockpit, short span
Junior which appeared in 1987 and developed into the full-span, enclosed seat prototype MAI-89 in 1989. The production prototype, designated MAI-890, followed the next year and production began in 1991. Since then two seat and agricultural versions have been produced. The MAI-890 has a structure of mixed aluminium, titanium and steel alloys and is
fabric covered. It is an unequal span biplane with a straight lower wing of constant
chord and some
dihedral, which carries full span
ailerons. The upper wing has greater span, some
sweep but no dihedral, with constant chord over much of its span but with taper on the outer panels. It is a
single bay biplane with one, slender
interplane strut on each side assisted by
flying wires; at its centre, the upper wing is fixed to the underwing engine mounting. Enclosed single or
side-by-side seating is positioned ahead of the lower wing
leading edge. A slender boom from the bottom of the
fuselage pod carries the
empennage; all tail surfaces are straight edged and strongly tapered and have generous control areas, with ground-adjustable
trim tabs on the
elevators. All current MAI-890 are powered by
Rotax engines mounted in pusher configuration, the type depending on the aircraft variant and option. It has a short-legged, fixed
tricycle undercarriage with
cantilever main legs attached the boom behind the cabin. ==Operational history==