There's no RTs (Bear D) anymore. The main reason this version existed was this bulbous radome underbelly hiding the Uspekh (Success) radar antenna. That was biggest radome of all Bear family. This aircraft is a targeting source against aircraft carriers since the picture from radar could have been transmit to surf CG/CGNs and SSGNs as well with no limits. Or at least so the story goes, though there wasn't any crypto devise there to defend the signal from ECM. The Bear D was the real flying coffin: of 8 accidents there was just one survivor, the tail gunner WO, and only due to his conscription time in Soviet Army Airborne (Blue Berets) so he knew how to bail out by the "jerk jump", i.e. first employing the chute while stay with the aircfart and wait until the full chute pulls your body off hatch, a crazy deadly method for low drop developed by those fucking berets. All the rest 87 people died. Escaping the tail cockpit was easy enough, and both tail gunner and ELINT operator who had seats there should bailed out until the bird went in inverted flat spin which it has as a habit when just anyone propeller lost feathering ability (which was a habit, too). But the forward cockpit had no ways out at all: any drop shold have been made from the nose gear well, so that fucking gear should has been down firstly, which is the big deal in itself while in inverted spin. And then, if someone was stupid enough to jump down through the well's hatch, he had ineviеably hit that fucking Uspekh radome. To prove that Bear D is unescapable for 9 of 11 crewmember, some fresh eggs were dropped in the open well while aloft, and there were just equal number of little yellow stains on the radome during after-landing inspection. From that moment, the escaping instruction has been modified for Bear D (not for all family of Bears, just for D-model) that a tail should bail out and after that the airplane should ditch. Chances to survive weren't higher but at least the tob brass listened the crew, which was extremely rare case in Soviet Naval Aviation.