Praga E.114

Praga E.114
Praga E.114M Air Baby OK-BGL on display at the Prague Aviation Museum, Kbely in May 2008
Role light private owner aircraft
Manufacturer ČKD-Praga
Designer Jaroslav Šlechta
First flight September 1934
Primary user private owners
Number built about 300

The Praga E.114 was a single-engine sport airplane, designed and manufactured by the Czechoslovakian company ČKD-Praga. Due to its light weight it was also called Air Baby.

Contents

Design and development

The Praga E.114, first flown in 1934 and designed by Jaroslav Šlechta, was a high wing, cantilever monoplane seating two in a side-by-side cabin. It was an all wood aircraft with a two spar single piece wing; the spars and ribs were built from pine and plywood and the wing plywood covered. The wing section was reflexed at the trailing edge. The wing had a constant chord centre section with taper on the trailing edge outboard and rounded tips. The ailerons were plywood covered and unbalanced.[1][2]

Its fuselage was a pine framed, plywood covered hexagonal box, with the straight edged fin an integral part. The rudder was rounded and horn balanced. Though the rudder was wood framed and covered, the tailplane, mounted just above the fuselage and externally braced from below, had a tube steel structure and was fabric covered. The elevators were balanced by an elastic rope to the control column.[1][2]

Early in the design process the E.114 had been envisaged as an open cockpit aircraft but by the time of construction there was an enclosed cabin. The first prototype had rather crude glazing constructed from plane panes. The absence of doors made entry somewhat challenging, with the side panels hinged down and the upper pane, together with part of the wing leading edge hinged upwards. The second prototype added a lower fuselage foothold to ease the process, as well as fitting less angular glazing. The undercarriage, which was also used as a first step into the cabin, was of the divided type with faired legs hinged on the lower fuselage, assisted by struts from the centre line to the wheels. The wheels contained rubber shock absorbers and were optionally spatted[1][2]

Early aircraft were powered by a 29 kW (36 hp) Aeronca air-cooled flat four engine mounted in the extreme nose with its cylinders exposed. Early production aircraft replaced the US-built Aeronca with a Czechoslovakian version of it, also built by Praga, called the Praga B. Later the similar but more powerful Parga B-2 was fitted and from 1936 this was replaced in turn by the Praga D. This was another flat four, producing 49/55 kW (65/74 hp), with each pair of exposed cylinders merged into a single housing for lower drag. Aircraft with this engine were referred to as E.114D.[1]

As well as benefiting from more power, the E.114D had other enhancements. The ailerons were balanced, improving the stall characteristics; the vertical surfaces were increased in area and given a more angular profile with a non-balanced rudder.[1]

The last E.114 variant involving an engine change was the E.114M, fitted with a 49 kW (65 hp) Walter Mikron III four-cylinder inverted inline engine. The full cowling changed the look of the nose considerably and increased the length by 510 mm (20 in). The E.114M was the heaviest of the series, with an empty weight of 415 kg (915 lb); the E.114D weighed 330 kg (728 lb). The wing carried noticeable dihedral and the E.114M was the only one of its type to have a tailwheel rather than a skid. It was the fastest of the type, with a maximum speed of 185 km/h (115 mph).[1]

The E.115 appeared in 1937 with significant changes to the wing. The span was only slightly reduced (by 200 mm or 7.9 in) but continuous taper reduced the area by 20%. The ailerons were fabric covered. It could be powered by either the Praga B or D and was noticeably faster than earlier variants, even with the smaller engine. The E.115 also had a revised undercarriage, with single, streamlined steel struts hinged to the lower fuselage braced by rods to the centre section. The wheels were spatted and the legs sprung with bungee cord inside the fuselage.[1][2]

The E.117 of 1937 had major alterations. The wing was the same span as that of the E.114 but was given a straight taper, resulting in a small (3.3%) decrease in area. For the first time flaps (of the split type) were fitted. The wing remained wooden but a steel framed, fabric covered fuselage was used and the fin and elevator were similarly constructed. The new fuselage construction allowed the E.117 to have cabin doors for the first time, as well as a more generous interior. It had cantilever undercarriage legs, with wheels in fairings and a tailwheel in place of the skid used by most of the E.114s and E.115, though one of the only two E.117s built flew for a time with a tricycle undercarriage, its mainlegs moved rearwards and with a faired nosewheel assembly.[1]

The E.214, which appeared in about 1936 or 1937 was essentially an E.114 with a 56 kW (75 hp) Pobjoy R seven-cylinder radial engine. The structure was the same as that of the E.114 and the wings had the same dimensions. With a length of 7.15 m (23 ft 5½ in), the E.210 was a few millimetres longer than the E.114M, despite the latter's much longer engine and the extension provided space for a second pair of seats behind the first, making the E.210 a four-seater. The new seats were accessed via a side door, though the front pair retained the side window route of the earlier aircraft. A trim tab on the elevator replaced the elastic rope balance and the undercarriage was also new, each side having an oleo leg fixed to the lower fuselage longeron and braced at its lower end by a V-form strut, hinged on the fuselage centreline. At 420 kg (926 lb), its empty weight was close to that of the E.114M. Maximum speed was 170 km/h (106 mph).[2]

Operational history

The first Air Baby prototype flew for the first time in September 1934 and appeared at the Czech National Flying Club Competition. After several demonstration flights within Europe it was displayed at the 1934 Paris salon.[1]

The Praga was produced before World War II both both by ČKD-Praga in Prague and, under licence as the Hillson Praga, by F. Hillson & Sons Ltd of Manchester in the UK. The numbers of E.114s produced in Czechoslovakia in this period and into the war are uncertain because of probable gaps in the constructor's number (c/n) run. 156 is the probable maximum number built, but the size of the gaps is not known.[1] Hillsons built 28 Pragas.[1] After the war production resumed at ČKD until 1948, when about 110 E.114D and E.114M had been made.[1] Another 26 E.114Ms were built by the Rudy Letov Co. in Czechoslovakia.[3] Including the various non-E.114 variants, these figures suggest a maximum production of 324.

In 1938 the E.115, then powered by a Praga B engine, set a class speed record at 171.5 km/h (106.6 mph) over a 100 km (62 mi) course.[1] In May 1936 one was flown from the UK to South Africa in a new record time of 16 days and 4.5 hours. No South African sales followed and this aircraft was later converted into a glider.[4]

Two E.114s participated in the Sternflug to the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin. The two E.114 pilots, Fuksa and Polma, took the first two places ahead of competitors, equipped with aircraft with more powerful engines.

Before the war some Czech built E.114s were exported to other European countries including Italy and Romania.[5] The first Hillson Praga was exported to Australia. Demand for the type in the UK was subdued and over half went to flying clubs, including a batch of ten to the Northern Aviation School & Club (NAS&C), set up at Barton Aerodrome near Manchester by the manufacturers for this purpose.[6] The NAS&C also trained prospective pilots of the Civil Air Guard. The Praga B engines manufactured in the UK by Jowett Cars Ltd proved unreliable and at least five were replaced by the much heavier 30 kW (40 hp) Aeronca JAP J-99 flat twin.[6][4] A Hillson Praga won the Manx Air Derby, flying three circuits of the Isle of Man on 1 June 1936 at 144 km/h (89.5 mph).[4]

Post-war Czech built E.114Ms were exported to France, Finland, Italy, Switzerland, Romania and the Saarland. Used as tourers and trainers, they also acted as glider tugs.[1] Five Hillsons survived the war but only two flew again. One crashed in Turkey in 1946 and the other in Italy in 1957.[4]

In 2000 there were two surviving E.114s, both in Switzerland. One of these had a 67 kW (90 hp) Continental C90-12F engine.[3] The 2010 Swiss register shows only HB-UAF, an E.114M, but it is not known if it is still active.[7]

Aircraft on Display

E.114M OK-BGL is on display in the Letecké Mǘzeum Kbeley, Prague.[8]

Variants

All variants apart from the E.115 had the same dimensions. Data from Air Britain Archive No.3 (2011), p.129[1]

E.114 (Praga B)
30 kW (40 hp) Praga B flat four engine.
E.114 (Praga B-2)
36 kW (45 hp) Praga B-2 flat four engine. As specifications.
E.114 (Praga D) or E.114D
49-59 kW (65-79 hp) Praga D flat four engine. Maximum speed 150 km/h (93 mph).
E.114M
Marked dihedral on wing. 48 kW (65 hp) Walter Mikron III four-cylinder inline engine. Maximum speed 185 km/h.
E.114C
At least one E.114M was modified to accept a 49 kW (65 hp) Continental flat four sometime after 1952 and this was registered as an E.114C.
E.115
Span decreased to 10.8 m (35 ft 5 in), wing area to 12.15 m² (130.78 ft2); length increased to 6.8 m (22 ft 4 in). 36 kW (45 hp) Praga B-2 flat four engine. Maximum speed of 173 km/h (108 mph). Only one built.
E.117
Changes to wing and fuselage. Flaps added. Wing area 14.75 m² (158.77 ft2). 49-59 kW (65-79 hp) Praga D flat four engine. The fastest Praga engined Air Baby, with a maximum speed of 216 km/h (134 mph). Only two built. One flew for a while with a tricycle undercarriage.
E.214
E.114 variant with a 56 kW (75 hp) Pobjoy R seven-cylinder radial engine, lengthened fuselage and seating for four.

Operators

 Czechoslovakia

Specifications (Praga B-2)

Data from Air Britain Archive No.3 (2011), p.129[9]

General characteristics

Performance

References

Notes
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Air Britain Archive No.3, 2011 pp.125-32
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Jane's All the World's Aircraft 1938, p.93-4c.
  3. ^ a b Simpson 2005, p446
  4. ^ a b c d Jackson 1988
  5. ^ http://www.goldenyears.ukf.net/
  6. ^ a b Ord-Hume 2000. p.389
  7. ^ European Registers Handbook 2010, p.319
  8. ^ Aviation Museums and Collections of Mainland Europe 2009, p.63
  9. ^ Air Britain Archive No.3, 2011 p.129
Bibliography