Kocjan Bᾳk | |
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Role | Motor Glider |
National origin | Poland |
Manufacturer | Warsztaty Szybowcowe |
Designer | Antoni Kocjan[1] |
First flight | March 1937[2] |
Number built | at least 27[3] |
The Bᾳk (Horse-Fly) was a single seat motor glider designed and built in Poland from 1936.
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Affiliated to D.W.L., the Warsztaty Szybowcowe – glider workshops produced the Bᾳk, designed by Antoni Kocjan, to compete with the ITS-8 which had been designed to a specification from the I.T.S.M. (Instytut Techniki Szybownictwa i Motoszybownictwa – institute of gliding and motor-gliding techniques), for a cheap ultra-light aircraft suitable for converting trained glider pilots to powered flying. The Bᾳk I was an immediate success with excellent performance and good handling qualities, passing I.T.L. (Instytut Techniczny Lotnictwa – Technical aviation institute) and airworthiness tests without problems, also proving to have relatively good gliding performance. The Bᾳk was built primarily of wood with plywood in a semi-monocoque fuselage and cantilevered single spar wooden wings, with plywood skinned leading edge torsion boxes and wing roots, mid set on the fuselage with marked dihedral. The tail unit comprised a fin, with rudder, integral with the fuselage and a cantilever ply and fabric covered all-flying tailplane, all control surfaces were statically balanced and mounted on ball bearings. Various engines of 16 to 32 hp could be fitted, with the majority of the production Bᾳk II's was the 32 hp Sarolea Albatros engine driving a twoblade fixed pitch Szomański propeller.
Data from Cynk, Jerzy B.. “Polish Aircraft 1893 – 1939”. London, Putnam. 1971. ISBN 0 370 00085 4
General characteristics
Performance
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