Letov Š-28 | |
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Role | Reconnaissance aircraft |
Manufacturer | Letov Kbely in Prague |
First flight | 1929 |
Introduction | 1934 |
Retired | 1944 |
Primary user | Czechoslovakian Air Force |
Number built | 470 (all variants Š-28, -128, -228, -328 and -528) |
The Letov Š-28 was a Czechoslovak single-engined, two-seat reconnaissance aircraft. It was manufactured by Letov Kbely in a number of versions with different powerplants. Most important version was Š-328, which was produced in relatively high quantities (412 planes produced).
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Design work started in 1932 to meet a requirement from the Finnish Air Force although they never accepted the type. It first flew in 1934 and began equipping the Czech Air Force the following year. The machine was made in two versions—with wheeled undercarriage for land use and with floats for water operations. Although Czechoslovakia was a land locked nation, a floatplane variant was necessary for a Czechoslovak anti-aircraft artillery training depot in Boka Kotorská (now in Jugoslavia) and four were built as the Š-328v. (v stood for vodní or water). It was used as a reconnaissance aircraft, light bomber and ground-attack aircraft for the Czechoslovakia Air Force during the mid and late 1930s and in that same role during the early months of World War II, when the Slovak Air Force came under German control following its occupation of Czechoslovakia in March 1939. 13 planes from first production batch was tested as night fighters armed with 4 7,92 mm vz.30 machine guns in the wings and 2 movable vz.30 for the observer. These were later modified for normal use because without radar their effectiveness was minimal. At the time of the Munich agreement, which ended the Sudeten crisis the Czechoslovak Air Force had 227 planes in operational units and 87 in training schools and mobilisation depots.
The Letov Š-328's combat record is vague but some sources suggest that some Š-328 landplanes may have been used during the Spanish Civil War[1] however there is no evidence to confirm this and is likely a misidentification of another type. The Germans used captured Š-328s both as trainers and in the night attack role on the Eastern Front in the Winter of 1942-43.[2] The Germans handed over some of these machines to their allies, Bulgaria, and Slovakia.
The Slovak Š-328s carried out reconnaissance and bombing sorties in support of the Slovak participation in the Invasion of Poland in September 1939.[3] Following Slovakia's participation in the German Invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941, Slovak Š-328s were used for patrol and reconnaissance flights and few of them also attacked soviet trucks and cars. They were again used in anti-partisan operations in western Ukraine in the summer of 1942.[4] At least 11 Slovakian aircraft were seized by Slovak insurgents and flown against the Germans in late 1944 during the Slovak National Uprising in September to October 1944.[5] The unit never had more than 3 planes operational at time, but they were an important asset. On 7th September 1944 this aircraft achieved the last shoot-down of an enemy aircraft achieved by biplane, when a patrolling Š-328 was attacked by a reconnaissance Focke-Wulf Fw 189. The Fw 189 was damaged by machine gun fire and forced to land in an area controlled by the insurgents.
General characteristics
Performance
Armament
Avionics
complete for night actions (as standard 1938)
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