CAP-4 Paulistinha

CAP-4 Paulistinha
Brazilian Navy CAP-4 preserved at the Museu Asas de um Sonho
Role Trainer
Manufacturer EAY, CAP
First flight 1935
Number built ca. 840


The CAP-4 Paulistinha was a military and civilian trainer aircraft built in Brazil during the 1930s and 40s. It was originally developed by Empresa Aeronáutica Ypiranga (EAY) as an unlicensed copy of the Taylor Cub powered by a Salmson 9Ad radial engine. It featured a high strut-braced wing, two enclosed tandem seats, and a steel-tube fuselage with fabric covering. Its tailwheel undercarriage was not retractable.

EAY had built five examples by the time that the firm was purchased by Companhia Aeronáutica Paulista (CAP) in 1942. CAP continued manufacturing the type under the designation CAP-4.

The type was widely successful, with nearly 800 units being produced for Brazil's flying clubs and armed forces, as well as for export to Argentina, Paraguay, Chile, Uruguay and Portugal. At the time of peak production in 1943, a new CAP-4 left the factory every day, and production continued until 1948.

In 1956, Sociedade Aeronáutica Neiva (Neiva) acquired the rights renaming it to P-56 Paulistinha, the design was used as the basis for an agricultural aircraft, the P-56 Agricola, adding a fibreglass chemical hopper and spraybars, but this was unable to compete with imported, purpose-built agricultural aircraft.


Variants

EAY-201
original radial engined version
CAP-4
main production version
CAP-4B
air ambulance version (2 prototypes built)
CAP-4C
artillery-spotting version
P-56 Agricola
agricultural version by Neiva (60 built)
Paulistinha 56-C
Powered by 90 horsepower (67 kW) Continental C-90-8F/12F engine. 256 built by Neiva between 1958 and 1964.[1]
P56C-1 Paulistinha Rebocador
Paulistinha 56-D
More powerful version with 150 horsepower (110 kW) Lycoming O-320-A1A. Single prototype built, which was designated L-6A by Brazilian Air Force. No production.[1]


Operators

 Brazil
 Paraguay


Specifications (CAP-4)

Data from Jane's Fighting Aircraft of World War II[2]

General characteristics

Performance

References

Notes
  1. 1.0 1.1 Taylor 1969, p. 10.
  2. Bridgman 1998, p. 100.
Bibliography

External links

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