Etrich Sport-Taube

The Etrich Sport-Taube was a one off, single engine, one seat monoplane, built in Czechoslovakia in 1929.

Sport-Taube
The Etrich Sport-Taube at the National Technical Museum (Prague).
Role One seat sports aircraft
National origin Czechoslovakia
Manufacturer Etrich
Designer Igo Etrich
First flight 1929
Number built 1

Design and development

The Sport-Taube was a plane built and designed by Igo Etrich, the famous builder of the Etrich Taube. It was originally intended as a Volksflugzeug, a low-cost airplane. However, it faced difficulties regarding production in series and the project was given up.[1]

After World War I, Etrich moved to Trautenau, now Trutnov, in the newly founded Czechoslovakia. He built the Sport-Taube, a closed-cockpit monoplane, in the same factory where he built textile machinery. The original plane is now displayed suspended from the roof at the National Technical Museum in Prague, Czech Republic.[2]

The Sport-Taube was powered by a 40 hp (30 kW) engine.[3]

Operational history

Although the Sport-Taube was intended to be commercialized as a private aircraft, with its 40 hp (30 kW) engine it was deemed to be faster than the planes of the Czechoslovak Air Force at that time. Thus the Czech authorities made difficulties to the Etrich company to obtain the permits that were necessary for mass production of the plane, claiming that the plane could be used for smuggling. Disappointed, Igo Etrich abandoned his aeronautical projects and dedicated himself fully to the production of textile machinery.[4]

Specifications

General characteristics

  • Crew: One
  • Capacity: One passenger
gollark: Which bit? I'm not sure about the user experience bit, but it's harder to get more CPU than it is more GPU.
gollark: Also, decimal points would likely break basically everything in existence.
gollark: *But* would also probably make the user experience worse than just using a bit of the GPU.
gollark: I'm not sure if that would be better or worse than people wasting GPU power; it would possibly even it out a little?
gollark: Maybe you could use algorithms designed to only run on CPUs decently?

See also

Related development

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.