Aero A.34

The Aero A.34 (nickname: Kos, Czech for " Blackbird " ) was a single-engine, two-seat civilian biplane Czechoslovak manufacturer Aero.

History

The idea of ​​developing a small, light sports and training aircraft was at Aero in 1929, after similar airplanes abroad have been very successful for several years.

Technology

With the A.34 thus creating a based on the popular and successful Moth series of the British manufacturer De Havilland einstieliger a biplane with equal-length upper and lower wing pairs that were foldable and thus ( with a width of 2.91 m) a road transport was possible. Fuselage and wings A.34 were fabric-covered wooden structures, only the ailerons were made of metal, the tense and also fabric-covered tail was a steel tube construction. Were at the edges of the lower wing to protect it at ground contact tube bracket. The chassis was designed with a split axle at the rear there was a tail skid. By default, the A.34 had a dual control for flight training; Pilot and student pilot or passenger sat in open cockpits. The standard version was powered by a Walter Vega radial engine.

Variants

Specifications

32600
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