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PZL.19 was a Polish sports plane built in 1932 in the PZL works. Ordered by the Ministry of Communications, it was specifically designed for the upcoming Challenge 1932 contest held that year in Germany.
[edit] Design and developmentThe PZL.19 was designed by Jerzy Dąbrowski and Franciszek Misztal in 1931. The plane was of a modern construction, an all-metal cantilever low-wing monoplane with a fixed landing gear and a closed canopy. The crew of two sat in tandem, there also could be fitted one passenger seat behind. It was powered by a 120 hp de Havilland Gipsy III straight engine. Three aircraft were built in 1932, the first was flown in May 1932 by Bolesław Orliński. They carried registration SP-AHH, SP-AHI and SP-AHK. After the Challenge and air meeting in Czechoslovakia all three planes were modified in winter 1932/1933 by addition of fuselage 140l fuel tanks, what increased range to 2000 km. In mid-1933 the SP-AHH was modified to carry 657l fuel, increasing range to some 5000 km, and the engine was replaced with a stronger 130 hp de Havilland Gipsy Major I (the SP-AHI also was given this engine). [edit] Operational historyAll three PZL.19 took part in the Challenge in August 1932. In a technical evaluation trial they were bested only by RWD-6, but the race part was less successful. Jerzy Bajan finished on the 11th place, Ignacy Giedgowd on the 18th and Bolesław Orliński withdrew from the race due to illness. Despite its failure in the Challenge (which was won by the Polish RWD-6), it was regarded as a successful machine and took part in several Polish and international contests. All three took part in an air meting in Prague in Czechoslovakia on 11 September 1932. In May 1933, Jerzy Bajan and Piotr Dudziński flew on two PZL-19s a 4063 km raid from Warsaw, through Kharkov, Leningrad and Lwów to Vienna, taking the 1st and 2nd place in a rally to Vienna, where they took part in the 1st Alpen Flight international contest. During the contest, the SP-AHI was thrown by a wind to the trees while taking off from Baltant near Treibach, and then burnt (the crew Jerzy Bajan and Gustaw Pokrzywka bailed out). Piotr Dudziński took the 3rd place in the contest, despite a damage in a forced landing. On 11 September 1933, the SP-AHH crashed near Kazan during an attempt of a long distance record flight Warsaw-Krasnoyarsk. The plane went into a spin due to an air turbulence and hit the ground. The pilot Józef Lewoniewski was killed and the other crewman injured. The last PZL.19 was used in sports aviation - in the Poznań Aeroclub until 1935, when it was removed from the registry. [edit] Specifications[edit] DescriptionMetal construction low-wing monoplane, conventional in layout. Fuselage of a steel frame covered with duralumin in front and canvas at the rear. Trapezoid three-part wing with elliptical ends, covered with duralumin, folding rearwards. Wings were built around light closed profiles instead of spars and were fitted with automatic slats and slotted flaps. Cab had three seats in tandem, under a common multi-part canopy, with double controls for the first two crewmen. Fixed landing gear with a rear skid, main wheels in massive covers. Two-blade metal propeller of variable pitch. Fuel tanks in wings (140 l), later number and capacity of fuel tanks increased. General characteristics
Performance
[edit] References
[edit] See alsoRelated development Comparable aircraft
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