Aichi Experimental Type 15-Ko Reconnaissance Seaplane (Mi-go)

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Aichi Experimental Type 15-Ko Reconnaissance Seaplane (Mi-go)
Role Reconnaissance seaplane
Manufacturer Aichi Kokuki
First flight1925
Primary user Imperial Japanese Navy
Number built4~

The Aichi Experimental Type 15-Ko Reconnaissance Seaplane (Mi-go) was a prototype reconnaissance seaplane built by Aichi in the mid-1920s.

Contents

Design and development

The Mi-Go was built in response to an Imperial Japanese Navy requirement for a reconnaissance seaplane to replace the Hansa-Brandenburg W.33 in IJN service. The W.33 had been acquired by the IJN in 1922, but was unpopular with crews due to poor handling and limited visibility afloat. The Mi-Go differed from the W.33 in having floats connected to the wings, a wooden airframe, fabric covered wings, and much lighter weight. Four prototypes of the Mi-Go were built; tests of which showed it to be longitudinally unstable in flight, although the first prototype used Dornier bench-type aileron balances, and the IJN selected the rival Nakajima Type 15 Reconnaissance Seaplane (E2N) for production instead. [1]

Operators

Flag of Japan.svg  Japan

Specifications

Data fromJapanese Aircraft, 1910-1941, [2] airwar.ru [3]

General characteristics

Performance

Armament

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References

  1. "Aichi Experimental Type 15-Ko Reconnaissance Seaplane (Mi-go)". www.historyofwar.org.
  2. Mikesh, Robert C.; Shorzoe Abe (1990). Japanese Aircraft, 1910-1941. London: Putnam & Company Ltd. ISBN   0-85177-840-2.
  3. "Aichi Mi-go". www.airwar.ru.