FVA-3 Ente

Last updated
FVA-3 Ente
Role glider
National origin Germany
Manufacturer Flugwissenschaftliche Vereinigung Aachen [1]
Designer Wolfgang Klemperer [2]
First flight1922 [2]
Number built1 [2]

The FVA-3 Ente was a canard two-seat glider built in Germany in 1922. [2]

Contents

Development

After the relative success of the FVA-1 Schwatze Düvel and FVA-2 Blaue Maus, Wolfgang Klemperer designed and built the canard FVA-3 Ente. Using similar construction methods to the earlier gliders, Klemperer built the FVA-3 from wood with fabric covering, the thick cantilevered mainplane supporting a wide fuselage, extending forwards from the centre section, enclosing the side-by side cockpit forward of the mainplane and supporting the forward plane which was mounted on spherical bearings to provide control in pitch and yaw. On the ground the FVA-3 was supported by two fixed skids faired by large trousers similar to the FVA-1 and FVA-2. [2]

The control system used the foreplane and 1.2 m (3 ft 11 in) span slotted ailerons at the tips of the mainplane. Fore-and-aft movement of the stick altered the angle of attack of the whole foreplane, raising or lowering the nose. Side-to-side movement of the stick operated the mainlane ailerons in a conventional fashion to control the bank angle (i.e. stick left -left aileron up right aileron down and vice versa). The sole yaw control, as the aircraft had neither fin nor rudder, consisted of applying left or right foot-operated rudder pedal deflected small servo flaps on the trailing edge of the foreplanes to tilt the foreplanes;left plane low for the nose to yaw left and right plane low for the nose to yaw right. [2]

Flight tests revealed a poor weight distribution, requiring the aircraft to be dismantled and the centre of gravity adjusted. [2]

Specifications

General characteristics

Performance

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References