Role | Single seat light aircraft |
---|---|
National origin | Poland |
Manufacturer | Pierwsza Śląska Fabryka Samolotów |
Designer | Sopora brothers |
First flight | June 1925 |
Primary user | Silesian Aeroclub |
Number built | 1 |
The Silesia S-4 was a Polish, low-power parasol wing aircraft built in 1925. After an engine change and airframe modifications it became one of the Silesian Aeroclubs fleet. It was lost in a take-off accident in 1931 and was the last Silesia aircraft to fly.
Three brothers, Edward, Paul and Wojciech Sopora set up an aircraft-building workshop in 1923 at Chorzów, calling it the Pierwsza Śląska Fabryka Samolotów (First Silesian Aircraft Factory). Their first product was the 1923 Silesia S-3. Though their next aircraft, the 1925 Silesia S-4, was also a low-powered, single seat monoplane like the S-3, It was a parasol wing type of more refined design. [1]
The wing, with a rectangular plan and a thin aerofoil section, was a one piece, wooden structure built around two spars and fabric-covered. It was braced on each side with a parallel pair of struts to the spars from the lower fuselage longerons. An unusual pyramid of long struts on each side from the mid and lower fuselage braced the forward spar centrally and an inverted V-strut aft joined the upper fuselage longerons and rear spar. The wing had a large, deep cut-out in the central trailing edge which eased cockpit access, as the wing was not far above the fuselage. [1]
The S-4 was at first powered by the same 22 kW (30 hp) air-cooled Haacke HFM-2 flat twin engine used by the S-3. Behind it the fuselage was rectangular in section and flat-sided. The forward part was a fabric-covered steel tube structure but behind the cockpit, just ahead of the trailing edge, wood frames and plywood covering were used. Its empennage was wood-framed, wire-braced and fabric-covered, with the tailplane on top of the fuselage and a fin with a short, balanced rudder. Its fixed, tailskid undercarriage was similar to that of the S-3, with large mainwheels on a single axle supported at each end by V-struts from the lower longerons. [1]
The first flight, piloted by Klosek, was in June 1925. It was soon busy, giving a demonstration to representatives of an infantry regiment and taking part in a series of publicity flights to Silesian towns during a L.O.P.P air-awareness week. It also made a flight from Michajłowice to Świętochłowice. [1]
It was later moved to Katowice, the home of the Silesian Pilots' Club where it was thoroughly tested by two Polskie Linie Lotnicze 'Lot' (Polish Airways 'Flight') pilots who found its handling poor and attributed this partly to the elderly, low-powered Haacke engine. These observations led to the installation of a slightly more powerful (26 kW (35 hp)) three cylinder Anzani engine. The wing bracing was tidied, with the original diagonal wire bracing of the main wing struts replaced by a rigid strut and the central, forward stuts replaced by a neater transverse V-strut from the upper longerons, making a more conventional cabane. The vertical tail was also modified, with a more rounded rudder with a smaller balance horn. [1]
After these modifications the S-4 was much flown by members of the Silesian Pilots' Club and when in 1930 this club became part of the Silesian Aeroclub, the S-4 was one of the eight aircraft in its fleet. It was destroyed in June 1931 when a club member fatally stalled after an unauthorised take-off. [1]
This crash had unhappy consequences for the Sopara brothers. Encouraged by the interest of the club fliers in the S-4, they had designed a 60 kW (80 hp), two seat, aerobatic training and touring aircraft, the Silesia S-10, the construction of which was funded by the Silesian Aeroclub. At the time of the S-4 crash the S-10 was complete but awaiting its German engine. The crash ended the club's interest in the S-10 and with it the Pierwsza Śląska Fabryka Samolotów; the S-4 was their last design to fly. [1]
Data from Cynk (1971) [1] except where noted
General characteristics
Performance
The PWS-4 was a prototype Polish sports aircraft, developed in 1928 by Podlaska Wytwórnia Samolotów.
The Albatros L.66 was a simple, low powered, two seat sports and training parasol wing monoplane, built in Germany in the mid-1920s.
The Dietrich-Gobiet DP.VII was a simple, low power, German sports aircraft flown in early 1924.
The Medwecki HL 2 was a Polish two seat lightplane flown in 1927. Handicapped by a low power, unreliable engine, its flying life lasted little more than a month.
The Medwecki and Nowakowski M.N.3 or just M.N.3 was a low-powered, four seat, Polish aircraft flown in 1928. The sole example was modified into a more powerful two-seater which served aeroclubs until World War II.
The Medwecki and Nowakowski M.N.5 was an economical Polish trainer aircraft initially aimed at the club market, though there was also some military interest. It performed well but lacked a constructor after Samolot became insolvent in 1930, so only one was completed.
The Rogalski and Wigura R.W.1 was designed and built by a pair of students at Warsaw Technical University in 1927. The single example was a two-seat parasol-wing monoplane which entered two national competitions, served the Warsaw Academic Aeroclub and also towed an advertising banner.
The Gabriel P 5 was the first nationally developed aircraft to fly in Poland after it became independent in 1918. It was an amateur-built, low-powered, single seat parasol wing machine. Only one was completed.
The Gabriel P 6 was a Polish training aircraft and the P 7 a tourer. The difference between them was the wing configuration, chosen to optimise their speed range for their role, so the P 6 was a biplane and the P 7 a parasol wing aircraft.
The Silesia S-3 was the first design from the Polish Sopora brothers to fly. It was a low power, single seat, high wing light aircraft. Only one was built and its flying time was limited.
The Działowski D.K.D.1 was the first powered aircraft designed by Stanislaw Działowski. It was a low-power high-wing monoplane with a cabin for one passenger. After attending an aviation exhibition in Warsaw in 1927 it was badly damaged when the engine failed as it left and it did not fly again.
The D.K.D.3 was a Polish, single seat, parasol-wing sports aircraft first flown in 1927. Only one was built but flew in demonstrations and in national competitions into the early 1930s.
The Działowski D.K.D.4 was a Polish, parasol-wing, sports two-seater built in 1928. One won the Second National Lightplane Contest, with another coming fifth.
The Zalewski W.Z.XI Kogutek I was a basic, single seat sport aircraft designed and built in Poland in the 1920s. Its engine was also designed and built by Zalewski, making it the first all-Polish aircraft to fly.
The Kozlowski WK.3 was a one-off Polish biplane trainer. It first flew in 1933 and was later re-engined, serving an aeroclub until the invasion of Poland.
The LKL IV and LKL V were a pair of very similar Polish parasol wing two-seaters, built in the early 1930s. They differed primarily in their engines.
The Sido S.1 was a Polish two seat, parasol wing trainer aircraft, first flown in 1930.
The Nowotny N-y 4bis was a tandem two-seat light aircraft, built in Poland, as a step towards a very light, low-powered training aircraft for flying clubs. Its designer was killed in a glider soon after the first flight of his trainer and its development was abandoned.
The Gabriel Śląsk (Silesia) was a Polish light aircraft designed and built by an amateur in the mid-1930s. After two flights the Polish authorities banned further development.
The AMA, named after its designers, was a one-off motor glider built in Poland in the mid-1930s. Its development was abandoned after early tests revealed incurable engine-mounting vibration problems.