IFIL-Reghin RG-4 Pionier

RG-4 Pionier
Role Primary glider
National origin Romania
Manufacturer Intreprinderea Forestierǎ di Industrializare a Lemnului (FILI)
Designer Vladimir Novitchi
First flight 1 May 1954
Number built 50


The IFIL-Reghin RG-4 Pionier or CIL Reghin RG-4 Pionier was a Romanian single seat primary glider built in the 1950s. Fifty were produced.

Design and development

The RG-4 Pionier was a single seat primary glider built in Romania in the 1950s, though very much in the 1930s Zögling tradition with the pilot exposed on a simple beam fuselage under the leading edge of a high wing. This wing was supported over the fuselage beam on a set of N-form, cross braced struts and by a pair of parallel lift struts on each side to the wing at about one third span. The wing, which was wood framed, was mounted with 2.8° of dihedral, had parallel chord and was unswept. There were plain, fabric covered ailerons out to the wing tips.[1]

The RG-4 landed on a fixed monowheel under the wing trailing edge, with a skid that reached from the nose to under mid chord, assisted by a small tailskid. It had a conventional empennage with a parallel chord tailplane and elevators, similar in plan to the wing, mounted in front of the narrow fin, held above the fuselage on a short step and braced from below with a single strut on each side. Despite its forward position the elevators still required an elevator cut-out for rudder movement. As well as carrying the broad, near triangular rudder, the fin also anchored a pair of bracing wires on each side to reduce horizontal flexing of the fuselage beam. One of these ran to the wing underside, the other to the fuselage under the wing.[1]

The RG-4 Pionier was first flown on 1 May 1954. A batch of fifty was produced.[1]

Specifications

Data from Sailplanes of the World, pp.210-11[1]

General characteristics

Performance


References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Shenstone, B.S.; Wilkinson, K.G. (1963). The World's Sailplanes. II. Organisation Scientifique et Technique Internationale du Vol à Voile (OSTIV) and Schweizer Aero-Revue. pp. 210–11.
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