Praga E-39

Role Elementary Trainer, Reconnaissance Aircraft
Manufacturer ČKD-Praga
Designer Pavel Beneš and Miroslav Hajn
First flight June 1931
Primary users Slovak Air Force
Czechoslovakian Air Force
Number built 139


Praga E-39/BH-39 was a Czechoslovakian trainer aircraft.

History

This aircraft was designed by Pavel Beneš and Miroslav Hajn, engineers at the Czech aviation company ČKD-Praga in 1931. It flew for the first time in June of that year. The biplane, standard configuration for that era, was an immediate success and orders were placed by the Czech Air Force that used them as elementary training aircraft at its flight schools throughout the 1930s. Pre-World War II production of the machine was 139 units. Following the German occupation of Czechoslovakia in 1939, the eastern area of that country was divided politically into the separate state of Slovakia. Under a puppet German government it became a German ally and its small air force was placed under Luftwaffe control. Ten of the Praga E-39s were given to the Slovakian Air Force who initially used them as trainers but during the German invasion of the Soviet Union, transferred several of them to the Soviet front where they were employed by the Slovaks as reconnaissance platforms in support of German ground forces. Other E-39s were used by the Luftwaffe in their flight training schools as elementary trainers and still others were given to the Hungarian Air Force for use in that same role.

Variants

E-39NZ / BH-39NZ
Powered by a 89.4 kW (120 hp) Walter NZ 120, 9-cylinder air-cooled radial engine.
E-39G / BH-39G
Powered by a 112 kW (150 hp) Walter Gemma, 9-cylinder air-cooled radial engine.
E-39AG / BH-39AG
Powered by a 112 kW (150 hp) Armstrong Siddeley Genet Major, 7-cylinder air-cooled radial engine.

Operators

 Czechoslovakia
 Germany
 Hungary
 Slovakia

Specifications (BH-39NZ)

General characteristics

Performance

See also

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Praga E-39.


Related lists

Operators

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 6/12/2013. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.