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The Aero A.30 was a biplane light bomber and reconnaissance aircraft. It was built in Czechoslovakia in the late 1920s. It originated as an attempt by Aero to improve the performance of the Aero A.11, but soon evolved into quite a different aircraft, larger and more powerful than its predecessor.[1] The aircraft is readily distinguished from other related types, through the difference in spans between its wings – the upper set being of much greater span than the lower.
You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Czech. (January 2020) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
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A.30 | |
---|---|
General information | |
Type | Light reconnaissance bomber |
National origin | Czechoslovakia |
Manufacturer | Aero |
Number built | 79 (+116 A.32) |
History | |
Developed from | Aero A.11 |
Variants | |
Developed into | Aero A.100 |
In 1926, the Ministry of National Defense (MNO) issued a request for a long-range reconnaissance and medium bomber aircraft. Aero entered the competition with the A.30, based on the Aero A.11, designed by Antonín Husník. The A.11 airframe was enlarged and strengthened, and fitted with a Lorraine 12E Courlis engine. Prototype test flights continued until the spring of 1927. This led to redesigns, including the tail surface, wing reinforcement system and landing gear, so that prototypes weren't considered complete until the summer of 1927.[2]
Prototypes of the A.30 were retrospectively designated A.130, with the A.230 being the main production version. The A.330 and A.430 featured different, more powerful engines, but the latter of these did not enter production, serving instead as the prototype for the Aero A.100.
The public unveiling, organized by the Aeroclub of the Czechoslovak Republic, took place at the 4th International Air Show in Prague on 4–19 July 1927. On 10 August 1927, Josef Novák, the chief pilot at Aero, set several records in the A.30. This included nine national endurance records as well as speed records. Several of those were broken by Alois Ježek on 12 October 1927 in a Letov Š-16.[3] Antonín Duchek set a national record flying an A.30 equipped with a Skoda L 500 hp (367 kW) engine on 23 July 1929.[4]
Data from Jane's all the World's Aircraft 1928 [7]
General characteristics
Performance
Armament
Related development
Related lists
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