|
SE5a
53 1/8" |
Short
Kit & Plans: $2400Buy
It
| ||
|
Plans:
$300Buy
It | |||
| Skill Level: Advanced Prototype
Version More than 425 laser cut parts |
SPECIFICATIONS | ||
| Scale:
1/6 |
Prop:
14x7 | ||
|
Channels:
R/E/A |
Wheels:
balsa
and plywood with Neoprene foam tires | ||
| Wingspan: 53 1/8" |
Airfoil Type: Under cambered | ||
| Wing
Area: 988 sq in |
Cowl:
N/A | ||
|
Designer:
M.K.
Bengtson |
Weight:
65 oz |
jSpinner:
N/A
| |
|
Prototype:
Brian Allen |
Power
System: AXI 2826 brushless direct drive, Olympus
geared Endoplasma power optional |
Shipping
Weight: 8 pounds | |
| | |||
| FEATURES
| |||
| HISTORICAL SIGNIFICANCE The S.E.5a was one of the most important and influential aircraft of the war. The S.E.5a (Scout Experimental 5a) was designed by H.P. Folland and J. Kenworthy of the Royal Aircraft Factory in Farnborough. The introduction SE5a with the 200-hp Hispano-Suiza or Wolseley Viper engine resolved earlier SE5 engine problems and added nearly 30 mph to the S.E.5a as top speed. The S.E.5a was inherently stable making it excellent at gunnery. It was also one of the fastest aircraft of the war, at 138 mph, it was as fast as the SPAD S.XIII. The S.E.5a was not a great dog fighter, lacking the agility of the Camel. However, it was much easier to fly. The S.E.5 had only one synchronized .303-in Vickers machine gun, however it did have a wing-mounted Lewis gun, which enabled the pilot to fire at an enemy aircraft from below. The S.E.5a entered service in June 1917. Legendary British ace, James McCudden wrote of the S.E.5a "It was very fine to be in a machine that was faster than the Huns, and to know that one could run away just as things got too hot."
| |||