Albatros L 69
The Albatros L 69 was a two-seat German parasol monoplane racing and training aircraft of 1925. It was a single-engine parasol-wing monoplane of conventional configuration that seated the pilot and passenger in tandem, open cockpits. It was advertised as a trainer, however contemporary reports dismissed this due to the difficulty in accessing the front cockpit, and the designers' focus on performance.[1]
Operational history
In 1925, the Albatros test pilot Kurt Ungewitter won Class D in the Deutsche Rundflug ("Round Germany") in an L 69a, but was killed in one in a crash two years later. The "Round-Saxony" flight Class D was won by a Bristol Lucifer-engined Albatros L.69, piloted by a student at an average speed of 165 km/h.[2]
Variants
- L 69 – two examples with Bristol Lucifer engine
- L 69a – two examples with Siemens-Halske Sh 12 engine
Specifications (L 69a)
See also
References
Notes
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Bibliography
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- German Aircraft between 1919–1945
- bungartz.nl
- Flight magazine 29 October 1925 on Albatros L.69 12