The Avia BH-25 was a biplane airliner built in Czechoslovakia in 1926.
| BH-25 | |
|---|---|
| BH-25J | |
| Role | Airliner Type of aircraft |
| Manufacturer | Avia |
| Designer | Pavel Beneš and Miroslav Hajn |
| First flight | 1926 |
| Retired | 1936 |
| Primary users | Czechoslovakian Airlines SNNA |
| Number built | 12 |
Typical of airliners of its time, it seated five passengers within its fuselage, whilst the pilots sat in an open cockpit above. Of conventional configuration, it was a single-bay bi-plane of equal span and unstaggered wings, with fixed tailskid landing gear. Originally designed for a Lorraine-Dietrich engine, this was changed to a Bristol Jupiter in service. After their withdrawal from airline use in 1936, some were used by the military for a while before finally becoming training targets.


Data from Jane's all the World's Aircraft 1928[1]
General characteristics
Performance
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