The Beneš-Mráz Be-150 Beta-Junior was a light aerobatic trainer and racing aircraft, designed and built in Czechoslovakia in the late 1930s.
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Be-150 Beta Junior | |
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Role | Light aerobatic trainer and racing aircraft Type of aircraft |
National origin | Czechoslovakia |
Manufacturer | Beneš-Mráz (Pavel Beneš and Jaroslav Mráz) |
Designer | Ing. Pavel Beneš |
First flight | 5 January 1937[1] |
Number built | 3[1] |
Developed from | Beneš-Mráz Be-50 Beta-Minor |
With the success of the Beneš-Mráz Be-50 Beta-Minor Beneš decided to produce a smaller version with better performance for sport flying. A major incentive was the availability of five spare 78 kW (105 hp) Walter Junior engines, which would imbue the Be-150 with much improved vertical performance compared to the Be-50.[1]
Beneš shortened the fuselage and fitted the short-span wings of the Be-52, retaining the open cockpits and fixed, trousered, tailwheel undercarriage of the Be-50.[1]
The Be-150 was first flown on 5 January 1937, but was rejected by the MNO (Czechoslovak Ministry of Defense) and the three production aircraft were used for general flying club use and for air racing.[1]
Data from [1]
General characteristics
Performance
Beneš-Mráz and Mráz aircraft | |
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Beneš-Mráz | |
Mráz |