The Slepcev Storch (English: Stork) is a Serbian type-certified, kit and ultralight STOL aircraft, designed by Yugoslavian-Australian Nestor Slepcev and currently produced by Storch Aircraft Serbia in several different versions. The ultralight version is a 3/4 scale replica of the Fieseler Fi 156 Storch of the Second World War and is supplied as a kit for amateur construction or as a complete ready-to-fly-aircraft.[1][2][3][4]
STOL aircraft
Slepcev Storch
Slepcev Storch registered in Switzerland
Role
Type-certified, kit and ultralight STOL aircraft
Type of aircraft
National origin
Australia, Serbia
Manufacturer
Slepcev Aircraft Industry Storch Aviation Australia Storch Aircraft Serbia
The aircraft was first flown in 1994. It was originally manufactured by Slepcev's company, Slepcev Aircraft Industry of Beechwood, New South Wales, Australia. The company was later renamed Storch Aviation Australia. The aircraft was type-certified in 1999 to the Joint Airworthiness Requirements - Very Light Aircraft (JAR-VLA) standard,[5] with contributions from aeronautical engineer C. W. "Bill" Whitney.[6] Production then moved to Serbia where a Fédération Aéronautique Internationale microlight category model was developed.[1][3][7]
Like the original Fi 156, the Slepcev Storch features a strut-braced high-wing, a two-seats-in-tandem enclosed cockpit, with extensive glazing, fixed conventional landing gear and a single engine in tractor configuration. It is made from welded steel tubing with its flying surfaces fashioned from sheet aluminium and covered in doped aircraft fabric. The ultralight version has a 10m (32.8ft) span wing with an area of 15m2 (160sqft), large flaps and leading edge slots. The wings are supported by V-struts and jury struts. Engines fitted vary by model.[1][3]
Operational history
Slepcev Storch
The designer has a keen interest in Second World War history and wanted to use an example of his Storch design to re-enact the 12 September 1943 rescue of Benito Mussolini by Otto Skorzeny and his SS commandos from his imprisonment by Italian Carabinieri guards on the Gran Sasso mountain.[8] It took Slepcev a year to gain Italian approvals for the flight and on 24 August 1996, he landed a Storch Mk 4 at the site, 53 years after the original dramatic rescue had taken place.[4]
Variants
Storch/Storch Mk 4
Homebuilt kit version, powered by a 100hp (75kW) Rotax 912ULS or 115hp (86kW)Rotax 914, with a gross weight of 550kg (1,213lb). Certification includes Australian and Spanish JAR-VLA. Available as a kit or as ready-to-fly.[1][3][2][7][9]
Storch Microlight
FAI compliant microlight 3/4 sized version, powered by a 100hp (75kW) Rotax 912ULS, with a gross weight of 450kg (992lb). Available as a kit or as ready-to-fly.[1][3][10][11]
Super Storch
Full scale homebuilt kit version, powered by a 180hp (134kW)Lycoming O-360, with a gross weight of 862kg (1,900lb). Available as a kit only.[1][3][12]
Storch Moose
Full scale homebuilt kit version, powered by a 360hp (268kW)Vedeneyev M14P, with a gross weight of 1,500kg (3,307lb). Available as a kit only.[1][3][13]
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