Caproni Bergamaschi PL.3

PL.3
Role Long distance racer
National origin Italy
Manufacturer Caproni Bergamaschi
Designer Cesare Pallavicino
Number built 1


The Caproni Bergamaschi PL.3 was designed and built in Italy to compete in the 1934 London to Melbourne air race. It was a single engine cantilever monoplane with clean lines, retractable undercarriage and side-by-side seating for two.[1] Though it was registered as a race entrant, late delays prevented it from competing.

Design and development

The PL.3 had a low wing built entirely of wood and plywood covered, tapering uniformly both in chord and thickness from wide, deep roots to rounded tips. The tail was conventional, the tailplane set at mid-fuselage with straight swept leading edges and carrying elevators with trim tabs. The fin was triangular, with a rounded rudder ending above the fuselage.[2]

In contrast the fuselage of the PL.3 was mostly of metal construction. From propeller to aft of the wing root the fuselage was a tube of constant diameter, set by the wide chord NACA cowling around its 525 kW (700 hp) licence built Pratt & Whitney Hornet radial engine, which then tapered to the tail. The underlying structure from nose to tail was a rectangular chrome molybdenum steel frame, aluminium covered in front and plywood behind. The low profile cockpit placed the crew at the wing trailing edge. The PL.3 had a conventional undercarriage with mainwheels retracting rearwards into the wing, leaving a small part exposed.[2]

Operational history

The PL.3 was one of many types entered into the London-Melbourne race of 1934 for the MacRobertson Trophy and £10,000 prize. The race was scheduled to start on 20 October 1934 The PL.3 was entered in May 1934.[3] By early September it had a race number, 61, and the crew had been elected; though it had not flown it was still an expected competitor. The crew were known: both Francis Lombardi and Vittori Suster were experienced flyers with careers beginning in the First World War. Lombardi had made many competitive long distance flights and Suster had spent the last seven year as an airline pilot, latterly as chief pilot.[2]

The exact reasons for its non-participation are not known, but the PL.3 was one of many registered competitors who cancelled early or failed to appear at the RAF Mildenhall, the starting point, in the week before the start.

Specifications

Data from Italian Civil and Military Aircraft 1930-1945[1]

General characteristics

Performance


References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Caproni aircraft.
  1. 1 2 Thompson, Jonathan (1963). Italian Civil and Military Aircraft 1930-1945. Fallbrook, California: Aero Publishers, Inc. p. 99.
  2. 1 2 3 "Who's who in the MacRobertson race". Flight. XXVI (1341): 617–8. 6 September 1934.
  3. "MacRobertson News". Flight. XXVI (1326). 31 May 1934.


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