Tainan Mita III / TN-1 / Sagami S-3
Страна: Япония
Год: 1966
Планер

Two-seat training and sporting sailplane
M.Hardy. Gliders & Sailplanes of the world
Фотографии

M.Hardy. Gliders & Sailplanes of the world

Tainan Mita III

  Japan has never attempted, in her light aircraft and sailplane designs, the sort of highly successful onslaught on world markets represented by her Honda motorcycles and transistor radios, and her sailplanes of indigenous design often represent, as does the Mita III tandem two-seater training and sporting glider, an essentially conventional, not to say cautious, design philosophy. The Mita was built by LADCO - the Light Aircraft Development Co of Tokyo, whose designer was Mr Asahi Miyahara,and its production has been continued under licence by the Tainan Industry Co Ltd (Tainan Kogyo KK) after the latter took over the manufacture of sailplanes from LADCO; by 1 January 1979 a total of 37 Mita Ills had been built. Of conventional wood and fabric construction, the Mita has cantilever shoulder wings of constant chord centre section with tapered outer panels, of all-wood single box spar construction with plywood covering. The ailerons are fabric-covered an there are Schempp-Hirth air brakes in the wing upper surfaces. The fuselage is a steel tube framework with wooden stringers and fabric covering; the nose and forward section are of glassfibre, and there is an aero-tow release in the nose as well as a winch release at the cg. The wooden tail unit has a fabric-covered rudder and elevators, and the landing gear consists of a rubber-sprung non-retractable monowheel with brake, plus a tailskid. The pilots sit under a flush-fitting two-piece blown canopy that hinges sideways to starboard for entry and exit.


Span: 52 ft 5 in
Length: 26 ft 1 1/2 in
Height: 4 ft 2 1/2 in
Wing area: 170.82 sqft
Aspect ratio: 16.13
Empty weight: 661 Ib
Max weight: 992 lb
Max speed: 118 mph (in smooth air)
Max aero-tow speed: 81 mph
Min sinking speed: 2.36 ft/sec at 47 mph
Best glide ratio: 30:1 at 51 mph



Tainan TN-1

  Also known by the manufacturers' designation F5, the TN-1 single-seater was designed by Yukio Tanaka and construction of the prototype began in August 1974; this made its first flight in December 1976. The Japan Civil Airworthiness Board was conducting certification trials in the spring of 1978 and it was hoped to begin production in the summer of that year. Of conventional wood and fabric construction very similar to the Mita III, the TN-1 had cantilever single-spar high wings of spruce and plywood, with fabric covering and a forward sweep of 2" 4' at the quarter-chord line; the wooden ailerons are ply-covered and there are Schempp-Hirth air brakes. The steel tube fuselage framework has fabric covering over wooden stringers, and the nose is of glassfibre. The wooden tail unit has fabric-covered elevators and rudder, and there is a trim tab in the starboard elevator. There is a non-retractable unsprung monowheel mounted at the cg with a band brake, plus a tailskid.


Span: 50 ft 10 1/2 in
Length: 25 ft 0 3/4 in
Height: 7 ft 2 3/4 in
Wing area: 172.0 sqft
Aspect ratio: 15.03
Empty weight: 595 lb
Max weight: 837 lb
Max speed: 81 mph (in smooth air)
Max aero-tow speed: 81 mph
Min sinking speed: 2.59 ft/sec
Best glide ratio: 26:1 at 49 mph
Tainan Mita III two-seat training and sporting sailplane
Tainan Mita III two-seat training and sporting sailplane
Tainan Mita III two-seat training and sporting sailplane
Tainan TN-1.
Sagami S-3K-1 modified pre-production version of the S-3
Tainan Sagami S-3 single-seat training and sporting sailplane
Tainan TN-1 (F5) single-seat sailplane