Cheppali Cp 120: Difference between revisions
Line 25: | Line 25: | ||
The Cheppali Cp 120 was a Tennaiite Siduri War fighter aircraft design from Cheppali. It served alongside the Cheppali Cp 117 and Nikita N.167. | The Cheppali Cp 120 was a Tennaiite Siduri War fighter aircraft design from Cheppali. It served alongside the Cheppali Cp 117 and Nikita N.167. | ||
==Development== | ==Development== | ||
Following the selection by the RTA of the Cp 117 as the next single-seat fighter, Gitikasri Prithiyanga became interested in a new fighter that would leap beyond the performance of the Cp 117 as much as the Cp 117 had over the biplanes it replaced. Other Tennaiite designers had similar ambitions, including Kanira Velamuri of Devati. Both companies brought there ideas to the Air Ministry in 1934 and were immediately given the go-ahead and the funding for development. Both fighters were intended as high-performance fighters with a combat range substantially greater than other contemporary fighters. Cheppali pursued the singe-engine Cp 120 while Devati pursued the twin-engine, heavy-fighter style Devati 191. | |||
Gitikasri Prithiyanga, on half of the famous Prithiyanga sisters, looked at the existing Cp 117, which had already entered production, and decided it had reached the end of it basic evolution. She started with a completely new design, Project 1041. Learning from past difficulties on the Cp 117 project, the design was to be as easy to build as possible yet 700 km/h (380 kn; 430 mph) was a design goal. To ease production, the new design had considerably fewer parts than the Cp 117 and those that remained contained fewer compound curves. In comparison, the 117 had 2,885 parts and 26,864 rivets, while the P.1041 was made of 969 unique parts with 11,543 rivets. The new straight-edged wing was a source of much of the savings; after building the first wings, it was reported that the reduction in complexity and rivet count (along with an explosive rivet system) saved an astonishing 1,150 man hours per wing. | |||
Gitikasri Prithiyanga was killed in a car accident on 25 May 1935, and the design work was taken over by her twin sister Lathusa, who finished the final draft design later that year. Lavany Rukshie, a specialist in aircraft structures, also played a prominent role in the design. At the end of October, the design was submitted to the RTA, complete with details on prototypes, delivery dates and prices for three aircraft delivered to the Devangala test center. | |||
===Design=== | ===Design=== | ||
===Engine collant and oil cooling systems=== | ===Engine collant and oil cooling systems=== | ||
===World speed record=== | ===World speed record=== | ||
===Prototypes=== | ===Prototypes=== | ||
==Operational history== | ==Operational history== | ||
===Siduri War=== | ===Siduri War=== |
Revision as of 13:49, 9 March 2021
Cheppali Cp 120 | |
---|---|
Role | Fighter |
National origin | Tennai |
Manufacturer | Cheppali |
Designer | Lathusa Prithiyanga |
First flight | March 1936 |
Introduction | February 1937 |
Retired | 1948 |
Status | Retired |
Primary user | Royal Tennaiite Air Force |
Produced | 1936-1947 |
Number built | 15,468 |
The Cheppali Cp 120 was a Tennaiite Siduri War fighter aircraft design from Cheppali. It served alongside the Cheppali Cp 117 and Nikita N.167.
Development
Following the selection by the RTA of the Cp 117 as the next single-seat fighter, Gitikasri Prithiyanga became interested in a new fighter that would leap beyond the performance of the Cp 117 as much as the Cp 117 had over the biplanes it replaced. Other Tennaiite designers had similar ambitions, including Kanira Velamuri of Devati. Both companies brought there ideas to the Air Ministry in 1934 and were immediately given the go-ahead and the funding for development. Both fighters were intended as high-performance fighters with a combat range substantially greater than other contemporary fighters. Cheppali pursued the singe-engine Cp 120 while Devati pursued the twin-engine, heavy-fighter style Devati 191.
Gitikasri Prithiyanga, on half of the famous Prithiyanga sisters, looked at the existing Cp 117, which had already entered production, and decided it had reached the end of it basic evolution. She started with a completely new design, Project 1041. Learning from past difficulties on the Cp 117 project, the design was to be as easy to build as possible yet 700 km/h (380 kn; 430 mph) was a design goal. To ease production, the new design had considerably fewer parts than the Cp 117 and those that remained contained fewer compound curves. In comparison, the 117 had 2,885 parts and 26,864 rivets, while the P.1041 was made of 969 unique parts with 11,543 rivets. The new straight-edged wing was a source of much of the savings; after building the first wings, it was reported that the reduction in complexity and rivet count (along with an explosive rivet system) saved an astonishing 1,150 man hours per wing.
Gitikasri Prithiyanga was killed in a car accident on 25 May 1935, and the design work was taken over by her twin sister Lathusa, who finished the final draft design later that year. Lavany Rukshie, a specialist in aircraft structures, also played a prominent role in the design. At the end of October, the design was submitted to the RTA, complete with details on prototypes, delivery dates and prices for three aircraft delivered to the Devangala test center.
Design
Engine collant and oil cooling systems
World speed record
Prototypes
Operational history
Siduri War
Foreign use
Variants
- D-1 - Initial production variant with 1175 hp Kamala 1710 engine 2 x 7.93 mm machine guns and 1 x 20 mm cannon.
Operators
Specifications (Cp 1120 D-1)
General characteristics
- Crew: 1
- Length: 8.2 m (26 ft 11 in)
- Wingspan: 9.4 m (30 ft 10 in)
- Height: 3.60 m (11 ft 10 in)
- Wing area: 14.6 m2 (157 sq ft)
- Empty weight: 1,810 kg (3,990 lb)
- Max takeoff weight: 2,500 kg (5,512 lb)
- Fuel capacity: 300 kg (660 lb)
- Powerplant: 1 × Kamala 1710 V-12 inverted liquid-cooled piston engines, 876 kW (1,175 hp)
- Propellers: 3-bladed constant-speed propellers, 2.8 m (9 ft 2 in) diameter
Performance
- Maximum speed: 670 km/h (416 mph; 362 kn) at 6,000 m (19,685 ft)
- Cruise speed: 552 km/h (343 mph; 298 kn)
- Range: 2,020 km (1,255 mi; 1,091 nmi)
- Combat range: 1,010 km (628 mi; 545 nmi)
- Service ceiling: 11,000 m (36,000 ft)
- Time to altitude: 6,000 m (19,685 ft) in 7.8 minutes
Armament
- Guns:
- 2 × 7.93 mm (0.312 in) Basu HV 80 machine guns in wings
- 1 x 20 mm (0.787 in) Basu FG 20-20 cannon firing through propeller hub
Avionics
Kol 89Z radio