
Laister-Kauffman TG-4 | |
---|---|
Pays | Usa |
Type | Planeur |
Fabricant | Laister-Kauffman |
Variantes | Bartos/Nobel BN-1 Phantom |
Lla Laister-Kauffman TG-4 (désigné LK-10 Yankee Doodle 2 par son concepteur) était un planeur produit aux États-Unis pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale pour la formation des pilotes de planeurs cargo. C’était une conception de planeur conventionnelle avec un fuselage de construction en tube d’acier et des ailes et une queue en bois, écorchées partout avec du tissu. Le pilote et l’instructeur étaient assis en tandem sous une longue verrière.
Laister-Kauffman TG-4A se promener | |
---|---|
Photographe | Vladimir Yakubov |
Localisation | Musée planes of fame, Chino |
Photos | 26 |

Voir aussi :
Lla Laister-Kauffman TG-4 was a two-seat training glider used by the United States Army Air Forces during World War II. It was designed by John K. Laister and Lee Kauffman and manufactured by the Laister-Kauffman Aircraft Company in St. Louis, Missouri. The TG-4 was based on the civilian LK-10 Yankee Doodle glider, which had won several soaring competitions in the late 1930s and early 1940s. The TG-4 had a high-wing configuration with a fabric-covered steel-tube fuselage and wooden wings. It had a fixed landing gear with a nose skid and a tail wheel.
Lla TG-4 could be launched by a tow plane or a winch. The TG-4 was used to train pilots for glider operations, such as towing, landing, and cross-country flying. The TG-4 also served as a liaison and observation aircraft in some units. The TG-4 was one of the most widely used training gliders in the USAAF, with over 1,000 units produced. Some of them were also used by the United States Navy and the Royal Canadian Air Force. The TG-4 was retired from service after the war and many of them were sold to civilian owners. Some of them are still flying today as historical aircraft.
Vues : 1382