The DFS 193 was a planned experimental German aircraft of the 1930s planned by Deutsche Forschungsanstalt für Segelflug (DFS). Designed by Professor Alexander Lippisch and a DFS employee named Roth, it resembled Lippisch's Storch IX and the Gotha Go 147.
Design and development
The DFS 193 was a two-seat tailless aircraft designed to explore the military potential of this layout. It was powered by an Argus As 10 C, of 240hp (179kW). Although a mockup was tested in a wind tunnel in 1936, it was abandoned in 1938 because it did not show any improvement over traditional designs.[1] The aircraft was therefore never built.
Specifications
Data fromThe Delta Wing: History and Development[1]
General characteristics
Crew: two
Length: 5.97m (19ft 7in)
Wingspan: 11.06m (36ft 3in)
Height: 3.1m (10ft 2in)
Wing area: 17.08m2 (183.8sqft)
Empty weight: 750kg (1,653lb)
Max takeoff weight: 1,065kg (2,348lb)
Powerplant: 1 × Argus As 10 C 8-cylinder, air-cooled, 90° inverted Vee piston aircraft engine, 180kW (240hp)
Notes
12Lippisch, Alexander (1981). The Delta wing: development and history. Iowa State University Press.