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RWD (aircraft manufacturer)

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RWD was a Polish aircraft construction bureau in the late 1920s and 1930s. It started as a team of three young designers, Stanisław Rogalski, Stanisław Wigura and Jerzy Drzewiecki, whose names gave an acronym RWD.

Jerzy Drzewiecki and Jerzy Wedrychowski by the RWD-7
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Jerzy Drzewiecki and Jerzy Wedrychowski by the RWD-7

They started work during studies at Warsaw University of Technology. In December 1925, with other student constructors, they set up workshops of Aviation Section of Students' Mechanical Club, where they manufactured their first designs. Apart from constructing, J. Drzewiecki was a test pilot of their designs, while S. Wigura flew as a mechanic in competitions. On September 11, 1932, Stanislaw Wigura died in an air crash in the RWD-6 during a storm. The designation letter RWD remained for new designs, since Jerzy Wędrychowski joined the team. In 1933, Rogalski, Wigura and Wędrychowski founded the company Doświadczalne Warsztaty Lotnicze (DWL, Aeronautical Experimental Works) in Warsaw, which became a manufacturer of further RWD aircraft.

The RWD team started with constructing light sportsplanes. Early designs RWD-2 and RWD-4 were built in a small series and used in Polish sports aviation, including their debut at the Challenge 1930 international contest. Their next designs performed particularly well in competitions - the RWD-6 won the Challenge 1932 and RWD-9s won the Challenge 1934 international contest. The sportsplane RWD-5 was the lightest plane to fly across the Atlantic in 1933. Three types saw mass production: the RWD-8, becoming Polish basic military trainer, the touring plane RWD-13 and the reconnaissance plane RWD-14 Czapla (1938).

Other important designs were aerobatic plane RWD-10 (1933), aerobatic-trainer plane RWD-17 (1937) and light sport plane RWD-21 (1939). The World War II prevented from further development and serial production of later RWD designs, and put an end to the RWD construction bureau and the DWL workshops.

List of RWD designs

List of designs by RWD
Design First flight Type Seats No. built
RWD-1 1928 sports high-wing, 1 engine 2 1
RWD-2 1929 sports high-wing, 1 engine 2 4
RWD-3 1930 sports high-wing, 1 engine 2 1
RWD-4 1930 sports high-wing, 1 engine 2 9
RWD-5 1931 sports high-wing, 1 engine 2 20
RWD-6 1932 sports high-wing, 1 engine 2 3
RWD-7 1931 sports high-wing, 1 engine 1 2 1
RWD-8 1933 primary trainer high-wing, 1 engine 2 ~ 470
RWD-9 1933 sports high-wing, 1 engine 4 8
RWD-10 1933 aerobatics high-wing, 1 engine 1 23
RWD-11 1936 passenger low-wing, 2 engines 2+6 1
RWD-12 (unfinished) observation plane high wing, 1 engine 2 2 0
RWD-13 1935 sports and touring high-wing, 1 engine 3 ~100
RWD-14 Czapla 1935 reconnaissance aircraft, high-wing, 1 engine 2 65 3
RWD-15 1937 touring high-wing, 1 engine 5 6 (+10 unfinished)
RWD-16 1936 sports low-wing, 1 engine 2 1
RWD-16bis 1938 sports low-wing, 1 engine 2 2
RWD-17 1937 trainer-aerobatics high-wing, 1 engine 2 24
RWD-17W 1938 trainer floatplane, 1 engine 2 64
RWD-18 (19395) touring and ambulance high-wing, 2 engines 5 (1 unfinished)
RWD-19 1938 sports low-wing, 1 engine 2 1
RWD-20 1937 experimental touring high-wing, 1 engine 6 2 1
RWD-21 1939 sports and touring low-wing, 1 engine 2 4 (+10 unfinished)
RWD-22 (late 1940) torpedo floatplane project, 2 engines 3 0
RWD-23 1938 trainer low-wing, 1 engine7 2 1
RWD-24 (late 1940) light bomber project, 2 engines 8 3 0
RWD-25 (1939) low-wing, fixed-wheels fighter project, 1 engine 1 0
RWD-26 (late 1940) trainer low-wing project, 1 engine 2 0

Notes:

  1. Built as a record plane, it set off after less than 20 metres runway.
  2. Derived from RWD-8.
  3. Produced by the LWS, all commissioned by Polish Airforce.
  4. Out of 125 ordered by the Polish Army (120) and Polish Navy (5).
  5. First flight planned in December 1939; it was one of the first two engine civilian planes in the world.
  6. Based on a RWD-9 prototype, designed to test a 3-wheel gear for the RWD-18.
  7. Designed as a successor of the RWD-8.
  8. Land-based version of the RWD-22.

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