Göppingen Gö 1 Explained

The Göppingen Gö 1 Wolf was a single-seat glider produced in Germany from 1935.

Design and development

Conceived as a rival to the Grunau Baby, it was the first product of the newly formed Sportflugzeugbau Göppingen Martin Schempp firm. It was a conventional, strut-braced high-wing design of wooden construction, incorporating a wheel aft of the loaded centre of gravity to ease ground handling, as well as aero-tow and winch launches.[1]

Of very similar construction to the Grunau Baby, the Wolf had strut-braced high-set monoplane wings supported on a pylon aft of the cockpit. The hexagonal-section fuselage was constructed largely of wood with plywood skinning and the wings and tail surfaces were plywood-skinned back to the main spars with wooden-framed fabric-covered rear portions. The undercarriage consisted of rubber-sprung skids under the nose and tail with a fixed mainwheel aft of the loaded centre of gravity.[1]

Operational history

Stressed for aerobatics, one example was purchased by Alan Cobham's National Aviation Day displays, and was flown under tow directly to London by Joan Meakin. During early flying with the Wolf it gained a reputation for dangerous spinning characteristics, which resulted in the Gö 1 being grounded in 1938, pending incorporation of modified, longer-chord, slotted ailerons.[1]

The cost of the required modifications proved uneconomic for the majority of owners and the majority of Gö 1s never flew again and only three are known to have survived in museums.[1] One is still operational in Germany at Schempp-Hirth GmbH. On June 30, 2018, Tilo Holighaus made a 74 km cross country flight with it.[2]

Variants

TG-20: Four Gö 1s impressed by the USAAF and allocated serials 42-57168,42-57175, 42-57195, and 42-57204[3]

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Simons, Martin . Sailplanes 1920-1945. 2006 . Konigswinter . 3-9806773-4-6 . Werbung & Verlag GmbH . 97–99 .
  2. Web site: OLC Flight information - Tilo Holighaus (DE) - 30.06.2018.
  3. https://usmilitaryaircraft.files.wordpress.com/2015/05/airf-tg.pdf