ICA IS-28 explained
The
ICA IS-28 is a two-seat
sailplane produced in
Romania in the 1970s. An all-metal
aircraft of conventional design with a T-tail, it was originally produced with 15-metre wings, but in 1973, production shifted to the
IS-28B with 17-metre wings and numerous
aerodynamic refinements. These included a smaller tail with decreased dihedral, decreased dihedral on the wings, and redesigned
fuselage contours. This version first flew on 26 April 1973 and was subsequently produced in versions with flaps (
IS-28B2) and without (
IS-28B1). Around 100 had been built by the early 1980s, with a substantial number sold for export. On April 7, 1979,
Tom Knauff and R. Tawse set a world record with the IS-28 B2 glider, covering a distance of 829 kilometres on a predetermined out-and-return course from the
Ridge Soaring Gliderport in
Julian, Pennsylvania.
The IS-28B2 is depicted in the film Escape From New York (1980)
The IS-28 was also produced as a motorglider, initially as just a powered version of the IS-28B2 (designated the IS-28M1) and then as the more radically redesigned IS-28M2. This version had an entirely new forward fuselage offering side-by-side seating for the two occupants, wings relocated to a low-set position on the fuselage, and tailwheel undercarriage with main units that semi-retracted backwards into the wings. The rear fuselage, empennage, and outer wing panels remained identical with the sailplane version.
The IS-29 is a single-seat sailplane that was designed and manufactured to complement training carried out in the IS-28 two-seater.
The IS-30 is a refined IS-28B2, identical in most respects other than having all-metal control surfaces (where the IS-28 has fabric-covered surfaces) and a re-designed horizontal stabiliser.
Variants
- IS-28 - sailplane with 15 metre wings
- IS-28B
- IS-28B1 - sailplane with 17 metre wings and DFS-style airbrakes
- IS-28B2 - similar to IS-28B1 with flaps and Schempp-Hirth-style airbrakes
- IS-28M
- IS-28M1 (aka IAR-34)- tandem seat motorglider version of IS-28B1 with Limbach SL.1700E1 engine
- IS-28M2 - motor-glider with side-by-side seating and three-point undercarriage
- IAR-28M2A - IS-28M2 with new wing, split flaps and Limbach L.2000E01 engine
- IS-30 - all-metal IS-28B2 with new tailplane.
- IAR-46 - trainer version of IS-28M2 with reduced wingspan and Rotax 912A engine
Operators
- Romanian Air Force - received 10 IAR-28MA from 1984.[1]
- The - still using IS-28B2 and IS-29D2 for glider pilots in training and performer pilots. A fleet of 5 IS-28M2 motor-gliders were restored and declared able to fly again.
Further reading
- Barnett . Cliff . IS-30: Romania's smooth two-seater . . 20 November 1982 . 1484–85 . 2008-05-07 .
- Book: Coates, Andrew . Jane's World Sailplanes and Motor Gliders . 1978 . MacDonald and Jane's . London . 124 . 0-354-01119-7 .
- Book: Hardy, Michael . Gliders and Sailplanes of the World . 1982 . Ian Allan . Shepperton . 54–55 .
- Book: Simpson, R. W. . Airlife's General Aviation . 1995 . Airlife Publishing . Shrewsbury . 342 . 1-85310-577-5 .
- Book: Taylor, Michael J. H. . Jane's Encyclopedia of Aviation . 1989 . Studio Editions . London . 528 . 0-7106-0710-5 .
Notes and References
- Airscene: Romania. . April 1984 . 25 . 4. 161. 0306-5634.