Oeffag G Explained

The Oeffag G , sometimes known as the Oeffag Type G or Oeffag-Mickl G, was a three-engined reconnaissance flying boat built in Austria during the First World War and deployed by the Kaiserlich und Königlich Seefliegerkorps (K.u.K. Seefliegerkorps) (Imperial and Royal naval aviation).

Design and development

The Oeffag G was a relatively large flying boat, following the design practises used for the smaller Lohner flying boats developed in Austria contemporaneously. The aircraft was a biplane with the wings mounted above a slender all-wood monocoque fuselage/hull, with the biplane tail unit mounted above the extreme tail end of the fuselage. The three pusher engines were mounted in open nacelles, supported by struts, between the main-planes. Early aircraft were armed with a large 66mm D/20 cannon in the front cockpit and later machines had a machine gun fitted on a flexible mount aft of the wings.

Operational history

Most of the ten aircraft completed saw service with the K.u.K. Seefliegerkorps, from 1916, operating principally from the Pola Naval station, (now Pula), on the Istria peninsula, in what is now Croatia.

Variants

The Oeffag G was developed as each aircraft was built, but the major differences involved the powerplants and the tail unit.

G.1 and G.3:powered by 150kW Hiero 6 cylinder water-cooled inline piston engines, built with the original biplane tail unit mounted on struts above the fuselage, fitted with triple rudders.
  • G.4 to G.7 :powered by 185kW Austro-Daimler 6 cylinder engines, with the original biplane tail unit
  • G.8 and G.9:powered by 230kW Hiero 6 engines, introducing a monoplane strut mounted tailplane with a single fin and rudder mounted on the fuselage and tailplane.
  • G.10 and G.11: aircraft not completed
  • G.12:powered by 185kW Austro-Daimler 6 cylinder engines, with the later monoplane tail unit.
  • Operators

    Austro-Hungarian Empire

    Further reading

    External links