Turbay T-1 Tucán Explained
The Turbay T-1 Tucán[1] was an Argentine single-engined single-seat light touring monoplane designed by Alfredo Turbay and built by . It first flew in April 1943.[2]
Design
The Tucán is a parasol-wing braced monoplane with a fixed cantilever type landing gear, tailwheel and powered by a 650NaN0 Continental A65 air-cooled piston engine. It had an enclosed cockpit just aft of the wing trailing-edge with a sliding canopy.
References
Bibliography
- Book: Bridgman, Leonard . Jane's Fighting Aircraft of World War II. 1988 . Crescent Books. New York. 0-517-67964-7.
Notes and References
- Web site: ALFREDO TURBAY. es. aracuan.com.ar. 2 August 2014. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20150923172841/http://www.aracuan.com.ar/turbay.htm. 23 September 2015.
- Book: Mondey, David . The Complete illustrated encyclopedia of the world's aircraft . New Burlington Books . 1978 . 0-906286-39-5 . 293.