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Breda Ba.15

The Breda Ba.15 was a two-seat light aircraft produced in Italy in 1928.

It was a high-wing braced monoplane of conventional design that seated the pilot and passenger in tandem within a fully enclosed cabin.

Ba.15s were fitted with a wide variety of engines.

The most popularly selected was the Walter Venus, but examples also left the factory powered by Cirrus III, de Havilland Gipsy, Colombo S.63, Walter Mars I, and Isotta-Fraschini 80 T engines.

Breda Ba.15s took part in several competitions.

Among others, in August 1930 Col. Sacchi won the race Giro Aereo d’Italia flying Breda Ba.15S

(Altogether 10 Bredas took part in this contest).

Besides their civil use, some Ba.15s were operated by the Regia Aeronautica.

An example is preserved at the Museo Nazionale della Scienza e della Tecnologia in Milan.

One Ba.15 was bought in 1929 by an Italian resident in Paraguay, Nicola Bo.

The plane had the Italian civil registration I-AAUG.

This plane was later sold to the Paraguayan Military Aviation and used in the Chaco War as a light transport plane with the serial T-8.

It was destroyed in an accident in 1933.

Variants

Ba.15 

Two-seat cabin touring, sporting aircraft.
Ba.15S 

Improved version.

Specifications

Crew

1 pilot

Capacity

1 passenger

Length

7 m (23 ft 0 in)

Wingspan

10.8 m (35 ft 5 in)

Height

2.25 m (7 ft 5 in)

Wing area

16 m2 (170 sq ft)

Gross weight

770 kg (1,698 lb)

Powerplant

1 × Walter Venus 7-cyl air-cooled radial piston engine,

82 kW (110 hp)

Propellers

2-bladed fixed pitch propeller

Performance

Maximum speed

200 km/h (120 mph, 110 kn)

Endurance

6 hours

Service ceiling

4,000 m (13,000 ft).

 

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