A parasol monoplane fighter of 1926, powered by a 450 hp W-12 Skoda L (HS 50).
Monoplane
Letov Š.12
A prototype single-seat parasol monoplane fighter of 1924.
Power was from a 220 hp V-8 Hispano-Suiza 8ba.
Letov Š.11
A twin-engined commercial monoplane possibly not completed.
Letov Š-8 / Sm-8
A single-seat, shoulder-wing monoplane experimetal aircraft of 1922.
Fitted with an annular radiator and a 450 hp W-12 Napier Lion II.
The Sm-8 designation was possibly applied to a projected or commercial variant.
Letord et Niepce 1909 monoplane

The 1909 Letord et Niepce monoplane was designed and built by Letord and Niepce in France
Span: 31’6″
Length: 27.11″
Weight: 772 lb
LET Mont Piper UL / TUL-09 Tulak

The UL Tulak (Rambler) is a side-by-side, factory-built or kit. There is no kit version for the Piper UL.
The Tulak was certified in 1996 and Piper in 1998. The Tulak was marketed by HB Flugtechnik as Dandy and the UL Piper as the Cubby. German name for the Piper UL being Tandem Tulak.

The Piper UL and TUL-09 Tulak feature a high constant-chord wing braced by V struts, with optional tapered or downturned wingtips. The wings fold back for storage and transportation. A Clark Y wing section, thickness/chord ratio 12.5 per cent, is used. Flying controls are conventional and manual wth a flight-adjustable trim tab in each elevator. Plain flaps are fitted.
The fuselage is fabric-covered metal tube and two-spar wooden wing. The engine cowling is metal, and some composites are used.
The landing gear is tailwheel type, fixed, with a steerable tailwheel; 420×150 mainwheels with bungee suspension and cable-operated brakes. Mainwheel spats optional.
Engine options include 58.8 kW (78.9 hp) or 73.5 kW (98.6 hp) BMW; 58.8 kW (78.9 hp) Verner; 62.5 kW (83.8 hp) Tatra; and 51.5 kW (69.0 hp) Limbach..
In total 55 kits and complete aircraft were built by the end of 2002. The ninth factory-built machine was registered in Poland in 2002. Known sales were in Czech Republic, France, Germany and Poland.
HB Flugtechnik marketed the Piper UL and TUL-09 Tulak as the Dandy and Tulak.

Piper UL / TUL-09 Tulak
Engine: Rotax 503 UL-2V, 37.0 kW (49.6 hp)
Propeller: SportProp three-blade, ground-adjustable pitch, glass fibre
Span: 9.82 m (32 ft 2½ in)
Length: 5.96 m (19 ft 6½ in)
Fuel capacity: 50 litres (13.2 US gallons; 11.0 Imp gallons).
Max cruising speed: 70 kt (130 km/h; 81 mph)
Piper UL
Engine: Rotax 912, 80 hp
Wing span: 9.6 m
Wing area: 13 sq.m
MAUW: 450 kg
Empty weight: 250 kg
Fuel capacity: 50 lt
Max speed: 180 kph
Cruise speed: 160 kph
Minimum speed: 55 kph
Climb rate: 5 m/s
Fuel consumption: 8 lt/hr
Certification: C2
Seats: 2
Price (1998): 58 780 DM
Let L.610

The development of the 40-seater L-610 started in 1985 at Let Kunovice Aircraft Industries in former Czechoslovakia. The Czech plane maker wanted to develop a bigger successor to its popular L-410.
After the collapse of the Soviet Union, Let tried to adapt its new airplane to the global market by westernizing its avionics. Eight prototypes were made and the forty-passenger L 610 regional airliner first flew December 1988 and L 610G version followed in December 1992.
But due to a lack of funding, the program was eventually abandoned in 2006 and Let went on to focus on the L-410 and on gliders.
In 2008, 51% of Let’s shares were acquired by the Ural Mining and Metallurgical Company (UGMK), with the prospect of developing the market of Russian regional aircraft. In 2018, Deputy Minister of Industry and Trade of the Russian Federation Oleg Bocharov announced the decision of acquiring the documentation for the L-610 in order to continue its development.
While the development of the new L-610 is carried out on the basis of the existing scientific and technical work, it should differ from the original prototype. “The maximum take-off mass, cargo capacity, flight range and speed of the aircraft will increase, moreover, even the fuselage of the aircraft will be presented in a more modern design,” claimed the director-general of UZGA Vadim Badeha. The type certificate is expected for 2023, with mass production commencing the same year.
Thirteen years after it was abandoned, Polar Airlines and the Ural Civil Aviation Plant (UZGA) brought back the L-610 to life with an order for 10 of the regional aircraft, to be delivered between 2023 and 2025.

With 10 aircraft ordered at the MAKS 2019 air show, the L-610 should replace the An-24 and An-26 within Russian Polar Airlines’ fleet. The partially state-owned regional carrier, subsidiary of Yakutia Airlines, already operates three L-410s.
Let L.410 Turbolet / L.420

The PT-6A-powered prototype for the L.410 series first flew on April 16, 1969. Production versions include the L.410A, AF, M and UVP, which have Walter M601 turboprops.
Let L.410 Turbolet / L.420 Article

The L-410UVP-E production version succeeded earlier variants and entered service in 1986. Its main changes included a modified interior to take accommodation to 19 passengers, a reinforced wing for optional streamlined tip tanks (boosting range by 40 per cent) and modifications to the 750 shp (559 kW) Motorlet Walter M601 E turboprops with five-blade propellers.

The L.410UVP-E version features a strengthened wing, and seating for four more passengers, taking total accommodation to 19. Military utility versions exploiting the L.410’s rough-field capability are available for a range of duties, including transport, medevac, para-dropping, and training.

More than 860 L-410s were in civil and military use by 1990.
A higher-powered L 420 variant first flew November 1993.
1978 Let 410 Turbolet
Engine : 2 x Walter M 601 A, 537 shp
Length: 44.652 ft / 13.61 m
Wingspan : 57.349 ft / 17.48 m
Wing area : 353.059 sq.ft / 32.8 sq.m
Max take off weight : 12568.5 lb / 5700.0 kg
Weight empty : 8202.6 lb / 3720.0 kg
Max. speed : 205 kt / 380 km/h
Cruising speed : 194 kt / 360 km/h
Initial climb rate : 1476.38 ft/min / 7.5 m/s
Service ceiling : 19685 ft / 6000 m
Wing load : 35.67 lb/sq.ft / 174.0 kg/sq.m
Range : 626 nm / 1160 km
Crew : 2
Payload : 17 Pax
L-410 UVP-E Turbolet
Engine: 2 x Walter M601D.
Installed pwr: 1120 kW.
Span: 20 m.
Length: 14.5 m.
Wing area: 35.2 sq.m.
Empty wt: 3970 kg.
MTOW: 6400 kg.
Payload: 1615 kg.
Cruise speed: 375 kph.
Initial ROC: 430 m / min.
Ceiling: 4200 m.
T/O run: 425 m.
Ldg run: 320 m.
Fuel internal: 1290 lt.
Range/payload: 1380 km with 900 kg.
Capacity: 19 pax.
Let L-200 Morava / L-201 / L-200 / Ceskoslovenske Zavody A Letecke, Narodni Podnik L-200 Morava

The Let L-200 Morava light twin-engine transport was preceded in production at the Let factory by the license-built Aero Ae 45. In 1955 the newly created design team led by Ladislav Smrcek of the Czechoslovak State Aircraft Factory decided to proceed with a proprietary design for a more modern twin with seating capacity of five and powered by a pair of then new 210 hp Avia M 337 engines, but as they were not yet available, the prototype made do with the less powerful Walter Minor 6-III engines of 160 hp each. While maintaining similar characteristics of western twin engine aircraft of the time, updated features of the Morava included twin tails, standard thermal wing de-icing equipment and inverted inline engines.

Three prototypes were built. The first, designated XL-200 (OK-LNA) made its maiden flight on 9 April 1957. It was followed in flight testing by the second prototype (OK-LNB) while the third was used for static testing. The aircraft sported clean, elegant lines. During the same year the factory built a run of 10 pre-production L-200s, one of these aircraft undergoing government flight testing in 1958. The program was successful, and the airplane was ordered into full-scale production. One L-200 was converted into a prototype of the M-337-powered production model L-200A. This aircraft incorporated minor changes, consisting mostly of new two-blade V-410 propellers, a cockpit lowered by 43mm, a modified tailfin design as well as longer engine nacelles. It was completed in 1959 and shown at the Paris Air Show in July of that year. The aircraft underwent government trials in the fall of 1959, having been fitted with M-337 engines. The trials once again proved successful and were completed the following July. The first production L-200A took to the skies in February 1960.
L-200B and C models were not produced. The second production variant was the L-200D, modified according to Soviet Aeroflot demands. It was fitted with new three-blade propellers V-506 of a smaller diameter and some minor improvements, such as dust filters. It also received more comprehensive navigation equipment. The prototype (OK-NIA) was converted from the L-200A prototype in 1960 and tested in 1961-1963.
In all, 367 L-200s were built by 1964, including 3 prototypes and 197 L-200D (eight L-200A and the L-200A prototype were converted to L-200D as well). 5 aircraft were manufactured from parts by Libis in Yugoslavia.
A further development was 6-place L-210 (also known as L-201; registration OK-PHB), converted from one L-200D in 1966, powered with 245 hp M-338 engines, but it was not ordered by the airlines and was not produced.
The pre-series aircraft L-200 were distributed for testing: 5 to the Czechoslovak airline Agrolet (OK-MEA – MEE), 2 to the Czechoslovak Air Force and 2 to Aeroflot in the USSR.
Aeroflot, who used them as air taxis, was the largest single user of Moravas – 68 L-200A and 113 L-200D, final deliveries taking place in 1966. In the 1970s however, the Soviet Union sold or withdrew its aircraft from use, in favour of indigenous designs.

About 100 Moravas were used for civilian purposes in Czechoslovakia by aeroclubs Svazarm (about 50), the airlines Agrolet (from 1969 Slov-Air) and Czechoslovak Airlines (45) and by businesses, such as Škoda. 20 were used by the Czechoslovak Air Force (16 of which L-200A), among others, for training. About 50 were sold to Poland, where they were used mostly as air ambulances and in aeroclubs. Some other countries had smaller fleets of Moravas.
During the Cold War Era, not many light aircraft were exported from behind the Iron Curtain. 144 L-200A were exported to 15 countries. They were used in Australia, Argentina, Cuba, Hungary, West Germany, Great Britain, Egypt, India, Italy, Poland, South Africa, USSR and Yugoslavia. L-200D were exported to Bulgaria, Cuba, Egypt, France, Hungary, GDR, Great Britain, India, Indonesia, Italy, Poland, Switzerland, Sweden, USSR and Yugoslavia.
Small number of Moravas are still used (as of 2008), mainly in Czech Republic, Slovakia Poland and Ukraine.
L-200
Engines: 2 x Walter Minor 6-III, 160 hp
L 200A
Number built: 160
L 200D
Engines: 2 × Walter M337, 160 kW (210 hp) each
Propellers: 3-bladed Type V506 constant-speed, 1.75 m (5 ft 9 in) diameter
Wingspan: 12.31 m (40 ft 5 in)
Wing area: 17.28 m2 (186.0 sq ft)
Length: 8.61 m (28 ft 3 in)
Height: 2.25 m (7 ft 5 in)
Empty weight: 1,330 kg (2,932 lb)
Max takeoff weight: 1,950 kg (4,299 lb)
Fuel capacity: 420 L (110 US gal; 92 imp gal)
Maximum speed: 290 km/h (180 mph, 160 kn) at sea level
Cruise speed: 256 km/h (159 mph, 138 kn) at 2,500 m (8,200 ft) (econ cruise)
Range: 1,710 km (1,060 mi, 920 nmi)
Service ceiling: 5,700 m (18,700 ft)
Rate of climb: 6.4 m/s (1,260 ft/min)
Takeoff distance to 15 m (50 ft): 390 m (1,280 ft)
Landing distance from 15 m (50 ft): 480 m (1,570 ft)
Baggage capacity: 297 lb / 135 kg
Crew: 1
Capacity: 4 passengers

Let L-40 Meta-Sokol

First flying in 1954 the Omnipol L-40 Meta-Sokol originated from Czechoslovakia. The initial version was a three-seater with either a 105 hp Walter Minor 4-III or 115/140 hp M 332 engine.
The four-seater is powered by a 110hp Let M-332 four-cylinder inline engine. Its retractable undercarriage is a reverse tricycle, though the technique is just the same as a normal taildragger.
Late production aircraft had provision for wingtip auxiliary fuel tanks.

Engine: M 332, 110 hp / 140hp supercharged
Wingspan: 32 ft 9 in / 10.00 m
Length: 24 ft 9 in / 7.54 m
Wing area: 157.154 sq.ft / 14.6 sq.m
Weight empty: 1177.5 lb / 534.0 kg
Max take-off weight: 2028 lb / 920 kg
Max. speed: 130 kts / 240 km/h
Cruising speed: 111 kts / 205 km/h / 129 mph
Initial climb rate: 630 ft/min / 192 m/min
Service ceiling: 14,765 ft / 4500 m
Wing load: 13.12 lb/sq.ft / 64.00 kg/sq.m
Range: 458 nm / 8500 km / 528 mi
Crew: 1
Payload: 2-3 Pax

