Valtion Pyorremyrsky

Conceived to make maximum use of indigenous materials with emphasis on suitability for operation from small Finnish front-line airfields under the most severe climatic conditions, the Pybrremyrsky (Whirlwind) was designed by Dipl-Ing Torsti R Verkkola. Powered by a 12-cylinder inverted-Vee Daimler-Benz DB 605AC engine rated at 1475hp, the Pyorremyrsky had a single-spar wooden wing with plywood skinning and a fuselage of steel-tube construction with detachable metal panels forward and a wooden ply-covered mono-coque aft. Armament comprised one engine-mounted 20mm MG 151 cannon and two 12.7mm LKK/42 machine guns, provision being made for two 200kg bombs underwing. Prototype construction was slowed by the preoccupation of the VL with higher priority programmes, and work on the Pyorremyrsky, which had languished for several months, came to a halt with the Finnish-Soviet Armistice of 4 September 1944. Somewhat surprisingly, construction of the fighter was resumed later, in January 1945. A DB 605AC engine was removed from a Bf 109G and installed in the prototype, which flew for the first time on 21 November 1945. The Pyorremyrsky could outclimb the Bf 109G-6 and was more manoeuvrable, but, as no funds were available for the purchase of new aircraft for Ilmavoimat and sufficient Bf 109Gs remained to equip the Ilmavoimien fighter force that was permitted under the Armistice terms, the prototype was grounded after 30 hours flying and the programme terminated.

Max take-off weight: 3310 kg / 7297 lb
Empty weight: 2619 kg / 5774 lb
Wingspan: 10.38 m / 34 ft 1 in
Length: 9.85 m / 32 ft 4 in
Height: 3.89 m / 13 ft 9 in
Wing area: 19.00 sq.m / 204.51 sq ft
Max. speed: 620 km/h / 385 mph

Valtion Humu

The Humu – literally “Reckless” – was produced by Valtion Lentokonetehdas. It was not that the Humu was unconventional in any respect. It was a copy of a seven-year-old American design adapted to make use of locally-available materials and captured equipment, and built without benefit of licence or assistance from the parent manufacturer. The Finnish air arm, Ilmavoimat, had acquired 43 Brewster B-239 shipboard fighters that had been declared surplus to US Navy requirements. These had proved singularly successful in Ilmavoimien service, and, in 1942, it was proposed that an attempt be made by the VL to remedy a shortfall of fighters of this type by producing a copy. Because of shortages of metal, this was to make as much use as possible of wood and to embody so-called “war booty” instrumentation and power plant – equipment captured from the Soviet forces by the Finns themselves and similar equipment captured by the Wehrmacht and sold to the Finns. The task of designing an entirely new wooden wing was assigned to M T Vainio, who was also responsible for the overall project, and, in October 1942, an order was placed with the VL for four prototypes, the intention at that time being to build a series of 90 aircraft. The chosen engine was the 930hp Shvetsov M-63, which was flown on 5 June 1943 in a B-239. Static testing of the wooden wing was not entirely satisfactory. Nevertheless, in September 1943, orders were confirmed for five prototypes of the Humu and 55 production aircraft. The wooden wing was found to add 250kg to air-frame weight, however, and the transfer of the fuel tanks from the wing to the fuselage shifted the CG aft, adversely affecting manoeuvrability. Initiation of series production was, therefore, delayed pending results of prototype tests, and in the summer of 1944 the programme was terminated as it was concluded that the Humu would have inadequate combat capability by the time it achieved service. Only one prototype Humu was completed, and this, having an armament of three 12.7mm guns and a mix of Finnish and Soviet instrumentation, flew on 8 August 1944. The M-63 engine failed to give its full power during subsequent flight testing, but 19 hrs 50 min were flown before, in 1945, the sole example of this aircraft was placed in storage.

The performance of VL Humu was not measured. The information of maximum speed is based on tests of wooden wing and M-63 motor in Brester 239 (BW-392) October 1942. BW-392 was 350 kg heavier than VL Humu and those days the Finns did not adjust the M-63 correctly due to lack of the instruction manual. The Finns got the instruction manual from Germany in 1943.

The prototype of VL Humu (HM-671) is in The Aviation Museum of Central Finland in Tikkakoski, Finland.

Max take-off weight: 2895 kg / 6382 lb
Empty weight: 2050 kg / 4520 lb
Length: 8.03 m / 26 ft 4 in
Max. speed: 430 km/h / 267 mph

Valtion Myrsky

On 8 June 1939, the VL (Valtion Lentokonetehdas) received a contract from the Ministry of Defence to design a new single-seat fighter. Chief designer was Dipl Ing A Ylinen, who was assisted by T Verkkola and M Vainio, and, within nine months of receiving the definitive prototype contract on 20 December 1940, the prototype of the Myrsky (Storm) was in final assembly. A conventional low-wing cantilever monoplane, the Myrsky had a plywood-skinned two-spar wooden wing and a welded steel-tube fuselage covered by dural panels forward and fabric aft. Power was provided by a Pratt & Whitney R-1830-SC3-G Twin Wasp 14-cylinder radial rated at 1115hp for take-off. The prototype was flown on 23 December 1941, but immediately encountered the first of what were to be many teething troubles.
On 30 May 1942, the VL received a contract for three development aircraft which were to embody numerous detail structural and other changes, these including an increase in wing area of 1.3sq.m and a change in armament from two 12.7mm and four 7.7mm guns to three (in first and second) or four (in third aircraft) of the larger-calibre weapons. The first of these was completed on 30 April 1943, but crashed a week later, and the second suffered a wheels-up landing three months later, and broke up in the air shortly after resuming flight test. The third was evaluated in service, and, on 17 March 1944, lost both wings in a dive.
In the meantime, VL had initiated production of the first series model which was referred to as the Myrsky II Series. All the progressive changes that had been introduced in the pre-series aircraft were incorporated, armament was standardised on four 12.7mm LKK/42 guns, and by the end of July 1944 the VL had completed 14 of the II Series aircraft, a further 16 having been delivered by the truce of 4 September. Production continued after the truce and the last five of the 47 built were delivered straight to the Air Force Depot on 30 December 1944 without flight testing. The Myrsky II series was assigned to a tactical reconnaissance squadron (TLeLv 12) which received its first aircraft on 23 July 1944, 20 being delivered to the squadron before the Armistice, and a second squadron (TLeLv 16) initiating conversion to the Myrsky meanwhile. The Myrsky was flown operationally over Lapland against the Wehrmacht under the terms of the Finnish-Soviet agreement, but Ilmavoimat flew this fighter only to a limited extent, and the service’s doubts as to its durability and sturdiness, despite continuous reinforcement of various components, finally came to a head on 9 May 1947 when a Myrsky broke up in a dive, all aircraft of this type then being grounded.

Max take-off weight: 3213 kg / 7083 lb
Empty weight: 2337 kg / 5152 lb
Wingspan: 11.00 m / 36 ft 1 in
Length: 8.35 m / 27 ft 5 in
Height: 3.00 m / 10 ft 10 in
Wing area: 18.00 sq.m / 193.75 sq ft
Max. speed: 535 km/h / 332 mph
Range: 500 km / 311 miles

Valmet TL-III Tuuli

The TL-III Tuuli was a primary trainer for the Finnish Air Force.

The wing is a light alloy stressed-skin structure. With a main spar at 25% chord. The slotted ailerons are light-alloyed covered. Aerodynamically and mass balanced, and fitted with balance tabs adjustable on ground. The landing flaps open 40 degrees, and the ailerons are coupled to the landing flaps so when the flaps fully open the ailerons are deflected 15 degrees.

The fuselage is a light-metal stressed-skin construction. Two main frames, one at the instrument panel and one behind the cargo compartment, divide the fuselage into three separately manufactured parts, which are riveted together. The extension of the main spar passes under the front seats in the fuselage, to which the fastening points of the main spar of the wings are attached. The fastening point of the auxiliary spar connects with a reinforced fuselage rib. The rudder and the elevators are stressed-skin structures with light-alloy covering.

The fin and stabiliser are attached to the reinforced ribs on the rear fuselage. Landing gear is rtractable mains and fixed tailwheel. The front cockpit has side-by-side pilot seats with full dual controls.

It was available in three versions; an aerobatic two-seater, a three-seat utility aircraft, and a for-seat liaison aircraft. It is capable of fitting a standard size stretcher.

Engine: Continental O-470-A, 225 hp
Span: 36 ft 1 in
Length: 26 ft 3 in
Height: 8 ft 6 in
Empty weight: 2350 lb
Loaded weight: 3166 lb
Max speed SL: 136 mph
Cruise: 112 mph

Valmet Vihuri

The Vihuri (Squall) was built for the Finish Air Force by Valmet OY at Tampere. The prototype flew for the first time on 6 February 1951, and the first production machine of an initial batch of thirty was flown on 3 August 1953.

Engine: 820 hp Bristol Mercury 8
Wingspan: 33 ft 1 in
Wing area: 202.9 sq.ft
Length: 28 ft 9 in
Height: 12 ft 8 in
Max weight: 6345 lb
Max speed: 268 mph at 12.140 ft
Econ cruise: 203 mph at 3280 ft
ROC: 2263 fpm
Service ceiling: 29,100 ft
Seats: 2

Valmet PIK-23 Towmaster / PIK Pik-23 Suhinu

The Valmet PIK-23 Towmaster is a Finnish two-seat glider towing/primary trainer aircraft built entirely out of composite materials in the early 1980s.

The Finnish technology students aviation club suggested in the 1970s, that a new aircraft should be developed for glider towing. The work focused on the improvement of a previous design, the PIK-19 Suhinu (Suhinu is a contraction of Super Hino = Super Tow-plane). Later on, the Helsinki University of Technology and Valmet Oy joined the project and the design process started from scratch. The goal was to develop a target/glider tower, which also could be used for basic training. It was given the name “PIK-23 Towmaster”.

Only two aircraft were manufactured, one at Valmet and one at the Helsinki University of Technology. The first aircraft, OH-TOW, made its maiden flight on March 22, 1982, flown by Mikko Järvi. The second aircraft, OH-TUG, flew the following year. OH-TUG was written of in 1991.

Valmet marketed the aircraft intensively, but no orders followed. It was also investigated if the aircraft could be sold in parts, for self-assembly, in order to lower the price. In its intended role as a glider tower, the PIK-23 has been quite successful.

PIK-23
Engine: 1 × Avco Lycoming O-360-A4M, 130 kW (180 hp)
Propeller: 2-bladed Hoffmann fixed pitch
Wingspan: 10.00 m (32 ft 10 in)
Wing area: 14.00 m2 (150.7 sq ft)
Aspect ratio: 7.14:1
Airfoil: NACA 632415 (modified)
Length: 7.19 m (23 ft 7 in)
Height: 2.90 m (9 ft 6 in)
Empty weight: 590 kg (1,301 lb)
Max takeoff weight: 870 kg (1,918 lb)
Fuel capacity: 200 L (44 imp gal; 53 US gal)
Maximum speed: 250 km/h (160 mph, 130 kn) at sea level
Cruise speed: 220 km/h (140 mph, 120 kn) at 3,660 m (12,010 ft) (65% power)
Stall speed: 78 km/h (48 mph, 42 kn) (flaps down)
Never exceed speed: 281 km/h (175 mph, 152 kn)
Range: 1,250 km (780 mi, 670 nmi) at 3,660 m (12,010 ft) (65% power)
Endurance: 6 hr 30 min (55% power)
Rate of climb: 5.80 m/s (1,142 ft/min)
Takeoff run to 15 m (50 ft): 320 m (1,050 ft)
Crew: 2

Valmet L.70 Militrainer

Own designed Leko-70 Vinka two-seat piston-engined trainer evolved by new design group created September 1970. The L.70 first flew on July 1, 1975.

Valmet L.70 Militrainer Article

30 Valmet Vinka were delivered to the Finish air force in the late 1970s, and entered service as the Vinka in October 1980. Production of the L.70 piston-engined side-by-side primary/basic trainer for the Finnish Air Force ended in 1982.

Gallery

L-70 Miltrainer
Engine: 1 x Lycoming AEIO-360, 150 kW
Span: 9.8 m
Length: 7.5 m
Wing area: 14.5 sq.m
Empty wt: 765 kg
MTOW: 1250 kg
Warload: 300 kg
Max speed: 235 kph
Initial ROC: 340 m / min
Ceiling: 4800 m
T/O run: 230 m
Ldg run: 175 m
Fuel internal: 170 lt
Range: 970 km

Valley Engineering Back Yard Flyer

Back Yard Flyer Prototype

A Back Yard Flyer UL prototype was built by Valley Engineering in 2005 as a STOL ultralight. Featuring a constant-chord wing with trailing full-length “flaperons.” Demonstrated take-off in about three seconds over 70 feet. With simple disassembly for trailering it was priced around.$25,000.

Planned production was for a two place, open cockpit low wing monoplane, side-by-side SP version for the FAA Part 103 Sport Pliot market, includes ballistic parachute system.

Engine: Valley-VW
Cruise speed: 90 mph
Stall: 30 mph
Seats: 1