Dietrich-Gobiet DP.VII
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The Dietrich-Gobiet DP.VII was a simple, low power, German sports aircraft flown in early 1924.


Design and development

The low-powered DP.VII was a simple, easily transportable, low-wing monoplane intended to make sports aviation more widely accessible. It had a simple, thick section wing, essentially rectangular in plan apart from blunted, angled tips. This had two main wooden box spars and was braced to the upper fuselage on each side with an inverted V-form pair of struts from the upper fuselage
longeron In engineering, a longeron and stringer is the load-bearing component of a framework. The term is commonly used in connection with aircraft fuselages and automobile chassis. Longerons are used in conjunction with stringers to form structural ...
s to the spars at about one-third span. Unusually, the one-piece wing structure passed through the deep fuselage above the lower longerons and could be extracted in a few minutes then transported away on a pair of trestles normally stowed inside the DP.VII. The aircraft had long-span ailerons filling about two-thirds of the wing. The simple, flat-sided fuselage was a steel-tube structure with four longerons, linked by welded struts, defining the shape. Internal piano wire bracing stiffened the fuselage, which was fabric-covered. The open
cockpit A cockpit or flight deck is the area, usually near the front of an aircraft or spacecraft, from which a Pilot in command, pilot controls the aircraft. The cockpit of an aircraft contains flight instruments on an instrument panel, and the ...
was over the rear wing and was large enough for a passenger to sit behind the pilot, straddling a box seat. Though the power was low, the structure was light and the load/empty weight ratio (0.89) was noted as high. At the time, the installation of the air-cooled Haacke HFM-2 engine was seen as particularly clean, with only the upper cylinders projecting out of the cowling. The DP.VII's mainwheels were mounted on a single axle, conventionally rubber sprung to a cross member attached to the lower fuselage longerons by a V-form pair of struts on each side. Less conventionally, the undercarriage structure was braced by another, transverse, V-strut from the cross piece centre to the longerons. There was a sprung tail skid at the rear. The exact date of the DP.VII's first flight is not certain, but the prototype had been well tested by late May 1924 and there were plans to put it into quantity production. At almost the same time, Dietrich-Gobiet were developing the DP.VIIA which, despite the similar designation, was a larger-span, parasol-wing monoplane. It had a similar fuselage and empennage to the DP.VII but a much more powerful engine, a
Siemens-Halske Sh 4 The Siemens-Halske Sh 4 was a five-cylinder, air-cooled, radial engine for aircraft built in Germany in the 1920s. First run in 1921, it was rated at 40 kW (55 hp). Applications * Albatros L 59 * Albatros L 71 * Caspar U.1 * Dietrich ...
five-cylinder radial producing about . This aircraft was on display at the Third International Aero Show at Prague in early June 1924. Few of either type seem to have been produced.


Variants

;DP.VII: Low-wing monoplane, powered by a
Haacke HFM 2 The Haacke HFM-2 was a German two cylinder flat engine built in the early 1920s. Variants From Flight * HFM-2 () * HFM-2a (); as HFM-2 apart from bore Applications * Albatros L.66 * Dietrich-Gobiet DP.VII * Działowski D.K.D.1 * Dobi-I ...
flat-twin engine. ;DP.VIIA: Parasol-wing monoplane, powered by a
Siemens-Halske Sh 4 The Siemens-Halske Sh 4 was a five-cylinder, air-cooled, radial engine for aircraft built in Germany in the 1920s. First run in 1921, it was rated at 40 kW (55 hp). Applications * Albatros L 59 * Albatros L 71 * Caspar U.1 * Dietrich ...
radial engine, with 20% greater span and 50% heavier loaded weight. Based on the Stahlwerk Mark R.III.


Specifications (DP.VII)


References

{{reflist, refs= {{cite magazine , date=22 May 1924 , title= The Dietrich-Gobiet Sport Monoplane, magazine= Flight, volume=XVI , issue=21 , pages=286–7 , url= http://www.flightglobal.com/pdfarchive/view/1924/1924%20-%200286.html {{cite magazine , date=12 June 1924 , title= The Aeroshow at Prague - Dietrich-Gobiet Flugzeugwerk, Cassel, magazine= Flight, volume=XVI , issue=24 , page=385 , url= http://www.flightglobal.com/pdfarchive/view/1924/1924%20-%200385.html {{cite web , url=http://www.airhistory.org.uk/gy/reg_D-.htmll, title=Reconstructed 1919–1935 German Civil Register , accessdate=6 September 2014 1920s German sport aircraft Low-wing aircraft Single-engined tractor aircraft Aircraft first flown in 1924 Conventional landing gear