Kawanishi K-6
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The Kawanishi K-6 was a passenger-carrying biplane floatplane, built in Japan in the 1920s. The sole example took part in an around Japan flight then flew as a transport with Japan Aviation.


Design and development

Kawanishi's first
floatplane A floatplane is a type of seaplane with one or more slender floats mounted under the fuselage to provide buoyancy. By contrast, a flying boat uses its fuselage for buoyancy. Either type of seaplane may also have landing gear suitable for land, ...
design was the K-5, which though foreseen as Japan's first successful large seaplane transport turned out to lack the power to take-off carrying any significant load. As no more powerful engine than the
Maybach Mb.IV The Maybach Mb.IV, originally designated Maybach HS, (only related to the Mb IVa by layout and size), was a six cylinder in-line piston engine of output, originally developed for use in airships. It was also used for large aircraft such as the Ze ...
was available, the K-5's development was abandoned late in 1922. Instead, Eiji Sekiguchi designed a new, smaller, lighter aircraft with the same engine. This, the K-6, was informed by the latest control and stability research from Göttingen. It was completed in November 1923 and was intended to be used by Kawanishi's
Nippon Koku KK Japan ( ja, 日本, or , and formally , ''Nihonkoku'') is an island country in East Asia. It is situated in the northwest Pacific Ocean, and is bordered on the west by the Sea of Japan, while extending from the Sea of Okhotsk in the north ...
(Japan Aviation Co. Ltd) The K-6 was a two bay biplane with fabric covering over a wooden structure. Its equal span wings were rectangular in plan out to rounded tips and braced together without stagger by parallel pairs of interplane struts. The pilot's open cockpit was between the wings, close behind the upright, water-cooled Maybach. The K-6's two passengers were in a separate cockpit behind him, originally open but later enclosed under multi-panel glazing faired smoothly into the upper rear fuselage. The latter was flat sided and remained deep to the tail; its surface served to stabilize the aircraft in yaw and there was no conventional fixed fin. The K-6 had a straight-edged, round-topped rudder, hinged on the extreme fuselage and cut-away for elevator movement, which was unusual in projecting only below the fuselage. Its tailplane was mounted on top of the fuselage and braced to the lower fuselage
longerons 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 ...
with pairs of parallel struts. The sides of its flat-surfaced floats met at bow and stern. Each float had a shallow step under the trailing edge. They were held under the fuselage on fore and aft struts to the lower longerons.


Operational history

Soon after completion it was decided that instead of immediate commercial use the K-6 should be part of the Around Japan Flight, an event sponsored by Nippon Koku KK and the ''Daimai Tonichi Shimbun'' newspaper. Some modifications followed: the passenger seats were replaced with extra fuel tanks, the engine radiator was moved, shallow fins were added on the tailplane undersides together with outrigger floats under the wing. Normally well above the water, these limited roll when afloat. The July 1924 flight began and ended at Osaka and covered . The K-6, flown by Yukichi Goto with flight engineer Minezo Yonesawa, covered the route in eight days, though flying for only 33 hr 48 min. On 2 December 1924 the K-6 won the seaplane category in the competitive Round Ise Bay event, covering three circuits totalling in 6 hr 30 min. After that the K-6, with passenger seats reinstalled, was returned to transport duties. No more were built as Kawanishi's attention turned to its successor, the K-7.


Specifications


References

{{Kawanishi aircraft K-6 Biplanes Single-engined tractor aircraft 1930s Japanese civil utility aircraft