Gotha Go 149
From Warlike
Q1538736
The Gotha Go 149 was a military aircraft developed in Germany in the mid-1930s for training fighter pilots. It was a conventional low-wing cantilever monoplane with tailwheel undercarriage, the main units of which retracted inwards. The wing was wooden, while the monocoque fuselage was metal. Two prototypes were constructed, and an armed version was also proposed as a light home-defence fighter (Heimatschutzjäger) armed with two 7.92 mm (.312 in) MG 17 machine guns, but the Luftwaffe did not purchase either version of the design, and no further examples were built.
Wikimedia, Wikidata
Gotha,
Avro Canada CF-103, BAE Replica, BFW M.21, British Aircraft Swallow, D-1, Dornier Do 13, Douglas Y1B-7, EM-10 Bielik, Focke-Wulf Fw 300, Goodyear Inflatoplane, Häfeli DH-2, Ikarus Orkan, Junkers Ju 322, Junkers K 47, Lebed XII, Letov Š-2, Letov Š-21, Letov Š-22, Letov Š-5, LVG E.I, Mikoyan-Gurevich I-250, Moskalyev SAM-13, Nakajima Ki-201, Phönix 122 DIII, Piaggio P.32, Junkers Ju 488 Q510445, Ro.37 Lince, Rogožarski R-100, Rogožarski R-313, Rohrbach Ro IX, Ryan XV-8, Slingsby Hengist, SM U-4, Sukhoi Su-1, Sukhoi Su-17, Tachikawa Ki-55, Voisin Canard, Yakovlev Yak-50, Yokosuka MXY9,
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Location: KML, Cluster Map, Maps,
| Type | Subtype | Date | Description | Notes | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| commons | image | Gotha Go.149 photo L'Aerophile February 1938 | Commons | ||
| commons | image | Gotha Go.149 3-view L'Aerophile February 1938 | Commons | ||

