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- Q5004816 subject Q7037296.
- Q5004816 subject Q7037378.
- Q5004816 abstract "The Bánhidi Gerle (Hungarian: "Dove") was a two-seat, single-engine sport biplane built in Hungary in the early 1930s, designed by Antal Bánhidi. It had a conventional layout, with staggered, single-bay wings of equal span braced by N-struts. The pilot and passenger sat in open cockpits in tandem, and the main units of the tailskid undercarriage were divided. The fuselage was constructed of fabric-covered steel tube, while the wings were built of plywood ribs and spruce spars and also covered in fabric. Bánhidi flew a single prototype (the Gerle 11 on 4 September 1930. This was followed by examples (designated Gerle 12 to Gerle 15) built by Műegyetemi Sportrepülő Egyesület, the sport flying club at the Budapest Technical University, and by another three machines (Gerle 16 to Gerle 18) built by WNF in Wiener Neustadt. The Gerles built by Műegyetemi Sportrepülő Egyesület are sometimes known under the name MSrE Gerle or MSE Gerle.Bánhidi achieved fame with the Gerle 13 when in 1933 he made a long-distance flight of 12,258 km around the Mediterranean. Between 19 February and 24 March, he and Tibor Bisits visited twenty-two cities in Italy, France, Spain, North Africa, Egypt, Palestine, Turkey, and Greece, spending around 100 hours in the air. Later the same year, Bánhidi made a flight from Hungary through northern Europe to England and back to Hungary, his route taking him from Debrecen to Rapla, Helsingfors, Stockholm, Copenhagen, Croydon, and then non-stop back to Debrecen. This final leg of the flight covered 1,640 km, a considerable achievement in a light aircraft at the time.A flying replica of the Gerle 13 was built in 1988.A flying replica of the Gerle 12, HA-AAE, is under construction at Budaors Airport, Budapest, by Goldtimer Aviation. Completion is expected in late 2015.On december 4. 2015. was the first successful testflight on Budaörs Airport, Budapest, Hungary.".
- Q5004816 designer Q853048.
- Q5004816 manufacturer Q6628500.
- Q5004816 thumbnail Bánhidi_Gerle_12.svg?width=300.
- Q5004816 wikiPageExternalLink content.cfm?pageid=439.
- Q5004816 wikiPageExternalLink 1933%20-%200546.html.
- Q5004816 wikiPageExternalLink 1933%20-%200722.html.
- Q5004816 wikiPageExternalLink 09szept.pdf.
- Q5004816 wikiPageExternalLink banhidiantal.
- Q5004816 wikiPageWikiLink Q1186843.
- Q5004816 wikiPageWikiLink Q131612.
- Q5004816 wikiPageWikiLink Q1428742.
- Q5004816 wikiPageWikiLink Q1748.
- Q5004816 wikiPageWikiLink Q1754.
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- Q5004816 wikiPageWikiLink Q1781.
- Q5004816 wikiPageWikiLink Q215971.
- Q5004816 wikiPageWikiLink Q2213391.
- Q5004816 wikiPageWikiLink Q465165.
- Q5004816 wikiPageWikiLink Q4793972.
- Q5004816 wikiPageWikiLink Q4793974.
- Q5004816 wikiPageWikiLink Q6628500.
- Q5004816 wikiPageWikiLink Q7037296.
- Q5004816 wikiPageWikiLink Q7037378.
- Q5004816 wikiPageWikiLink Q79880.
- Q5004816 wikiPageWikiLink Q853048.
- Q5004816 wikiPageWikiLink Q917172.
- Q5004816 designer Q853048.
- Q5004816 manufacturer Q6628500.
- Q5004816 type Product.
- Q5004816 type Aircraft.
- Q5004816 type MeanOfTransportation.
- Q5004816 type DesignedArtifact.
- Q5004816 type Thing.
- Q5004816 type Q11436.
- Q5004816 comment "The Bánhidi Gerle (Hungarian: "Dove") was a two-seat, single-engine sport biplane built in Hungary in the early 1930s, designed by Antal Bánhidi. It had a conventional layout, with staggered, single-bay wings of equal span braced by N-struts. The pilot and passenger sat in open cockpits in tandem, and the main units of the tailskid undercarriage were divided.".
- Q5004816 label "Bánhidi Gerle".
- Q5004816 depiction Bánhidi_Gerle_12.svg.