Lotnicze Warsztaty Doświadczalne

Lotnicze Warsztaty Doświadczalne (LWD) was the Polish aerospace manufacturer and construction bureau, located in Łódź, active between 1945 and 1950. The name meant Aircraft Experimental Workshops. It was the first Polish post-war aerospace construction bureau.

Lotnicze Warsztaty Doświadczalne
IndustryAerospace
Founded1 April 1945 (1945-04-01)
Founder
Defunct1950 (1950)
SuccessorWSK No. 4 Warszawa-Okęcie[1]
Headquarters,
ParentMinistry of Communication[1]

History

LWD Szpak-4T – the first Polish post-war series plane
Junak-3 in the Polish Aviation Museum

The World War II and German occupation destroyed the whole Polish aviation industry. As soon as eastern part of Poland was liberated, in October 1944 a group of designers gathered in Lublin in a Design Bureau of Ministry of Communication. It was directed by Aleksander Sułkowski, but the main designer became Tadeusz Sołtyk. In primitive conditions, the bureau started works upon a utility aircraft Szpak-1. In early 1945 the construction bureau moved to liberated Łódź and on April 1, 1945 there were created the Aircraft Experimental Workshops (LWD), subordinated to the Ministry of Communication.[lower-alpha 1]

The Szpak-1 was not built, but there was designed and built its development variant, the LWD Szpak-2 utility plane. It first flew on October 28, 1945, as the first Polish post-war plane. Szpak-2 and Szpak-3 remained in single units, but in 1947 there was designed the LWD Szpak-4, which was the first Polish post-war plane built in series - a short series of 10 was manufactured in PZL-Mielec.

The next design was LWD Żak, two-seater touring and trainer plane of 1947. A series of 10 Żak-3 was built in LWD in 1948, plus prototypes of Żak-1, Żak-2 and Żak-4.

Most successful design of LWD was a military and civilian trainer LWD Junak of 1948. Its improved variants Junak-2 and Junak-3 were produced from 1951 in the WSK-4 Okęcie in Warsaw (a total of 252), although its further development was carried out outside of LWD. A civilian aerobatics and trainer variant of Junak was LWD Zuch of 1948; it was a successful design, but only 7 were built in LWD because of lack of proper engines.

LWD designed also two-engine light transport plane LWD Miś of 1949, but it was not successful and was not produced. The last LWD design was LWD Żuraw, two-seater military liaison and utility high-wing plane prototype completed in 1951. It was not produced either.

In 1950 LWD was converted from a construction bureau and experimental works to a production factory and renamed WSK-6 (Wytwórnia Sprzętu Komunikacyjnego 6 - Communication Equipment Factory 6). This put an end to its activity. Soon it was disbanded because of too small production capabilities. Tadeusz Sołtyk, a talented designer, organized next a construction bureau in the Aviation Institute in Warsaw.

Aircraft

Model name First flight Number built Type
LWD Szpak 1945 3[lower-alpha 2] Single engine monoplane utility airplane
LWD Żak 1947 13 Single engine monoplane touring airplane
LWD Junak 1948 1[lower-alpha 3] Single engine monoplane trainer
LWD Zuch 1948 or 1949 7 Single engine monoplane aerobatic airplane
LWD Miś 1949 1 Twin engine monoplane transport
LWD Żuraw 1951 1 Single engine monoplane liaison airplane

References

Footnotes

  1. The name of the organization in Polish was roughly equivalent to Doświadczalne Warsztaty Lotnicze – the pre-war manufacturer of RWD planes.
  2. Although an LWD design, all but three aircraft were built by other manufacturers.
  3. Although an LWD design, all but one aircraft were built by other manufacturers.

Notes

  1. Krzysztof, Luto. "Lotnicze Warsztaty Doświadczalne". Samoloty w Lotnictwie Polskim (in Polish). Retrieved 7 March 2022.

Bibliography

  • Babiejczuk, Janusz; Grzegorzewski, Jerzy (1947). Polski Przemysł Lotniczy, 1945-1973 (in Polish). Warsaw: Ministerstwa Obrony Narodowej.
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