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Grigorovich ROM-1

The Grigorovich ROM-1 was a long-range reconnaissance flying boat designed by the Grigorovich Design Bureau for the Soviet Navy in the late 1920s.

Design

The ROM-1 (ROM = Razviedchik Otkrytovo Morya [Open Sea Reconnaissance]) was a long range maritime reconnaissance sesquiplane flying boat with two engines installed in a tandem nacelle, supported on struts over the hull. The hull was made from aluminumand the wings were made of wood, attached to the sides of the engine nacelle. The water-tight lower wings, attached to the sides of the hull, were installed slightly above the waterline and carried two floats on their tips. The tail surfaces had aluminum alloy frames with fabric covering.

Development of the ROM-1 commenced in the summer of 1925. V.B.Shavrov was responsible for hull design, and P.D.Samsonov was responsible for the wing and powerplant. The ROM-1 first flew in the autumn of 1927, with test flying concluding in 1929, when the Soviet Navy judged it unsuitable for use as in combat.[1]

Specifications

Data from ,[2] Aircraft of the Soviet Union : the encyclopaedia of Soviet aircraft since 1917[3]

General characteristics

Performance

Armament

References

  1. ^ Shavrov, V.B. (1988). Istorii︠a︡ konstrukt︠s︡iĭ samoletov v SSSR do 1938 g. (Izd. 5-e, ispr ed.). Moscow: Mashinostroenie. p. 398. ISBN 5-217-03112-3.
  2. ^ "ROM-1, D.P.Grigorovich". Russian Aviation Museum. Retrieved 2 February 2019.
  3. ^ Gunston, Bill (1983). Aircraft of the Soviet Union : the encyclopaedia of Soviet aircraft since 1917. Osprey. p. 93. ISBN 085045445X.

Bibliography