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Albatros L 69

From PlaneSpottingWorld, for aviation fans everywhere

The Albatros L 69 was a two-seat German trainer aircraft of the 1920s. It was a single-engine parasol-wing monoplane of conventional configuration that seated the pilot and instructor in tandem, open cockpits. In 1925, Albatros' test pilot Kurt Ungewitter won Class D in the Deutsche Rundflug in an L 69a, and he was killed in the crash of one two years later.

Variants

Specifications (L 69a)

Template:Aerospecs

See also

Designation sequence
L 66 - L 67 - L 68 - L 69 - L 70 - L 71 - L 72

References

fr:Albatros L.69 it:Albatros L 69

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Albatros L 69".