Sunrise | |
---|---|
![]() | |
Role | One or two-seat sport kitbuilt ultralight |
National origin | Germany |
Manufacturer | WD Flugzeug Leichtbau |
Designer | Wolfgang Dallach |
First flight | 1986 |
Produced | 5 years |
Number built | c.39 |
The Dallach D.2 Sunrise, also known as the WDFL Sunrise after its suppliers, is a single-engine, single-seat cantilever monoplane. It was designed and marketed as a homebuilt aircraft in Germany by Wolfgang Dallach.
Wolfgang Dallach's Sunrise, marketed ready-to-fly or in kit form by his WD Flugzeug Leichtbau (WDFL), was his first ultralight design. In Germany, it was the first ultralight equipped with a four-stroke engine. The Sunrise is a tandem two-seater. Both seats are equipped with a throttle lever, rudder and control stick. Full engine control is available only from the rear seat. The fuselage is built from steel tubes and is fabric covered. The wing has a nose made of fiberglass. The main spar is built from CFK. The Sunrise has a fixed tailwheel undercarriage, with the mainwheels hinged from the fuselage on V-form, cross-connected struts. Some Sunrises have wheel fairings. [1]
The Sunrise can be powered by one of several engines in the 28-66 kW (38-90 hp) power range. [2]
About 39 Sunrises are thought to have been built, all flying in Germany. [1] In mid-2010, 19 years after kit production ended, 38 still appeared on the German civil register. [3]
Data from DAec [2]
Data from Airelife's World Aircraft [1]
General characteristics
Performance
Sunrise | |
---|---|
![]() | |
Role | One or two-seat sport kitbuilt ultralight |
National origin | Germany |
Manufacturer | WD Flugzeug Leichtbau |
Designer | Wolfgang Dallach |
First flight | 1986 |
Produced | 5 years |
Number built | c.39 |
The Dallach D.2 Sunrise, also known as the WDFL Sunrise after its suppliers, is a single-engine, single-seat cantilever monoplane. It was designed and marketed as a homebuilt aircraft in Germany by Wolfgang Dallach.
Wolfgang Dallach's Sunrise, marketed ready-to-fly or in kit form by his WD Flugzeug Leichtbau (WDFL), was his first ultralight design. In Germany, it was the first ultralight equipped with a four-stroke engine. The Sunrise is a tandem two-seater. Both seats are equipped with a throttle lever, rudder and control stick. Full engine control is available only from the rear seat. The fuselage is built from steel tubes and is fabric covered. The wing has a nose made of fiberglass. The main spar is built from CFK. The Sunrise has a fixed tailwheel undercarriage, with the mainwheels hinged from the fuselage on V-form, cross-connected struts. Some Sunrises have wheel fairings. [1]
The Sunrise can be powered by one of several engines in the 28-66 kW (38-90 hp) power range. [2]
About 39 Sunrises are thought to have been built, all flying in Germany. [1] In mid-2010, 19 years after kit production ended, 38 still appeared on the German civil register. [3]
Data from DAec [2]
Data from Airelife's World Aircraft [1]
General characteristics
Performance