Kārlis Irbītis | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | October 13, 1997
Saint-Laurent,
Quebec, Canada | (aged 92)
Nationality | Latvian |
Occupation | Airplane designer |
Known for | VEF I-16 |
Awards | Bronze medal from the Latvian Aeroclub (1938) McCurdy Award for the VSTOL CL-84 project (1970) |
Signature | |
Kārlis Irbītis (October 14, 1904, in Lāde parish, Governorate of Livonia – October 13, 1997, in Saint-Laurent, Quebec, Canada) was a Latvian aeroplane designer.
His greatest successes, for the VEF Factory, were the sports plane VEF I-12 (1935) and the monoplane VEF I-16 (1939), used as a fighter. After World War II, when he had emigrated to Canada, he was the designer of the experimental Canadian vertical landing and take-off aeroplane, the CL-84 (1950).
VEF Factory
Other
Kārlis Irbītis | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | October 13, 1997
Saint-Laurent,
Quebec, Canada | (aged 92)
Nationality | Latvian |
Occupation | Airplane designer |
Known for | VEF I-16 |
Awards | Bronze medal from the Latvian Aeroclub (1938) McCurdy Award for the VSTOL CL-84 project (1970) |
Signature | |
Kārlis Irbītis (October 14, 1904, in Lāde parish, Governorate of Livonia – October 13, 1997, in Saint-Laurent, Quebec, Canada) was a Latvian aeroplane designer.
His greatest successes, for the VEF Factory, were the sports plane VEF I-12 (1935) and the monoplane VEF I-16 (1939), used as a fighter. After World War II, when he had emigrated to Canada, he was the designer of the experimental Canadian vertical landing and take-off aeroplane, the CL-84 (1950).
VEF Factory
Other