Klemm"s sign - definição. O que é Klemm"s sign. Significado, conceito
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O que (quem) é Klemm"s sign - definição

AIRCRAFT
Klemm Kl 106; Klemm Kl.35; Klemm Sk15B; Klemm Kl 35bW; Klemm KL 35D; Klemm KL 35B; Klemm Kl 35DW; Klemm Kl 35D; Klemm Kl 35B
  • Klemm Kl35

Werner Klemm         
ROMANIAN ORNITHOLOGIST (1909-1990)
Werner Friedrich Heinrich Klemm
Werner Friedrich Heinrich Klemm (24 July 1909 - 19 December 1990) was a Romanian school teacher and ornithologist who studied the birds of Transylvania.
Gustav Klemm         
  • Gustav Klemm
GERMAN ANTHROPOLOGIST AND LIBRARIAN (1802-1867)
Gustav Friedrich Klemm
Gustav Friedrich Klemm (12 November 1802, in Chemnitz – 26 August 1867, in Dresden) was a German anthropologist and librarian. He spent much of his career as the Director of the Royal Library in Dresden.
Klemm         
GERMAN AIRCRAFT MANUFACTURER
Klemm Leichtflugzeugbau GmbH; Leichtflugzeugbau Klemm GmbH; Leichtflugzeugbau Klemm
The Klemm Leichtflugzeugbau GmbH ("Klemm Light Aircraft Company") was a German aircraft manufacturer noteworthy for sports and touring planes of the 1930s.

Wikipédia

Klemm Kl 35

The Klemm Kl 35 is a German sporting and training aeroplane developed as a successor to the Kl 25. A product of Klemm Leichtflugzeugbau Gmbh it shared the same single-engine, cantilever low-wing configuration as the earlier machine, the major difference being the introduction of an inverted gull wing.

Probably Klemm's most important type, the fully aerobatic aeroplane was shown for the first time publicly in October 1935 at the international Air Show in Milan and soon found many private buyers. Powered initially by an 80 hp (60 kW) Hirth HM60R inline, it had fixed undercarriage, mixed wood and fabric covering, and the choice of open or closed cockpit. Powered by the Hirth 60R, it became the Kl 35A (with floats, Kl 35AW), while with the 105 hp (78 kW) Hirth, it was the Kl 35A (with floats, Kl 35AW).

An improved Kl 35D, designed as a Luftwaffe trainer, with 105 hp (78 kW) Hirth HM 504A-2 engine and the option of ski or float landing gear, appeared in 1938. It was the most numerous, with over three thousand built.

A number of air forces purchased copies, including the Romanian, Hungarian, and Slovak. The Swedish Air Force bought several, designated Sk 15, for training use (at least five of those were seaplanes) and in 1941 began licence production, building about 74 more, with some remaining in service until 1951. The Lithuanian air force flew three.