| Lists of aircraft | 
|---|
This is a list of gliders/sailplanes of the world, (this reference lists all gliders with references, where available)[1] Note: Any aircraft can glide for a short time, but gliders are designed to glide for longer.
| List of gliders | 
|---|
| By constructor name | 
Latvian miscellaneous constructors
data from:-[2]
- Acs (glider)
 - Aizsardze
 - Alise (glider)
 - Apogs
 - Auseklis (glider)
 - Burbulmate
 - Cirulitis
 - Cukurs C-4 – Herberts Cukurs
 - Daugaviete
 - Vainode Duja – A Hutter-17 type, based in Vainode. Built by the 17th Glider Aviator Group.
 - 2nd Aviation Scouts Duja – A primary type constructed by the 2nd Aviation Scouts.
 - Dzelzcelnieks
 - Dzelzcelnieks II
 - Dzelzcelnieks III
 - Dzerve
 - Edgars laksevics
 - Erglis
 - Gaigalina
 - Gintaras (glider)
 - Gulbene II
 - Gulbis (glider)
 - Jelgava-Hütter 17
 - Vilnis-Hütter 17 – Edvins Vilnis
 - Stekelis-Hütter 17 – Huberts Stekelis
 - Jelgava I
 - Kaija (glider)
 - Krustpilnieks
 - Lāčplēsis (glider)
 - Latvija (glider)
 - Lenta (glider)
 - Maikapars
 - Mara (glider)
 - Mintava
 - Nameisis
 - Parsla
 - Salka (glider)
 - Selija (glider)
 - Skaubitis
 - Skauts
 - Skrunda I
 - Sloka (glider)
 - Spriditis (glider)
 - Staburags (glider)
 - Tērvete (glider)
 - Valmierietis
 - Vanadzins
 - Vanags (glider)
 - Vef-1
 - Viesturs (glider)
 - YL-12
 - YL-13
 - YL-14 "fricis tramdachs"
 - Zemgale (glider)
 - Ziemelnieks
 
Notes
- ↑ "j2mcl-planeurs". Team J2mcL. Retrieved 29 November 2012.
 - ↑ "Latvian gliders". latvianaviation.com. Retrieved 10 August 2013.
 
Further reading
External links
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.