Reading level:
A kid-friendly version of this page isn’t written yet — you’re seeing the regular version below. Back to the gallery to find an aircraft with a Kids version.

Avia BH-5

General Aviation · Interwar (1919–1938)

Avia BH-5 — General Aviation
Open in interactive gallery →See aircraft like this on the live radar →

The Avia BH-5 was a two-seat sport aircraft built in Czechoslovakia in 1923. It was based on the firm's experience with the BH-1 and shared that aircraft's basic design: a low-wing, braced monoplane. As a result of its L-BOSA registration, all slow flying Avia monoplanes of the BH-5 lineage were nicknamed Boska. The BH-5 was flown competitively by Zdeněk Lhota at the Belgian Touring Aircraft Contest in Brussels in 1923, and won both the overall prize for the event and the King of Belgium Prize. The same year, it won the first prize in its class in the Czechoslovak President of the Republic Competition.

Specifications

Category
Fixed Wing
Sub-Category
General Aviation
Domain
Civil
Era
Interwar (1919–1938)
Engine
Anzani radial
Thrust / Power
70 hp (52 kW)
Length (ft)
21
Wingspan (ft)
31
Empty Weight (lb)
743
MTOW (lb)
1268
Range (mi)
300
Max Speed (mph)
94