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The Lublin R-XIII was the Polish army cooperation plane, designed
in the early-1930s in the Plage i Laskiewicz factory in Lublin.
Since 1927, they started working on their own prototypes. Those
were designed by J. Rudlicki and his team of more than a dozen
people including engineers Marian Bartolewski, Jerzy Dabrowski,
Antoni Uszacki, Janusz Lange, Jerzy Teisseyre, Witold Grabowski,
Jaworski and others. The factory's first own product was a
reconnaissance bomber Lublin R-VIII built in 1928. Its airliner
variant, the R-IX, was constructed in a short while. In 1930, they
produced a pilot series of 5 Lublin R-VIIIs, 3 of which were
converted to seaplanes in 1932. At the beginning of 1929, they
performed a test flight of a liaison aircraft prototype designated
R-X; a pilot series composed of 5 examples was built in 1931.
Prototypes of the Lublin R-IX airliner (1929) and Lublin R-XI
airliner (1930) as well as its improved variant, the R-XVI, failed
to meet the requirements of LOT Polish Airlines so the production
was not started. However, 5 examples of an air ambulance variant
R-XVI were built in 1933-1934. In 1931, they created the R-XII
sport aircraft that was not put to use.
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