Caproni Vizzola Calif


The Caproni Vizzola Calif was a family of Italian sailplanes, the first example flew in 1969, with production continuing into the 1970s and 1980s. Of typical sailplane configuration with T-tails, they featured distinctive wings with centre sections of constant chord and trapezoidal outer panels. The forward fuselage was constructed of fibreglass over an alloy frame, while the rear fuselage, wings, and empennage were metal-covered.
The most significant member of the family, and the only one produced in quantity was the A-21S, a two-seat version that accommodated the pilot and passenger side by side. At one time this aircraft concurrently held four world records for two-seat sailplanes, including:

Variants

  • A-10
  • A-12
  • A-14
  • A-15
  • A-20
  • *A-20S - two-seat version of A-20
  • A-21 - two-seat development of A-14
  • *A-21S - refined production version of A-21
  • *A-21SJ - jet-powered version of A-21 using either a thrust engine, having a ceiling. A trailing edge flap-airbrake is unique to this model. Marketed in America by AVIA America Corporation.