LKOD KOD-1
The KOD-1 was an Estonian-designed Latvian trainer aircraft built by Liepājas Kara Ostas Darbnīcas. The KOD-1 was built from 1936 until 1938 and was used as a trainer by the Latvian Aeroclub and the Aizsargi home guard.
Design and operational history
In 1930, the Estonian Defence League, the Estonian reserve army, formed an aviation section, the Õho- ja Gaasikaitse Liit based at Ülemiste near Tallinn, which was responsible for training for pilots for the Aviation Regiment, as well as acting as a conventional flying club. In 1934, three Estonian engineers, V. Post, R. Neudorf and Org, produced two designs for the ÕGL, the ÕGL-1, a biplane, and the ÕGL-2, a low-wing monoplane. Two examples of each design, which were later redesignated the PON-1 and PON-2 after the designers, were built for the ÕGL. The PON-1 was a two-seat tandem biplane of mixed construction, with the fuselage having a welded steel tube structure covered with fabric, while the wings were made of fabric-covered wood. It was powered by a Armstrong Siddeley Genet Major radial engine. In 1935, five more were ordered for the Aviation Regiment, to replace its obsolete Avro 504Rs. These were powered by de Havilland Gipsy Major inline engines, and were designated as the PON-1A. Only four PON-1As were completed.In response to a Latvian requirement for a suitable aircraft for use by the Aizsargu Aviacija and the Latvian Aero Club, a PON-1 was demonstrated in Riga to representatives of these organisations, and the type was selected for Latvian use. The Liepajas Kara Ostas Darbnicas, a Liepāja shipyard, set up an aviation department, under the management of engineer Georgs Novickis, and obtained a license for production of a version of the PON-1, with the designation KOD-1. Production started in 1935, with the first two aircraft being delivered to the Aizsargu Aviacija on 13 January 1936 and continued until 1938. LKOD built a total of 13 KOD-1s, of which ten were purchased by the Aizsargu Aviacija and the remaining three going to the Latvian Aero Club. The KOD-1 was initially powered by a Genet Major engine, with the last two receiving Gipsy Major engines.
Novikis designed an enlarged and more powerful derivative of the KOD-1, the LKOD KOD-2, to meet a requirement for an armed trainer for the Aizsargu Aviacija. Seven were built in 1937–1938.
Operational history
In 1937, the ÕGL was abolished, with its aircraft being transferred to the newly established Eesti Aeroklubi which functioned as a more conventional civil aero club, although it retained the training duties for the Aviation Regiment. The four PON-1As remained in service with the Estonian Aviation Regiment until the Soviet occupation of Estonia in June 1940. The Estonian armed forces were incorporated into the Soviet armed forces, but most of the aircraft of the Air Regiment, including the PON-1As, were not used by the Soviets, and stored in the open at Jägala where they quickly deteriorated, and were destroyed when the Soviets evacuated Estonia after the German invasion in June 1941.The Aizsargu Aviacija used its KOD-1s as basic trainers and liaison aircraft. After the Occupation of Baltic states by the Soviet Union in June 1940, like Estonia, Latvia's armed forces were incorporated into those of the Soviet Union, with the Latvian Air Force and the Aizsargu Aviacija disbanded.