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Saab 17

The Saab 17 is a Swedish single-engine monoplane reconnaissance dive-bomber aircraft of the 1940s originally developed by ASJA prior to its merger into Saab. It was the first all-metal stressed skin aircraft developed in Sweden.

Saab 17
Role Reconnaissance-dive bomber
National origin Sweden
Manufacturer SAAB
First flight 18 May 1940
Introduction March 1942[1]
Retired 1968 (Ethiopia)
Primary users Swedish Air Force
Imperial Ethiopian Air Force
Royal Danish Air Force
Produced 1941–1944
Number built 326 (including 2 prototypes)[2]

Design and development edit

 
B 17s in Trollhättan assembly hall in 1944

The project was initiated in response to a 1938 request from the Flygvapnet (Swedish Air Force) for a reconnaissance aircraft to replace the obsolete Fokker S 6 (C.Ve) sesquiplane. Design work began at the end of the 1930s as the L 10 by ASJA, but once accepted by the Flygvapnet it was assigned the designations B 17 and S 17 for the bomber and reconnaissance versions respectively, and it became better known as the Saab 17.

The design chosen was a conventional mid-wing cantilever monoplane with a long greenhouse canopy and a single radial engine in the nose. Control surfaces were covered in fabric but the remainder was stressed-skin duraluminum. It could be fitted with wheels or skiis, both of which retracted straight to the rear along the underside of the wing, leaving prominent fairings, and when fitted with wheels the undercarriage doors could be used as dive brakes.[3] A retractable tailwheel was provided. A floatplane version was built in small numbers for coastal reconnaissance to replace the obsolete Svenska S 5, with massive fairings joining the floats to the wings where the wheels would have been. To maintain stability small vertical fins were added to the horizontal stabilizer. The wings were reinforced so that it could be used as a dive bomber and bomb racks were provided under the wings, along with a small bomb bay below the cockpit, although some examples used a conventional rack on the centreline, while on the bomber versions, a crutch was fitted to swing the bomb clear of the aircraft in vertical diving attacks, when the bomb could otherwise have passed through the propeller. The reconnaissance versions lacked the crutch. Split flaps broken into four segments were fitted to the underside trailing edge of the wing.

Two L 10 prototypes were ordered, the first being powered by a 880 hp (660 kW) Bristol Mercury XII radial engine built by Nohab in Sweden, and the second with an imported 1,065 hp (794 kW) Pratt & Whitney R-1830 Twin Wasp C radial.

Supplies of suitable engines remained a major problem, and resulted in the aircraft being built in three versions with different engines. The definitive B 17A used the Swedish-built STWC-3 (Swedish Twin Wasp C-3), an unlicenced copy of the R-1830. The B 17B used a Bristol Mercury XXIV built by Svenska Flygmotor AB (SFA) in Sweden, and the B 17C used an imported 1,060 hp (790 kW) Piaggio P.XI radial from Italy.[4] The United States government denied a request to purchase a licence to build the Twin Wasp, so an unlicensed, reverse engineered copy was built instead as the STWC-3 (Swedish Twin Wasp C-3) to supplement and replace the lower powered Mercury radials already being built under licence.[5] Until production caught up to demand, the earliest aircraft being delivered were flown to their destinations, the engines were removed and shipped back, to be used on the next aircraft to be delivered.[citation needed]

Operational history edit

 
Saab B 17B showing bombing crutch under the fuselage needed to allow the bomb to clear the propeller during a dive, and the large undercarriage doors which acted as dive brakes
 
Saab B 17B in flight

The first flight was on 18 May 1940 and first deliveries of dive bombers to the Flygvapnet began in March 1942,[1] while deliveries of reconnaissance versions began in June 1942, and the type was operational by September 1942 when the first exercises were carried out.[2] Problems immediately arose with wing failures, and additional modifications were needed before it could be cleared for dive bombing, which remained limited to shallow attacks thereafter.[2] The final aircraft was delivered on 31 August 1944.[6]

A B 17 was used to test the ejection seat Saab had developed for use in the Saab 21 pusher fighter, which was first successfully fired on 27 February 1944 with a dummy.[7]

Stig Wennerström gained some fame in Sweden for successfully bailing out from a B 17 from low altitude, with his gunner, but would later become a spy for the Soviet Union.[8]

For several months in late 1944 and early 1945 fifteen B 17As were operated by the Danish Brigade in Sweden (Danforce) a unit of 5000 men (including 50 airmen) in Sweden which had been formed to assist in liberating occupied Denmark from the Nazis, and preventing the retreating German soldiers from using civilians as human shields, and carrying out scorched earth tactics as they had done elsewhere. However, due to the German surrender on 7 May 1945, the aircraft were no longer needed and were returned to Flygvapnet control a couple of months later.[9]

Rapid advances in aviation related to improved aerodynamics, higher engine power and finally the introduction of jet engines, resulted in it having a short career, and it was gradually withdrawn from frontline service between 1948 and 1950,[2] while the last examples were retired from secondary roles by 1954. Over the next few years, examples would be sold off to various operators.

Due to the efforts of Carl Gustaf von Rosen, the Ethiopian Air Force bought 47 which were operated from 1947[2] until 1968.

From 1951, 19 B 17s were loaned to Svensk Flygtjanst AB and AVIA for use as target tugs and painted yellow with civilian markings.[2] One of these, a B 17A SE-BYF was sold to the Austrian Österreichische Luftstreitkräfte in 1957, where it continued to be used as a target tug until retired in 1963. Two B 17As were also sold to the Finnish Ilmavoimat in 1959 and 1960, also as target tugs. Neither of the Finnish aircraft lasted long before being destroyed in accidents.[10]

Variants edit

Company designations edit

L 10
internal ASJA/Saab designation; two produced
 
Saab S 17BS mounted on floats
L 10A
internal ASJA/Saab designation for 17A, B, and C
L 10BL
internal ASJA/Saab designation for S17BL
L 10BS
internal ASJA/Saab designation for S17BS

Flygvapnet designations edit

P 7[2]
L 10 development prototypes
B 8
Preliminary designation for bomber version of L 10, not used
 
Saab B 17C in flight. The three main versions could be distinguished by their intakes and exhausts. The 17A had a single intake centred on the top of the cowling, the 17B had a single intake offset to starboard along with a prominent exhaust on the same side, and the 17C had two intakes on either side of the top
B 17A
Bomber with 1,065 hp (794 kW) Svenska Flygmotor Aktiebolaget (SFA)-built STWC-3 (Pratt & Whitney R-1830-S1C3G Twin Wasp) radial engine; 132 built
B 17B
Bomber with 980 hp (730 kW) SFA-built Bristol Mercury XXIV radial engine; 55 built
B 17C
Bomber with 1,060 hp (790 kW) Piaggio P.XIbis R.C.40D radial engine; 77 built
S 15
Preliminary designation for reconnaissance version of the L 10, not used
S 17BL
Reconnaissance version of B 17B with wheeled or ski landing gear; 21 built
S 17BS
Reconnaissance version of B 17B with floats, powered by a Bristol Mercury XXIV engine; 38 built

A total of 326 Saab 17 aircraft of all types were produced, and some bombers were converted into reconnaissance aircraft.[2]

Operators edit

 
Saab B 17A displayed in Helsingør in Danish markings
  Austria
  Denmark
  Ethiopia
  Finland
  Sweden

Surviving aircraft edit

 
Saab B 17A flown by the Swedish Air Force Museum. A second B 17 is displayed in the museum.

Five Saab 17s are known to be in existence today, three of which are on public display.

The Swedish Air Force Museum in Linköping has two aircraft in their collection, a S 17BL '5', serial 17005 which is on static display in the museum, and a B 17A '7', serial 17239, the latter being kept in airworthy condition and which is periodically flown.[11]

Another B 17A 'E', serial 17320 which was donated by the Flygvapnet after having served as a target tug is on display at the Danish Museum of Science and Technology in Helsingør/Elsinore.

Two former Ethiopian B 17As were recovered in the 1990s and purchased by a South African collector as a part of a large batch of ex-Ethiopian aircraft. These were shipped to Lithuania but their current status and location is unknown following the collapse of the collector's business interests.[12]

Specifications (B 17C) edit

Data from Saab Aircraft since 1937[13]

General characteristics

  • Crew: Two
  • Length: 10 m (32 ft 10 in)
  • Wingspan: 13.7 m (44 ft 11 in)
  • Height: 4.5 m (14 ft 9 in)
  • Wing area: 28.5 m2 (307 sq ft)
  • Empty weight: 2,680 kg (5,908 lb)
  • Gross weight: 3,870 kg (8,532 lb)
  • Powerplant: 1 × Piaggio P.XIbis R.C.40D 14 cylinder air-cooled radial piston engine, 790 kW (1,060 hp)
  • Propellers: 3-bladed Piaggio P.1001 variable pitch propeller

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 435 km/h (270 mph, 235 kn)
  • Cruise speed: 370 km/h (230 mph, 200 kn)
  • Minimum control speed: 125 km/h (78 mph, 67 kn)
  • Range: 1,700 km (1,100 mi, 920 nmi)
  • Service ceiling: 9,800 m (32,200 ft)
  • Rate of climb: 10 m/s (2,000 ft/min)
  • Wing loading: 139 kg/m2 (28 lb/sq ft)
  • Power/mass: 0.220 kW/kg (0.134 hp/lb)

Armament

  • Guns:
  • Bombs:
    • 700 kg (1,500 lb) of bombs could be carried. Racks were provided under the wings, in an internal bomb bay and externally on the fuselage centreline.

See also edit

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b Annerfalk, 1999, p.58
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Annerfalk, 1999, p.59
  3. ^ Karlström, 1988, p.52
  4. ^ "B 17 – Saab 17 (1941–1955)". Avrosys. pp. 1–5. Retrieved 3 September 2015.
  5. ^ Annerfalk, 1999, p.84
  6. ^ "Fpl 17 – Saabs första konstruktion". Svensk Flyghistorisk Tidskrift (in Swedish). Svensk Flyghistorisk Tidskrift (Swedish Aviation History Journal). June 2020. p. 8. ISSN 1100-9837.
  7. ^ Annerfalk, 1999, p.95
  8. ^ Annerfalk, 1999, p.144
  9. ^ Annerfalk, 1999, p.100
  10. ^ "Saab 17 i flygvapnet, Spaningsplan och dykbombflygplan – S17, B17". Svensk Flyghistorisk Tidskrift (in Swedish). Svensk Flyghistorisk Tidskrift (Swedish Aviation History Journal). June 2020. p. 14. ISSN 1100-9837.
  11. ^ Poelstra, Jack. "SE-BYH Saab B 17A c/n 17239 - Swedish Air Force Museum - Groningen Airport Eelde in Holland - 7 July 2005". Retrieved 27 December 2020.
  12. ^ "Baltbound Bombers – 2". Lae – inte bara en stad på Nya Guinea (in Swedish). Retrieved 3 September 2015.
  13. ^ Andersson, 1989, pages 59–65

Bibliography edit

  • Annerfalk, Anders (1999). Flygvapnet An Illustrated History of the Swedish Air Force. Ljungsbro, Sweden: Aviatic Förlag. ISBN 91-86642-049.
  • Andersson, Hans G. (1989). Saab Aircraft since 1937. Washington, D.C. / London, UK: Smithsonian Institution Press / Putnam. pp. 59–65. ISBN 0874743141.
  • Karlström, Björn (1988). Flygplans - Ritningar 3 Svenska Flygvapnets Bombflygplan 1926-1986. Stockholm: Allt om Hobby. ISBN 9789185496259.

Further reading edit

  • Bill Gunston, ed. (1989). Jane's Fighting Aircraft of World War II (2001 ed.). New York & London: Military Press & Crescent Books. ISBN 1851704930.
  • Widfeldt, Bo; Hall, Åke (1997). SAAB 17; Den Forsta Egna Konstruktionen (in Swedish). Air Historic Research. ISBN 9789197160582.
  • Edlund, Ulf; Andersson, Lennart; Berns, Lennart; Stridsberg, Sven (2003). "Svensk flyghistoria under 1900-talet". Svensk Flyghistorisk Tidskrift. Stockholm: Svensk Flyghistorisk Förening. ISSN 1100-9837.

saab, swedish, single, engine, monoplane, reconnaissance, dive, bomber, aircraft, 1940s, originally, developed, asja, prior, merger, into, saab, first, metal, stressed, skin, aircraft, developed, sweden, role, reconnaissance, dive, bombernational, origin, swed. The Saab 17 is a Swedish single engine monoplane reconnaissance dive bomber aircraft of the 1940s originally developed by ASJA prior to its merger into Saab It was the first all metal stressed skin aircraft developed in Sweden Saab 17Role Reconnaissance dive bomberNational origin SwedenManufacturer SAABFirst flight 18 May 1940Introduction March 1942 1 Retired 1968 Ethiopia Primary users Swedish Air ForceImperial Ethiopian Air ForceRoyal Danish Air ForceProduced 1941 1944Number built 326 including 2 prototypes 2 Contents 1 Design and development 2 Operational history 3 Variants 3 1 Company designations 3 2 Flygvapnet designations 4 Operators 5 Surviving aircraft 6 Specifications B 17C 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Citations 8 2 Bibliography 8 3 Further readingDesign and development edit nbsp B 17s in Trollhattan assembly hall in 1944The project was initiated in response to a 1938 request from the Flygvapnet Swedish Air Force for a reconnaissance aircraft to replace the obsolete Fokker S 6 C Ve sesquiplane Design work began at the end of the 1930s as the L 10 by ASJA but once accepted by the Flygvapnet it was assigned the designations B 17 and S 17 for the bomber and reconnaissance versions respectively and it became better known as the Saab 17 The design chosen was a conventional mid wing cantilever monoplane with a long greenhouse canopy and a single radial engine in the nose Control surfaces were covered in fabric but the remainder was stressed skin duraluminum It could be fitted with wheels or skiis both of which retracted straight to the rear along the underside of the wing leaving prominent fairings and when fitted with wheels the undercarriage doors could be used as dive brakes 3 A retractable tailwheel was provided A floatplane version was built in small numbers for coastal reconnaissance to replace the obsolete Svenska S 5 with massive fairings joining the floats to the wings where the wheels would have been To maintain stability small vertical fins were added to the horizontal stabilizer The wings were reinforced so that it could be used as a dive bomber and bomb racks were provided under the wings along with a small bomb bay below the cockpit although some examples used a conventional rack on the centreline while on the bomber versions a crutch was fitted to swing the bomb clear of the aircraft in vertical diving attacks when the bomb could otherwise have passed through the propeller The reconnaissance versions lacked the crutch Split flaps broken into four segments were fitted to the underside trailing edge of the wing Two L 10 prototypes were ordered the first being powered by a 880 hp 660 kW Bristol Mercury XII radial engine built by Nohab in Sweden and the second with an imported 1 065 hp 794 kW Pratt amp Whitney R 1830 Twin Wasp C radial Supplies of suitable engines remained a major problem and resulted in the aircraft being built in three versions with different engines The definitive B 17A used the Swedish built STWC 3 Swedish Twin Wasp C 3 an unlicenced copy of the R 1830 The B 17B used a Bristol Mercury XXIV built by Svenska Flygmotor AB SFA in Sweden and the B 17C used an imported 1 060 hp 790 kW Piaggio P XI radial from Italy 4 The United States government denied a request to purchase a licence to build the Twin Wasp so an unlicensed reverse engineered copy was built instead as the STWC 3 Swedish Twin Wasp C 3 to supplement and replace the lower powered Mercury radials already being built under licence 5 Until production caught up to demand the earliest aircraft being delivered were flown to their destinations the engines were removed and shipped back to be used on the next aircraft to be delivered citation needed Operational history edit nbsp Saab B 17B showing bombing crutch under the fuselage needed to allow the bomb to clear the propeller during a dive and the large undercarriage doors which acted as dive brakes nbsp Saab B 17B in flightThe first flight was on 18 May 1940 and first deliveries of dive bombers to the Flygvapnet began in March 1942 1 while deliveries of reconnaissance versions began in June 1942 and the type was operational by September 1942 when the first exercises were carried out 2 Problems immediately arose with wing failures and additional modifications were needed before it could be cleared for dive bombing which remained limited to shallow attacks thereafter 2 The final aircraft was delivered on 31 August 1944 6 A B 17 was used to test the ejection seat Saab had developed for use in the Saab 21 pusher fighter which was first successfully fired on 27 February 1944 with a dummy 7 Stig Wennerstrom gained some fame in Sweden for successfully bailing out from a B 17 from low altitude with his gunner but would later become a spy for the Soviet Union 8 For several months in late 1944 and early 1945 fifteen B 17As were operated by the Danish Brigade in Sweden Danforce a unit of 5000 men including 50 airmen in Sweden which had been formed to assist in liberating occupied Denmark from the Nazis and preventing the retreating German soldiers from using civilians as human shields and carrying out scorched earth tactics as they had done elsewhere However due to the German surrender on 7 May 1945 the aircraft were no longer needed and were returned to Flygvapnet control a couple of months later 9 Rapid advances in aviation related to improved aerodynamics higher engine power and finally the introduction of jet engines resulted in it having a short career and it was gradually withdrawn from frontline service between 1948 and 1950 2 while the last examples were retired from secondary roles by 1954 Over the next few years examples would be sold off to various operators Due to the efforts of Carl Gustaf von Rosen the Ethiopian Air Force bought 47 which were operated from 1947 2 until 1968 From 1951 19 B 17s were loaned to Svensk Flygtjanst AB and AVIA for use as target tugs and painted yellow with civilian markings 2 One of these a B 17A SE BYF was sold to the Austrian Osterreichische Luftstreitkrafte in 1957 where it continued to be used as a target tug until retired in 1963 Two B 17As were also sold to the Finnish Ilmavoimat in 1959 and 1960 also as target tugs Neither of the Finnish aircraft lasted long before being destroyed in accidents 10 Variants editCompany designations edit L 10 internal ASJA Saab designation two produced nbsp Saab S 17BS mounted on floatsL 10A internal ASJA Saab designation for 17A B and C L 10BL internal ASJA Saab designation for S17BL L 10BS internal ASJA Saab designation for S17BSFlygvapnet designations edit P 7 2 L 10 development prototypesB 8 Preliminary designation for bomber version of L 10 not used nbsp Saab B 17C in flight The three main versions could be distinguished by their intakes and exhausts The 17A had a single intake centred on the top of the cowling the 17B had a single intake offset to starboard along with a prominent exhaust on the same side and the 17C had two intakes on either side of the topB 17A Bomber with 1 065 hp 794 kW Svenska Flygmotor Aktiebolaget SFA built STWC 3 Pratt amp Whitney R 1830 S1C3G Twin Wasp radial engine 132 built B 17B Bomber with 980 hp 730 kW SFA built Bristol Mercury XXIV radial engine 55 built B 17C Bomber with 1 060 hp 790 kW Piaggio P XIbis R C 40D radial engine 77 builtS 15 Preliminary designation for reconnaissance version of the L 10 not used S 17BL Reconnaissance version of B 17B with wheeled or ski landing gear 21 built S 17BS Reconnaissance version of B 17B with floats powered by a Bristol Mercury XXIV engine 38 builtA total of 326 Saab 17 aircraft of all types were produced and some bombers were converted into reconnaissance aircraft 2 Operators edit nbsp Saab B 17A displayed in Helsingor in Danish markings nbsp AustriaOsterreichische Luftstreitkrafte Austrian Air Force operated one target tug nbsp DenmarkFlyvevabnet Royal Danish Air Force operated 15 on loan while in exile with the Den Danske Brigade Danforce in 1945 nbsp EthiopiaYe Ithopya A yer Hayl Imperial Ethiopian Air Force operated 47 examples 2 nbsp FinlandIlmavoimat Finnish Air Force operated two target tugs nbsp SwedenSvenska Flygvapnet Swedish Air Force F 2 Hagernas Roslagen Air Corps Naval Support Wing Hagernas near Stockholm S 17BS floatplanes only 2 F 4 Froson Jamtland Wing Froson 2 F 6 Karlsborg Vastgota Wing Karlsborg 2 F 7 Satenas Skaraborg Wing Satenas 2 F 12 Kalmar Kalmar Wing Kalmar 2 Surviving aircraft edit nbsp Saab B 17A flown by the Swedish Air Force Museum A second B 17 is displayed in the museum Five Saab 17s are known to be in existence today three of which are on public display The Swedish Air Force Museum in Linkoping has two aircraft in their collection a S 17BL 5 serial 17005 which is on static display in the museum and a B 17A 7 serial 17239 the latter being kept in airworthy condition and which is periodically flown 11 Another B 17A E serial 17320 which was donated by the Flygvapnet after having served as a target tug is on display at the Danish Museum of Science and Technology in Helsingor Elsinore Two former Ethiopian B 17As were recovered in the 1990s and purchased by a South African collector as a part of a large batch of ex Ethiopian aircraft These were shipped to Lithuania but their current status and location is unknown following the collapse of the collector s business interests 12 Specifications B 17C editData from Saab Aircraft since 1937 13 General characteristicsCrew Two Length 10 m 32 ft 10 in Wingspan 13 7 m 44 ft 11 in Height 4 5 m 14 ft 9 in Wing area 28 5 m2 307 sq ft Empty weight 2 680 kg 5 908 lb Gross weight 3 870 kg 8 532 lb Powerplant 1 Piaggio P XIbis R C 40D 14 cylinder air cooled radial piston engine 790 kW 1 060 hp Propellers 3 bladed Piaggio P 1001 variable pitch propellerPerformance Maximum speed 435 km h 270 mph 235 kn Cruise speed 370 km h 230 mph 200 kn Minimum control speed 125 km h 78 mph 67 kn Range 1 700 km 1 100 mi 920 nmi Service ceiling 9 800 m 32 200 ft Rate of climb 10 m s 2 000 ft min Wing loading 139 kg m2 28 lb sq ft Power mass 0 220 kW kg 0 134 hp lb Armament Guns 2 fixed forward firing 8 mm 0 315 in Flygplanskulspruta Ksp m 22F M1919 Browning AN M2 machine guns 1 rear cockpit flexible 8 mm 0 315 in Flygplanskulspruta Ksp m 22R M1919 Browning AN M2 machine gun Bombs 700 kg 1 500 lb of bombs could be carried Racks were provided under the wings in an internal bomb bay and externally on the fuselage centreline See also editAircraft of comparable role configuration and era Aichi D3A Blackburn Skua Caproni Ca 355 Curtiss SB2C Helldiver Douglas SBD Dauntless Mitsubishi Ki 51 Naval Aircraft Factory SBN Northrop A 17 Sukhoi Su 2 Vultee VengeanceRelated lists List of bomber aircraft List of military aircraft of SwedenReferences edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Saab 17 Citations edit a b Annerfalk 1999 p 58 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Annerfalk 1999 p 59 Karlstrom 1988 p 52 B 17 Saab 17 1941 1955 Avrosys pp 1 5 Retrieved 3 September 2015 Annerfalk 1999 p 84 Fpl 17 Saabs forsta konstruktion Svensk Flyghistorisk Tidskrift in Swedish Svensk Flyghistorisk Tidskrift Swedish Aviation History Journal June 2020 p 8 ISSN 1100 9837 Annerfalk 1999 p 95 Annerfalk 1999 p 144 Annerfalk 1999 p 100 Saab 17 i flygvapnet Spaningsplan och dykbombflygplan S17 B17 Svensk Flyghistorisk Tidskrift in Swedish Svensk Flyghistorisk Tidskrift Swedish Aviation History Journal June 2020 p 14 ISSN 1100 9837 Poelstra Jack SE BYH Saab B 17A c n 17239 Swedish Air Force Museum Groningen Airport Eelde in Holland 7 July 2005 Retrieved 27 December 2020 Baltbound Bombers 2 Lae inte bara en stad pa Nya Guinea in Swedish Retrieved 3 September 2015 Andersson 1989 pages 59 65 Bibliography edit Annerfalk Anders 1999 Flygvapnet An Illustrated History of the Swedish Air Force Ljungsbro Sweden Aviatic Forlag ISBN 91 86642 049 Andersson Hans G 1989 Saab Aircraft since 1937 Washington D C London UK Smithsonian Institution Press Putnam pp 59 65 ISBN 0874743141 Karlstrom Bjorn 1988 Flygplans Ritningar 3 Svenska Flygvapnets Bombflygplan 1926 1986 Stockholm Allt om Hobby ISBN 9789185496259 Further reading edit Bill Gunston ed 1989 Jane s Fighting Aircraft of World War II 2001 ed New York amp London Military Press amp Crescent Books ISBN 1851704930 Widfeldt Bo Hall Ake 1997 SAAB 17 Den Forsta Egna Konstruktionen in Swedish Air Historic Research ISBN 9789197160582 Edlund Ulf Andersson Lennart Berns Lennart Stridsberg Sven 2003 Svensk flyghistoria under 1900 talet Svensk Flyghistorisk Tidskrift Stockholm Svensk Flyghistorisk Forening ISSN 1100 9837 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Saab 17 amp oldid 1150645484, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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