Gasuden/Kokenki (Tokyo Gasu Denki) « Wings of the Century »

Batman10

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Has anyone ever heard of a plane simply dubbed "Wings of the Century" "This big Japanese monoplane remained aloft for 62 1/2 hours and flew 7,245 miles to set an endurance record and distance record for Japan. The flight was made around a "closed course" which ringed the sacred mountain Fujuiyama. The pilots were Major Fuita and Sergeant Takahashi.
The craft was manufactured by the Tokyo Gasu Denki concern. It had a wing span of 88'6' and was 49' 2" long. Gross weight was 7,840 pounds and the ship has a top speed of 133 mph fully loaded.

Source Air News Year Book 1942 page 203, 262.
 
Batman10 said:
Has anyone ever heard of a plane simply dubbed "Wings of the Century" "This big Japanese monoplane remained aloft for 62 1/2 hours and flew 7,245 miles to set an endurance record and distance record for Japan. The flight was made around a "closed course" which ringed the sacred mountain Fujuiyama. The pilots were Major Fuita and Sergeant Takahashi.
The craft was manufactured by the Tokyo Gasu Denki concern. It had a wing span of 88'6' and was 49' 2" long. Gross weight was 7,840 pounds and the ship has a top speed of 133 mph fully loaded.

Source Air News Year Book 1942 page 203, 262.

Here is a photograph of this Airplane
wings-century.jpg



Does anyone know anything about it?

Thanks
Batman
 
Hi Everyone!

There's an excellent entry about this aircraft in the book:
Japanese Aircraft 1910-1941
pp.90 & 91
Robert C. Mikesh and Shorzoe Abe

Chuck





Batman10 said:
Batman10 said:
Has anyone ever heard of a plane simply dubbed "Wings of the Century" "This big Japanese monoplane remained aloft for 62 1/2 hours and flew 7,245 miles to set an endurance record and distance record for Japan. The flight was made around a "closed course" which ringed the sacred mountain Fujuiyama. The pilots were Major Fuita and Sergeant Takahashi.
The craft was manufactured by the Tokyo Gasu Denki concern. It had a wing span of 88'6' and was 49' 2" long. Gross weight was 7,840 pounds and the ship has a top speed of 133 mph fully loaded.

Source Air News Year Book 1942 page 203, 262.

Here is a photograph of this Airplane
wings-century.jpg



Does anyone know anything about it?

Thanks
Batman
 
Hi! There is a replica of Kokenki(航研機) in MISAWA AVIATION AND SCIENCE MUSEUM AOMORI JAPAN.(Near MISAWA air base)
http://www.kokukagaku.jp/01_museum/01_frame.html

One of the designer of Kokenki was Dr.Hidemasa Kimura(木村秀政), the professor of Tokyo Imperial university, who also designed A-26 long distance record plane, YS-11 and Kawanishi TB America bomber. He also did not speak about TB at after the war. He was born in Aomori, this is the reason why the replica of Kokenki is in Misawa Aomori.
Span:27.93m, Length:15.06m, Height:3.6m, Wing area:87.3m2, Empty:4,224kg, MTOW: 9,216kg(at record flight), Cruising speed:196km/h(1,000m), Service ceiling:3,410m, Range: 12,540km(altitude 1,000m), Take off run:1,000m. Engine: Hitachi modified BMW-8 liquid cooling engine(Max power 800hp), Crew : 3.
Source: My No.2 bible and internet site.
 

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Thank you,
to everyone who provided this information.
I have been searching for this information for a long time.

Cheers,
Batman :)
 
Mr. Blackite. I have pics of this aircraft labeled "Waturu". Any idea what this means? TIA
 
Hi! Sorry I have no idea about Waturu. I never heard such Japanese. ;D I want to see the picture which you have.
 
Some fantastic pictures and details about the Gasuden Koken-ki long range Japanese aircraft here:
http://arawasi-wildeagles.blogspot.com.ar/
A blog I recommend for any person interested in Japanese aviation.

Someone has a detailed 3d view of this aircraft?

Regards
Alcides
 

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Now I see that the air intake slots at the bottom of the fuselage were added in and not removed! See my comparison photo.

Edit: here's a better one.
 

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Didn't realize we had two threads on the same aircraft... Topics merged.
 

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Hi!
When record flight, Kokenki had a modified larger area vertical tail stabilizer and oil cooler.
Please compare pic 2 and pic 3.
 

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Perhaps the best looking plane of the 1930s (and if not, certainly in the top ten). Thanks for keeping the legend of that amazing aircraft alive! ;)
 
Hi! Kokenki 3-side.
Source : LONG RANGE FLIGHT TEST PLANE "KOKEN-KI" Seirin sha, ISBN4-915552-0515-1 C3053(a collection of photography)
You can compare the vertical tail stabilizer shape by the first 3-side view(after the modification) and the second 3-side view(before the modification) of Kokenki.
 

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Wow. That book looks fantastic! Thanks for sharing, blackkite.
 
This aircraft had an engine with air-cooled valves.
air cooled valve %0AGasuden Koken.png
The air was delivered by a roots blower which allowed the engine to operate at a very lean AFR of 19 during cruise.

From: The Romance of Engines by Takashi Suzuki
 
This item appeared in today's Asahi here https://www.asahi.com/articles/AST793FKGT79UBNB008M.html?iref=comtop_Tech_science_02 (translation by the google AI)

"Kokenki" recognized as aerospace technology heritage Demonstration of unusual main gear retraction​


July 12, 2025 9:00

[Video] A restored version of the "Kokenki" aircraft, which has been certified as an aerospace technology heritage site. The propeller rotation and main landing gear retraction were demonstrated. (Photo by Terutoshi Unuma)
This is a restored version of the "Kokenki" aircraft, which set a world record in 1938 with a range of 11,651 km. To commemorate its recent certification as an "Aeronautical Science and Technology Heritage" by the Japan Society for Aeronautical and Space Sciences, a demonstration was given of how the main landing gear retracts. The landing gear has a complex mechanism in which it is tilted 30 degrees backwards once, before being pulled up 90 degrees and stored inside the wing. The landing gear retraction was apparently performed using a wire system, and manually. At the time, there were already electric and hydraulic methods of operation, but due to the rush to complete the aircraft, parts that required complex design were omitted. (Photo by Unuma Teruto, Misawa Aviation Science Museum, Aomori Prefecture)

The domestically-made propeller aircraft "Kokenki," which set the world record for Japan's first long-distance circular flight in 1938 (Showa 13), has recently been recognized as an "Aerospace Technology Heritage" by the Japan Society for Aeronautical and Space Sciences. On June 22nd, at the Aomori Prefectural Misawa Aviation Science Museum (Director Shigezo Oyanagi, Misawa City ), where a restored aircraft is on display, a presentation was given to commemorate the recognition, along with a demonstration of the propeller rotation and retractable landing gear operation, attracting many aviation fans.
"KOKENKI" is an abbreviation for "Tokyo Imperial University Aeronautical Research Institute Prototype Long-Distance Research Aircraft." The institute began planning in 1931 with the aim of setting a world record for the longest orbital flight distance, and the aircraft was completed in 1937.
On May 13, 1963, the KOKENKI took off from Kisarazu Airfield in Chiba Prefecture , setting a world record for orbital distance of 11,651.011 kilometers and an international record for speed of 186.197 kilometers per hour over a 10,000-kilometer course, before returning to Earth on the 15th with a flight time of 62 hours, 22 minutes and 49 seconds.
At that time, Japan had been on the rise from a developing aviation nation to a first-class nation the previous year (1937), when the Asahi Shimbun company's "Kamikaze" flew from Tokyo to London (total distance of 15,357 km) in 94 hours and 18 minutes (actual flight time was 51 hours and 19 minutes), setting a new international record for intercity flight .
As an aerospace technology heritage item, it was recognized for the fact that it was designed solely to set a world record for long-distance flight, and that various innovations were incorporated into it, such as the fitting of fully retractable main landing gear, which was the first in the world for a long-distance experimental aircraft, and that the achievement of this world record demonstrated the high level of Japanese technology at the time.
The company was also recognized for the fact that the experience, knowledge, and human resources gained at KOKENKI were passed down even after the seven-year ban on aircraft development in postwar Japan, leading to the development of aircraft such as the domestically produced passenger plane, the YS11 .
 

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The long-distance flight test aircraft "Aeronautical Research Institute Prototype Long-distance Aircraft (hereinafter "Kokenki")," manufactured by Tokyo Gas and Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. (hereinafter "Tokyo Gas and Electric Industrial"), the predecessor of Hino Motors, Ltd. (Headquarters: Hino City, Tokyo; President: Ogiso Satoshi; hereinafter "Hino"), has been recognized as an "Aerospace Technology Heritage" by the Japan Society for Aeronautical and Space Sciences. Hino, together with the University of Tokyo (then Tokyo Imperial University), which designed the Kokenki, received the certificate at the University of Tokyo's Yasuda Auditorium on Friday, April 4th.

Aerospace Technology Heritage is recognized for groundbreaking products and technologies in the history of the development of aerospace technology in Japan. Kokenki was recognized for being the only aircraft in Japan to set a world record for circumnavigational distance, and for the experience, knowledge, and human resource training gained through the design, development, and manufacture of the aircraft, which became the foundation of the postwar civilian aircraft industry.
 

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