Development
In June 2001, Pipistrel begun the development of the Taurus as one of the first self-launched gliders in the microlight category. The design used the wings of the Pipistrel Sinus with a new two-seat side-by-side fuselage. To enable the Taurus to self-launch, a pop-out propeller is mounted on the rear fuselage driven by a Rotax 503 piston engine. In 2007 the company developed the Taurus Electro with the piston engine replaced by a permanent magnet synchronous three-phase brushless motor. By 2011, Pipistrel had delivered 100 aircraft of the Taurus family.Operational history
In 2010, the Taurus Electro was awarded the gold medal at the Slovenian Biennale of Design (Bienale industrijskega oblikovanja) BIO 22 "due to its supreme beauty and advanced technologies (...) in a design where form truly follows function in the most aesthetically pleasing way". In AERO Friedrichshafen 2011, the Taurus Electro received the Lindbergh Electric Aircraft Prize for "best electric aircraft". The prize recognized the Electro's “plug and play” electric power system, enhanced by solar panels on the aircraft trailer that allow the system to recharge using clean energy. In September 2011, the Taurus G4 won the CAFE Foundation'sVariants
;Taurus M (Taurus 503) :Original variant powered by a Rotax 503 pop-up internal combustion engine. Since the discontinuation of the Rotax 503, the model has been marketed as Taurus M, but still equipped with the remaining original engines. ;Taurus PureGlider :Unpowered variant without engine fitted. It flew for the first time in 2006. ;Taurus Electro :Variant with a Sinedon electric motor replacing the piston engine; first flown in December 2007. Pipistrel claims it was the first two-seat electric aircraft to have ever flown. Two units were produced. ;Taurus Electro G2 :Updated version of the Electro for series production, introduced in 2011. Powered by a electric motor and lithium batteries. Powered endurance is 17 minutes, intending to allow for self-launching to an altitude of , after which the engine is retracted and the aircraft then soars as a sailplane. It is the first two-seat electric aircraft to have achieved series production.Specifications (Taurus M)
See also
References
Notes
External links
* Taurus M * Taurus Electro {{Pipistrel aircraft 2000s Slovenian sailplanes Pipistrel aircraft Motor gliders Mid-wing aircraft T-tail aircraft Single-engined tractor aircraft