The Aero was a Czech automobile, manufactured between 1929 and 1947 by a well-known
aircraft and car-body company owned by one Dr. Kabes in Praha-Vysocany. Now Aero Vodochody produces aircraft only.
The next model in 1932, the Type 20, was a 660 cc vertical twin with, among other improvements,
four wheel brakes. The most common body was a two door three seat roadster but four door saloons
were also made using steel covered timber framed coachwork. A 999 cc 26 bhp engine was available from 1932.
In 1934 the Type 30 was announced with a 998 cc 26 bhp twin-cylinder engine, front wheel drive
and all independent suspension. The car could reach 65 mph (105 km/h). About 3000 were made before the war.
The last model, the Type 50, also front-wheel-drive, had a 1997 cc four-cylinder 50 PS (37 kW
two-stroke engine with alloy cylinder head and was capable of reaching 78 mph (125 km/h).
After the war the company made the Type 30 until 1947. About 500 were produced with 200 going
to France and 100 to Belgium. Design work had been done on a new post war range which would
have had hydraulic brakes and four speed gearboxes but they did not go into production. Aero
disappeared when the Czech motor industry was nationalised...