experimental airplane in 1932, showing Stipa's "intubed propeller" design in which the
propeller and
engine are mounted inside a hollow tube which constitutes the airplane's
fuselage. In the 1920s, Stipa applied his study of hydraulic engineering to develop a theory of how to make aircraft more efficient as they traveled through the air. Noting that in
fluid dynamics—in accordance with
Bernoulli's principle—a fluid's velocity increases as the diameter of a tube it is passing through decreases, Stipa believed that the same principle could be applied to air flow to make an
aircraft's engine more efficient by directing its propeller wash through a
Venturi tube in a design he termed an "intubed propeller". In his concept, the
fuselage of a single-engined
airplane designed around an intubed propeller would be constructed as a tube, with the propeller and
engine nacelle inside the tube, and therefore within the fuselage. The propeller would be of the same diameter as the tube, and its slipstream would exit the tube via the opening at the tube's trailing edge at the rear of the fuselage. Stipa spent years studying the idea
mathematically, eventually determining that the Venturi tube's inner surface needed to be shaped like an
airfoil in order to achieve the greatest efficiency. He also determined the optimum shape of the propeller, the most efficient distance between the leading edge of the tube and the propeller, and the best rate of revolution of the propeller. He appears to have intended the intubed propeller for use in large, multi-engine,
flying wing aircraft—for which he produced several designs—but saw the construction of an experimental single-engine
prototype aircraft as the first step in proving the concept. Stipa published his ideas in the Italian aviation journal
Rivista Aeronautica ("Aeronautical Review"), then asked the Air Ministry to build a prototype aircraft to prove his concept. Eager for propaganda opportunities to highlight Italian achievements in technology to the world, and particularly interested in aviation advances, the Italian
Fascist government approved of the venture, and contracted with the
Caproni Aviation Corporation to build the prototype in 1932. ==The Stipa-Caproni==