A very old but very rigid double-pole design, usually flown with a 13 sq.m Vento wing.
The Quander Airpfeil (English: Air-Arrow) is a German ultralight trike that was designed and produced by UL Flugzeugbau Quander of Petershagen. The aircraft is supplied complete and ready to fly.
Empty weight: 130 kg Wing span: 9.5 m Wing area: 13 sq.m Fuel capacity: 62 lt Certification: Vz Engine: Rotax 582, 65 hp MAUW: 400 kg Seats: 2 Max speed: 145 kph Cruise speed: 80-120 kph Minimum speed: 43 kph Climb rate: 5.4 m/s Fuel consumption: 10 lt/hr Price (1998): 38 400 DM
The ULBI Wild Thing is a German ultralight aircraft, designed by R. Kurtz and produced by Ultraleicht Bau International (ULBI), of Hassfurt. The aircraft was supplied as a kit for amateur construction or as a complete ready-to-fly-aircraft.
Since 1997 the Wild Things have been built in WT 01 and WT 02 versions at the Aerodrome Hafurt (EDQT). Construction is of aluminum and the Wild Thing is suitable for training, towing, as well as for the relaxing.
The Wild Thing wings are foldable, and an engine option is a Hirth F 20.
In the 1990s the aircraft was marketed by Air-Max GmbH of Nuremberg, Germany.
The aircraft was introduced in 1996 and production ended when ULBI went out of business in 2014.
The Aeroplane is a single seat single engined biplane with two-axis control. Wings have swept back leading and trailing edges, and constant chord; no tail, elevator only. Pitch control by elevator at rear; yaw control by tip rudders; no separate roll control; control inputs through stick for pitch/yaw. Wings braced by struts and transverse X cables; wing profile; double surface. Undercarriage has three wheels in tricycle formation; bungee suspension on all wheels. Nosewheel steering independent from yaw control. Brake on nosewheel. Aluminium tube framework, without pod. Engine mounted between wings driving pusher propeller. Designed by Larry Mauro, under the original title of Icarus II as a hang glider, this famous biplane was one of the first hybrid control hang gliders to be motorised (in 1975 by John Moody). It then pursued a remarkable career under the name of Easy Riser; by 1981 more than 900 were flying in the United States, built from plans supplied by the Larry, or sold as kits by different firms such as UFM of Kentucky.
Since 1981, this company has offered it with an elevator added at the back of the interplane struts, in which form it carries the name Aeroplane. It is fitted with two axis control and there is a fixed seat for the pilot, the hybrid control with the pilot moving in a swing seat having been abandoned. The rudders on the standard Aeroplane are hinged on the rear interplane struts at the wing tips. The engine is the Cuyuna 215R of 20hp, which as an option ($300) can be replaced by the 430R as on the Aeroplane XP, the three axis control version. The Aeroplane is sold either ready to fly for $5200 in 1983, or as a kit requiring 150h assembly for $3995. Options include floats for $900, transport covers for $250, skis, parachute and an instrument panel. Whereas UFM of Kentucky has fitted the Easy Riser with a conventional tail giving rise to the Aeroplane (a 1983 model), Northstar had preferred a canard of variable incidence, thus acting as an elevator, for its Viking. This rigid wing biplane has retrofit horizontal tail and strong spars. A joystick controls the elevator and drag tip rudders. Side mounted joy stick, rudder pedals, nose wheel steerable through rudder pedals. Single-cylinder Cuyuna 215R engine has reduction drive and is pusher mounted in the rear behind the pilot. It turns a 50-inch prop. Tricycle gear has 20-inch wheels which are shock cord mounted and a 16-inch nosewheel with a wheel brake. The Aeroplane XP is a single seat single engined biplane with conventional three axis control. Wings have swept back leading and trailing edges, and constant chord; conventional tail. Pitch control by elevator on tall; yaw control by fin mounted rudder; roll control by spoilerons on upper wing; control inputs through stick for pitch/roll and pedals for yaw. Wings braced by struts and transverse X cables; wing profile; double surface. Undercarriage has three wheels in tricycle formation; bungee suspension on all wheels. Push right go right nosewheel steering connected to yaw control. Brake on nosewheel. Aluminium tube framework, with optional pod. Engine mounted between wings driving pusher propeller. The Aeroplane XP is basically a three axis version of the Aeroplane with a twin cylinder engine. The design abandons the tip rudders of the Aeroplane in favour of a conventional tail, the stick and pedal arrangements being similarly conventional, with the stick mounted on the side of the framework. One interesting point, however, is that both spoilers can be simultaneously deployed to act as air brakes; this is quite a common arrangement with pedal actuated spoilers, but most unusual when the spoilers are actuated by the stick. Options for the Aeroplane XP are as for the Aeroplane, except that UFM of Kentucky announced in March 1983 that a pod was available for the XP. Price is $4500 and the XP can be folded into a package measuring some 2 x 4 x 16 ft (0.6 x 1.2 x 4.9 m), allowing trailer or car top transport. Rigging time is quoted as 50 min by one person.
Aeroplane Engine: Cuyuna 215R, 20hp at 5500rpm Propeller diameter and pitch 54 x 20 inch, 1.37 x 0.51 m Reduction ratio 2.0/1 Power per unit area 0.12hp/sq.ft, 1.3hp/sq.m Fuel capacity 5.0 US gal, 4.2 Imp gal, 18.9 litre Length overall 11.0 ft, 3.35 m Height overall 8.0ft, 2.44m Wing span 30.0ft, 9.14m Constant chord 3.4ft, 1.04m Dihedral 15 deg Sweepback 15 deg Total wing area 170 sq.ft, 15.8 sq.m Upper wing area 102.5 sq.ft, 9.52 sq.m Lower wing area 67.5 sq.ft, 6.27 sq.m Upper wing aspect ratio 8.8/1 Lower wing aspect ratio 5.8/1 Wheel track 4.5 ft, 1.37 m Wheelbase 4.5 ft, 1.37 m Nosewheel diameter overall 20 inch, 51 cm Empty weight 180 lb, 82 kg Max take off weight 400 lb, 181 kg Payload 220 lb, 100kg Max wing loading 2.35 lb/sq.ft, 11.5kg/sq.m Max power loading 20.0 lb/hp, 9.1kg/hp Load factors +6.0, 4.0 design; +10.0, 5.0 ultimate Never exceed speed 50 mph, 80 kph
Aeroplane XP Engine: Cuyuna 430R, 34hp at 6000rpm Propeller diameter and pitch 54 x 30 inch, 1.37 x 0.76 m V belt reduction, ratio 2.0/1 Max static thrust 250 lb, 113 kg Power per unit area 0.20 hp/sq.ft, 2.2 hp/sq.m Fuel capacity 5.0 US gal, 4.2 Imp gal, 18.9 litre Length overall 11.0 ft, 3.35 m Height overall 8.0ft, 2.44m Wing span 30.0ft, 9.14m Constant chord 3.4ft, 1.04m Dihedral 15 deg Sweepback 15 deg Total wing area 170 sq.ft, 15.8 sq.m Upper wing area 102.5 sq.ft, 9.52 sq.m Lower wing area 67.5 sq.ft, 6.27 sq.m Upper wing aspect ratio 8.8/1 Lower wing aspect ratio 5.8/1 Wheel track 4.5 ft, 1.37 m Wheelbase 4.5 ft, 1.37 m Nosewheel diameter overall 20 inch, 51 cm Tailplane span 8.5ft, 2.59m Fin height 3.5ft, 1.07m Empty weight 225 lb, 102 kg Max take off weight 475 lb, 215 kg Payload 250 lb, 113kg Max wing loading 2.79 lb/sq.ft, 13.6kg/sq.m Max power loading 14.0 lb/hp, 6.3kg/hp Load factors +6.0, 4.0 design; +10.0, 5.0 ultimate Max level speed 55 mph, 88 kph Never exceed speed 55 mph, 88 kph Max cruising speed 50 mph, 80 kph Economic cruising speed 40 mph, 64 kph Stalling speed 22 mph, 35 kph Max climb rate at sea level 1200 ft/min, 6.1 m/s Min sink rate 290 ft/min at 30 mph, 1.5 m/s at 48 kph Best glide ratio with power off 8/1 at 28 mph, 45 kph Take off distance 75 ft, 23 m Landing distance 100 ft, 30 m Service ceiling 18,000 ft, 5490 m Range at average cruising speed 125 mile, 201 km
Aeroplane XP-2 Engine: Cuyuna, 43 hp or Rotax 47 hp Wingspan: 32 ft Wing area: 196.5 sq.ft Empty wt: 250 lbs Max wt: 700 lbs Cruise: 55 mph Stall: 26 mph Vmax: 63 mph ROC: 600 fpm TO run: 100 ft Ldg roll: 100 ft
The Easy Riser biplane was designed by Larry Mauro and which under the name Icarus II was one of the earliest hang gliders to be motorised, back in 1975 by John Moody. A rigid wing tailless biplane flown by supplemental weight-shift. A variety of engines could be fitted, including the 125cc McCulloch 101 go cart engine, UFM selling the machine as a hang-glider. Control method: Standard tip rudder and weight-shift pitch axis, optional 2 or 3 axis control. First year built 1976. Units delivered by June 1981 2,500. Many options in power and landing gear were available. It is strut and cable braced.
The Easy Riser is a progression from the Icarus II but the wing is a modified monowing with a double surfaced rigid airfoil. Wingtip rudders are mounted on ball bearings and drag brakes are fitted. Wing tips are fully contoured. Wing covering is 1.3oz dacron sealed with aircraft dope.
The spars are made from 6061-T6 aluminium tubing with foam core spruce ribs. Wing bracing is both aluminium struts and cable. All rigging is aircraft grade. All hardware is aircraft grade, fastened with pop rivets and bolts.
The pilot has a tube cockpit support with an optional swing seat.
The Easy Riser won the 1976 World Open Hang Gliding Championships.
The Easy Riser is offered as a hang glider, and engine and landing gear packages to use with this aircraft are offered separately by other companies. Power and landing gear optional. Standard tip rudder and weight-shift pitch axis, optional 2 or 3 axis control.
The first aeroplane with a circular wing, the Spheroplan, was built in Russia by A.G.Ufimtsev in 1909-10. Ufimtsev practised controlling the Spheroplan in numerous runs on the ground, but the tests were never completed because of the damage done to the apparatus by a sudden storm.
The UFAG C.I was a military reconnaissance aircraft produced in the Austro-Hungarian Empire during World War I, by the Ungarische Flugzeugfabrik Abteil Gesellschaft (UFAG). It was introduced in April 1918, and was widely used on the Italian Front in the final months of World War I.
The UFAG C.I incorporated the best features of the Brandenburg C.II(U) with single-bay wings and ‘I’ strut inter-plane bracing, which was replaced wing conventional steel-tube interplane struts in production aircraft. More manoeuvrable than the Phönix C.I, the C.I had good performance, but suffered from a few odd handling characteristics.
Ufag C.Is in service
Production of the C.I continued after the Armistice by MARE and was also built by the Neuschloss-Lichtig factory as the NL Sportplane.
UFAG Brandenburg C.I aircraft in Albertfalva (Budapest) in 1916
The C.I was widely used by the KuKLFT on the Italian front by at least 30 Fliks. The C.I was also used post WWI by the Hungarian Red Airborne Corps as well as the clandestine Hungarian Legügyi Hivatal. Ex-military C.Is were also converted for civil use and as mailplanes.
Twenty UFAG C.I were captured from the Hungarian Soviet Republic in 1919 and used by the Romanian Air Corps.
Variants:
Ufag 161.01 First prototype 8.92 m (29.3 ft) span, 200 hp (150 kW) Hiero 6, ‘I’ type inter-plane struts.
Ufag 161.02 Second prototype, 230 hp (170 kW) Hiero 6, ‘I’ type inter-plane struts.
Ufag C.I (series 161.03 to 161.22) Production by Ufag, 9.12 m (29.9 ft) span, 230 hp (170 kW) Hiero 6, twin inter-plane struts.
Ufag C.I (series 161.31 to 161.250) Production by Ufag, 9.5 m (31 ft) span, 230 hp (170 kW) Hiero 6, twin inter-plane struts.
Ufag C.I(Ph) (series 123.01 to 123.40) Production by Phönix, 9.12 m (29.9 ft) span, 230 hp (170 kW) Hiero 6, twin inter-plane struts.
UFAG 60.01 an improved C.I which would evolve into the UFAG 60.03 / C.II.
Specifications:
C.I second series 161.23 – 161.250 Powerplant: 1 × Hiero 6, 170 kW (230 hp) Propeller: 2-bladed wooden fixed-pitch Upper wingspan: 9.5 m (31 ft 2 in) Lower wingspan: 9.4 m (30 ft 10 in) Wing area: 26.3 m2 (283 sq ft) Length: 7.41 m (24 ft 4 in) Height: 2.7 m (8 ft 10 in) Empty weight: 750 kg (1,653 lb) Gross weight: 1,150 kg (2,535 lb) Maximum speed: 190 km/h (120 mph, 100 kn) Range: 350 km (220 mi, 190 nmi) Endurance: 3 hours Service ceiling: 4,900 m (16,100 ft) Guns: 1 x 8 mm (0.315 in) Schwarzlose machine-gun forward-firing fixed machine guns; 1 x 8 mm (0.315 in) Schwarzlose machine-gun in trainable rear cockpit mounting Bombs: 12 x 12 kg (26 lb) bombs (161.131 onwards) Crew: 2