Sisler SF-2 Whistler / SF-2A Cygnet

SF-2A Cygnet

Bert Sisler, of Barnsville, Minnesots, second design was the mid-wing Whistler. The two-seat craft is convertible from tailwheel to tri-gear configuration. The fuselage is tubular steel and fabric, the wings and tail are of wood geodetic construction with fabric covering. The baggage compartment has a 70 lb capacity.

Whistler

The SF-2 Whistler N5549 built in 1973 was improved to become the SF-2A Cygnet circa 1977.

Designed by Burt Sisler, USA, the two-place, plans-built, VW powered Cygnet has geodesic wing construction, offers excellent short-field performance, good climb rate and ease of control. It can handle two 175-pound people and 80 lbs of baggage. This is a United States designed side by side 2 seater being designed for STOL operations. The Cygnet features folding wings and is designed for running on Mogas. Early United States mac¬hines were powered by a 60 hp HAPI engine, providing a 100 mph cruise and 350 mile range.

The Cygnet Model SF-2A in 2008 was available from:
Viking Aircraft
333 Sunny Hill Dr
Elkhorn, Wisconsin 55312

SF-2 Whistler
Engine: 70 hp Baker VW1834
Wingspan: 30’0″
Length: 19 ft
Height: 5 ft 9.5 in
Empty weight: 645 lb
Useful load: 500 lb
Baggage capacity: 70 lb
Max speed: 95 mph
Cruise: 86 mph
Stall: 43 mph
Landing speed: 42 mph
Landing roll: 300 ft
ROC solo: 700 fpm
Seats: 2

SF-2A Cygnet
N191S
Engine: 62hp Barker-VW 1834cc
Wingspan: 30’0″
Length: 19’0″
Useful load: 515 lb
Max speed: 108 mph
Cruise: 100 mph
Stall: 48 mph
Seats: 2

SF-2A Cygnet
Engine: 1835cc HAPI VW conversion
HP range: 60-82
Speed max: 108 mph
Cruise: 90-100 mph
Range: 390 sm
Stall: 41 mph (solo), 48 mph (dual)
ROC: 580 fpm
Take-off dist: 700 ft
Landing dist: 700 ft
Fuel cap: 15 USG
Weight empty: 585 lbs
Gross: 1100 lbs
Height: 5.83 ft
Length: 19 ft
Wing span: 30 ft
Wing area: 125 sq.ft
Seats: 2
Landing gear: tail wheel

Cygnet SF-2A
Engine: 1835 60HP VW
Span: 30 ft
Empty Weight: 585 lbs
Useful Load: 515 lbs
Seats: 2 Side by Side
Stall: 48 mph
Landing Speed: 60 mph
Cruise: 100 mph
Rate of Climb: 580 fpm

SIPA S.251 / S.2150 Antilope

The first prototype S-251 flew on 7 November 1962. An all-metal long range 4 to 5 seats.

In 1965 the S.2150 set the speed record for aircraft of this class reaching 436km/h on a 100km close circuit.

Gallery

S-251
Engine: 1 x Turbomeca Astazou II, 560 hp
Wingspan w/tip tanks: 37 ft
Length: 29.52 ft
Empty weight: 1948 lb
MTOW: 3968 lb
Range: 1240 mi at 280 mph with 5 pax
Range at 19,700 ft: 1466 mi
Service ceiling: 36,000 ft
ROC: 2652 fpm
TO run: 678 ft
TO to 50ft: 1345 ft

S-2510
Engine: 1 x Turbomeca Astazou X turboprop, 496kW
Max. speed: 436 km/h / 271 mph

SIPA SIPA-1000 Coccinelle

In 1955 Yves Gardan designed the SIPA 1000 Coccinelle side by side two seat light aeroplane with a 90 hp engine. It was designed and built in two months, first flying on 11 June 1955.

Designed for simplicity, the three undercarriage wheels are interchangeable and were from motor scooters. A number of automotive prats were used including oil pressure and temperature indicators, and the hydraulic brakes are from a Renault 4 cv car.

A 65 hp or 90 hp Continental engine could be fitted.

Production deliveries were scheduled for April 1956.

S.1000 Coccinelle
Engine: Continental C90, 90 hp
Wingspan: 25 ft 11 in
Length: 17 ft 10 in
Height: 7 ft 3 in
Empty weight: 740 lb
Loaded weight: 1260 lb
Max speed: 125 mph
Cruise: 112 mph
Range: 375 mi
Seats: 2

SIPA S.90 / S.91 / S.92 / S.93 / S.94 / S.901 / S.902 / S.903

Yves Gardan is the engineer who, in 1947, designed the SIPA 90, winner of the two seater 75hp Concours, beating 13 other competitors and prompting an order for 100 from the govern¬ment Service de l’Aviation Legere et Sportive (115 were built).

S.901

The S.901 is the production version.

Numerous experimental versions were built.

S.90
Engine: 75 hp Mathis 4G-69

S.91
Engine: 85 hp Continental C85-12F

S.92
Engine: 85 hp Mathis 4GB-62

S.93
Engine: 75 hp Salmson 5AQ-01

S.94
Engine: 90 hp Continental C90-8F

S.901
Engine: 1 x Mini 4 DC 30 or DC 32, 56kW
Max take-off weight: 600 kg / 1323 lb
Empty weight: 366 kg / 807 lb
Wingspan: 8.75 m / 29 ft 8 in
Length: 5.75 m / 19 ft 10 in
Height: 1.75 m / 6 ft 9 in
Wing area: 11.2 sq.m / 120.56 sq ft
Max. speed: 200 km/h / 124 mph
Cruise: 109 mph
ROC: 492 fpm
Ceiling: 4000 m / 13100 ft
Range: 500 km / 311 miles

S.902
Engine: 85 hp Continental C85-12F

S.903
Engine: 90 hp Continental C90-12-F

S.901

SIPA SIPA-300

In 1954 Yves Gardan designed the SIPA 300 single jet engine tandem two seater ab-initio jet trainer. The construction of the prototype was launched on the basis of a contract awarded by the SALS.

SIPA-300 Article

First flown on September 4, 1954, by Max Fischl, it was powered by a 0.712kN Turbomeca Palas.

After thirty hours of flight testing by the manufacturer, the Sipa-300R entered the CEV Brétigny sur Orge April 4, 1955. On July 28 of the same year, it had accumulated 75 hours of flight and 99 landings.

This prototype was destroyed during a test spin on Sept. 26, 1955. No serial production was considered.

Fuel was in two tanks, one of 70 lt in the central wing and the other, 150 lt, housed in the fuselage.

Gallery

Engine: Turboméca Palas I, 160 kg
Wingspan: 8.02 m / 26 ft 4 in
Length: 6.71 m
Height: 2.50 m
Wing area: 9.8 m²
Empty weight: 524 Kg
Max weight: 880 Kg
Max. speed: 360 km/h / 224 mph
Cruise speed: 312 Km / h
ROC: 4,6 m / s
Ceiling: 5000 m
Range: 400 – 700 miles

SIPA S.300

SIPA SIPA-200 Minijet

In 1949 Yves Gardan created the SIPA 200 Minijet, a single jet engine light two seater capable of 250 mph (400 kph) maximum level speed with 358 lb (160 kg) static thrust. It was distinctive in its twin-boom configuration and short, tubby nacelle housing the engine and cockpit.

SIPA-200 Minijet Article

The SIPA 200 was built at the request of the French government, which was evaluating new aviation concepts as part of the progressive build-up of France’s postwar aircraft industry.

The monoplane cantilever wing has a laminar profile. The undercarriage is of tricycle. It has been designed and manufactured by ERAM. The main gear retracts completely into the body. The front landing gear remains slightly out, providing protection to the cockpit in case of landing gear retracted. There is a retractable rear stand that protects when landing.

Kerosene fuel is held in 2 x 60 lt tanks in each wing, and one central reservoir of 120 lt in the fuselage. A total capacity of about 240 lt.

Although its extreme height is given as 6ft, the wings are at waist level, the cabin roof very little higher, and the underside of the fuselage just a few inches clear of the ground. The second prototype fins and rudders are very slightly modified; the original Y control-column was replaced by two separate sticks, and a full blind-flying panel was now installed, and five-point seat harness. All instruments are on a vertical panel, and flap, undercarriage, fuel and trim controls and indicators are on a console down the centre of the cockpit, between the two pilots.

To climb in, one ducks under the open roof panel and then wriggles down and back into the seat. Once in, there is just enough room for elbows and plenty for the legs. The view is reasonable over the instrument panel, good to the sides and poor everywhere behind the three to nine o’clock sectors.

To started up; select petrol on, oil on, pressed the starter for two seconds, then further pressed the igniter button and at 10,000 revs released these two buttons, switched to kerosine, and opened the throttle. Taxi is about 25,000 revs, using toe-operated hydraulic brakes for steering. The noise is distinctive but neither loud nor penetrating.

Takeoff uses 15 deg of flap and 35,000 revs against the brakes and the take-off is about 400 yd. By the time the undercarriage is pumped up, the speed has gone from 70 to 100 kt and climb is between 200 and 300 m/min (990 ft/min).

The S.200 made its first flight on 14 January 1952 at the hands of Roger Launay. Early test flights revealed that it was underpowered and performance fell short of expectations, and it was unable to compete with contemporary types such as the Fouga Magister.

The second prototype Minijet, unlike the first prototype, is fully aerobatic at its take-off weight of 1,675 lb.

The flaps are double slotted but so arranged that, when retracted, both slots are shrouded by the wing under-skin. The approach is about 80 kt. The flap selector was left “down” and one full stroke of the pump lowered 5 deg of flap to some 30 deg. More than this is available but is never required.

It stalls at about 50 kt, cruises at 150 kt at 1,500 ft at 31,500 r.p.m., and climbs at almost 1,500 ft/min. Although there is nothing “hot” about it, it does behave like a jet aircraft.

Besides the two prototypes, a pre-production batch of five has been ordered by the French Government Secretariat for Light and Sporting Aviation. Furthermore, NATO training authorities have shown interest in the Minijet as a possible basic trainer. Seven prototypes were built. All except one (No.5) were assigned to the Training Service Aviation and based in Saint Yan.

Gallery

Specifications:

Prototype N ° 1
Engine: Turbomeca Palas I, 150kg / 330 lb thrust.
Wingspan: 7.20 m / 24 ft 7 in
Length: 5.12 m / 17 ft 10 in
Height: 1.78 m / 6 ft 10 in
Wing area: 7.90 m²
Empty weight: 488 kg
Max weigh: 824 kg
Wing loading: 85 kg / m²
Max speed: 185 kt / 400 km/h / 249 mph
Cruise: 195 kt
Stall speed: 55 kt
Ceiling: 8000 m / 26250 ft
Range: 500 km / 311 miles
Seats: 2

Prototypes N ° 2 of 7
Engine: Turbomeca Palas I, 160kg
Wingspan: 8.00 m
Length: 5.12 m
Height: 1.75 m
Wing area: 9.62 m²
Empty weight: 488 kg
Max weight: 825 kg
Max speed: 240 kt
Stall speed: 70 kt

SIPA S.10 / S.11 / S.12 / S.111 / S.121

The S.10 was the French version of the Arado Ar.396, built as the company’s first post-war product. Twenty-eight produced.

The S.11 (50 built for the French Air Force) and S.111 were modified versions of the S.10 two-seat advanced trainer, fitted with Renault 125 engines (440kW SNECMA S-12-SO2-3H, French-built Argus As 411).

SIPA S.12

The S.12 was similar to the S.11 but was constructed entirely of metal; 52 S.12s were built for the French Air Force together with 58 S.121 lightweight derivatives. For use in Algeria, a number of S.111s and S.121s were modified to carry rockets and bombs for ground attack under the designations S.111A and S.121 A.

Sipa 121 trainer

S.12
Engine: 580 hp SNECMA 12S-02
Empty weight: 4107 lb
Loaded weight: 5126 lb
Max speed: 224 mph
Cruise: 199 mph
ROC: 1476 fpm
Wingspan: 36 ft 1 in
Length: 30 ft 7.5 in
Height: 8 ft
Wing area: 197.1 sq. ft

SIPA S.12

Sinfield Honeybee

The forerunner of the Hummer, the Honeybee is a single seat, taildragger-type ultralight. The fuselage is a wooden box girder, and the wing is built from aluminum tube, covered with cloth. There are no control surfaces in the wing. Power is supplied by a 20-hp JLO 395-cc, single-cylinder engine, turning a wooden pusher propeller. Cruising speed is about 40 mph, with stalling speed at about 30 mph. Takeoff speed is approximately 20 mph, and the one-gallon fuel supply lasts for 45 minutes at full throttle. The aircraft can be broken down into small components for easy storage.

Engine: JLO 395cc, 20 hp
Cruise: 40 mph
Stall: 30 mph

Sindlinger Special #1

Fred G Sindlinger built the Sindlinger Special #1 in 1959. Registered N6448C, it was a single-place cabin, low-wing monoplane powered by a 65hp Continental engine, later 75hp A-75.

It first flew on 10 April 1959.

Engine: 65hp Continental
Wingspan: 20’4″
Length: 16’5″
Useful load: 336 lb
Max speed: 145 mph
Cruise: 120 mph
Stall: 63 mph
Range: 524 mi
Seats: 1