
The 1935 single place Wildcat designed by Art Sampson registered N14806, was the example built.
Engine: 65hp Velie M-5
Wing span: 22’3″
Length: 15’1″
Useful load: 315 lb
Max speed: 150 mph
Cruise: 130 mph
Stall: 50 mph

The 1935 single place Wildcat designed by Art Sampson registered N14806, was the example built.
Engine: 65hp Velie M-5
Wing span: 22’3″
Length: 15’1″
Useful load: 315 lb
Max speed: 150 mph
Cruise: 130 mph
Stall: 50 mph
In 1935 Salzman Aircraft Services built the SL-1 two place cabin monoplane registered N X14525. Powered by a 90hp Wright Gipsy, the registration was cancelled on 1 November 1935.

Designed by George Stark as the Salvay-Stark Skyhopper, the prototype TT-1 (N3113G) with a 90hp Continental, was built by Al Trefethen and Art Thistle. It first flew on 9 November 1959.

The 1946 Skyhopper 10 plans were marketed for home-builders with a 65hp Continental engine. Designed to sell for around $1,000, a prototype, N41770, was built.
The Skyhopper 10 design modified by Al Trefethen in 1959 as tri-gear Sport Aire II. Also seen under the company names of Avia-Boosters and Skyhopper, but still the same Salvay-Stark design.
It was claimed to be the inspiration for the 1948 Morrisey Nifty.
The Skyhopper 11 of 1959 two place version of the Skyhopper 10 had a greater span wing and 65-85hp Continental; also 108-125hp Lycoming. Registrations N197N, N4787T and possibly others.
Skyhopper 10
Engine: Continental, 50hp
Wingspan: 25’0″
Length: 18’10”
Useful load: 315 lb
Max speed: 130 mph
Cruise speed: 120 mph
Stall: 42 mph
Range: 275 mi
Seats: 1-2
Skyhopper 11
Engines: Continental 65-85hp; Lycoming 108-125hp
Wingspan: 26’4″
Seats: 2
Sport-Aire II / TT-1
1961
Engine: 125hp Lycoming
Wingspan: 26’5″
Length: 21’9″
Useful load: 475 lb
Max speed: 142 mph
Cruise speed: 128 mph
Stall: 62 mph
Range: 400 mi
Ceiling: 13,000 ft
Seats: 2

In 1910, mechanic-electrician of the Carcel Modelo de Valencia, Arturo Salvador Gómez, designed and constructed a monoplane at Valencia, Spain, completing the craft in 1911.
The airplane was presented in public on the occasion of the Valencia-Alicante-Valencia aerial raid and subsequent Aviation Festival held at the airfield of La Malvarrosa Beach from 29 to 31 July.
Lacking the engine, the plane was bought by the Aragonese pilot Gregorio Campaña, who had broken his own design plane by falling into the water during the Raid. Campaña intended to equip the Salvador monoplane with the 50 hp Anzani engine from its shattered plane. On August 6, 1911, Campaña departed from Valencia in the direction of Huesca taking with him the plane of Salvador and the remains of his own.
He arrived in Huesca on 9 August and flew on 11 and 12 August. It is not know if the flights made were with the airplane of Salvador with the Anzani engine or if he repaired his own airplane.
Wingspan: 8.9 m
Length: 9 m
The Salmson-Béchereau SB-7 was a fighter aircraft built by French company Salmson in 1925. The SB-7, listed elsewhere as ‘AMBC1’ single-seat, was a high-wing monoplane of all-wood construction, with a canvas coating. Only one aircraft was built, and it was intended as a navalized SB-5.
Only the one was built.
Engine: 1 × Salmson 18Cmb, 390 kW (520 hp)
Propeller: 2-blade
Wingspan: 14.00 m (45 ft 11 in)
Wing area: 39 m2 (420 sq ft)
Length: 11.15 m (36 ft 7 in)
Height: 3.00 m (9 ft 10 in)
Empty weight: 1,600 kg (3,527 lb)
Maximum speed: 200 km/h (120 mph, 110 kn)
Crew: Two

The Salmson-Béchereau SB-5, sometimes known as the Béchereau C.2 (C.2 denoting a two-seat chasseure or fighter) was Salmon’s response to the French 1925 two seat fighter programme. Its strut-braced, parasol wing design owed much to Béchereau’s 1921 Letord-Béchereau 2 and 1924 Buscaylet-Béchereau 2 single seat fighters and, like them, it used a similar type of 370 kW (500 hp) Salmson 18Cm eighteen cylinder water-cooled radial engine.
The wing of the SB-5 was in two parts, joined low over the fuselage by a pair of cabane struts. Beyond the section, where a pronounced reduction (c.50%) in chord, particularly on the trailing edge, provided a better field of view for the pilot, the wings were straight edged and of constant chord out to almost square tips. The wings were mounted with about 2° of sweep and 3° of anhedral. Each half-wing was built around two spruce longerons with pine ribs and plywood covered at the leading edge with fabric elsewhere.

It was noted at the time that the wings were very thin and so required elaborate struttage which also involved the fixed landing gear. The central part of the latter was a wooden airfoil section, 3 m (9 ft 10 in) span plane which contributed an extra 13% lifting area. This had metal carriers at its tips, each supported by a pair of almost parallel struts to the lower fuselage. Split axles, mounted centrally on a transverse V-strut from the fuselage, were connected to the carriers via rubber shock absorbers and mounted the wheels. The main wing struts converged slightly from the carriers to the wing longerons at about 80% span. From near the midpoint of these struts a further pair of inverted Vs braced the inner wing to the upper fuselage.

The forward part of the SB-5’s fuselage was designed around the 390 kW (520 hp) Salmson 18Cmb water-cooled radial engine, which was set back from the propeller on a 1.00 m (3 ft 3 in) extension shaft. The fuselage was built around four longerons but had a near-circular cross-section shaped by formers and covered with fabric. The pilot’s open cockpit was entirely under the central trailing edge opening and the rear cockpit was very close behind, still partly forward of the outer trailing edge. The intention, probably never realised, was that the SB-5 should have two fixed, forward firing 7.7 mm (0.303 in) machine guns controlled by the pilot and another pair on a flexible mount for the gunner. The fuselage tapered to the rear with a ridge fairing which began behind the gunner’s cockpit, ran along the spine and blended into a slightly rounded, low and broad fin, integral with the fuselage, which carried a pentagonal rudder. The SB-5’s tailplane, at the top of the fuselage, was generous and more rounded in plan than the fin and braced on each side by a strut from below. Its elevator trailing edges were level with the rudder hinge.
The exact date of the first flight of the SB-5 is not known but, described as new, it was being test flown by Duchamps in the last week of January 1926. By April it was at the government testing ground at Villacoublay, where tests revealed handling problems sufficiently serious to require significant modifications. When these were completed in the summer of 1926, the aircraft was redesignated the Salmson-Béchereaux SB-6. The most important changes were to the wings, where the ailerons now occupied all the trailing edge, and the size of its central cut-out was reduced. In addition the propeller drive shaft was shortened, reducing the SB-6’s length by 300 mm (11.8 in).

Further testing showed the performance of the SB-6 did not meet the requirements of the two-seat programme specification. Béchereaux then left Salmson to form his own company, the Société pour la Réalisation d’Avion Prototypes (S.R.A.P.) and the SB-6 was displayed at the Paris Aero Salon in December 1926 as the S.R.A.P. 2; shortly afterwards the C.2 programme itself was abandoned and development of the S.R.A.P. 2 ended.
SB-6
Powerplant: 1 × Salmson 18Cmb, 390 kW (520 hp)
Propeller: 2-bladed
Wingspan: 14.6 m (47 ft 11 in)
Wing area: 35 m2 (380 sq ft)
Length: 9.7 m (31 ft 10 in)
Height: 3.0 m (9 ft 10 in)
Empty weight: 1,558 kg (3,435 lb)
Gross weight: 2,360 kg (5,203 lb)
Maximum speed: 220 km/h (140 mph, 120 kn) at 3,000 m (9,800 ft)
Service ceiling: 7,150 m (23,460 ft)
Time to altitude: 3,000 m (9,800 ft) 9.0 min
Crew: Two
Armament: provision for 2×7.7 mm (0.303 in) fixed, forward firing machine guns, plus another pair on a flexible mount in rear cockpit.


The SB-4 was a high-wing monoplane intended to be used for tourist purposes, with provisions for one passenger. First flying in 1923, only one aircraft was built.
Engine: 1 × Salmson AD.3 3, 12 kW (16 hp)
Propeller: 2-blade
Wingspan: 8.00 m (26 ft 3 in)
Wing area: 14 sq.m (150 sq ft)
Length: 6.05 m (19 ft 10 in)
Height: 1.75 m (5 ft 9 in)
Gross weight: 240 kg (529 lb)
Maximum speed: 80 km/h (50 mph, 43 kn)
Crew: One
The Salmson-Béchereau SB-2 was a 1923 mid-wing trainer aircraft built by the French company Salmson.
The SB-2 was basically a mid-wing monoplane design. Only one aircraft was built.
The SB-2 was developed into the Salmson-Béchereau SB-3.
SB-2
Engine: 1 x Salmson 1 9AC, 120 hp / 89 kW
Propeller: 2-bladed
Wingspan 7.00m (23 ft 0 in)
Wing area: 11 m2 (120 sq ft)
Length: 6.03 m (19 ft 9 in)
Height: 2.14 m (7 ft 0 in)
Empty weight: 622 kg (1,371 lb)
Maximum speed: 220 km/h (140 mph, 120 kn)
Seats: 1
The pre-War Salmson D.2 Phrygane was first produced in 1934.
Production models were the three-seat D.2 and the four-seat D.2T-4, both powered by the 135 hp Salmson 9 Nc radial engine.
Post-War development was the CFA D.21 Phrygane.
Designed and built by P. Salmon at Farnborough in 1923, the Tandem Monoplane was a single-seater powered by a 3.5 hp Bradshaw conversion driving a pusher propellor.
Registered G-EBHQ, it would not fly and it was broken up soon after 1923.