A two-seat landplane, powered by a Wright-built Gipsy.
Inter-Wars
Huntingdon Aircraft Corp
USA
Incorporated in 1928 at Bridgeport, Connecticut, this company developed two airplanes, the Huntingdon II two-seat landplane, powered by a Wright-built Gipsy, and the Huntingdon 12, a four/six-seat amphibian with a Pratt & Whitney Wasp engine.
Hughes H-1/1019

Hughes Aircraft Co was founded in 1935 by businessman/film magnate Howard Hughes to produce the Hughes H-1 racing aeroplane, in which Hughes established a world landplane speed record of 352.46mph (567.23kmh).
Engines: 1
Hughes Aircraft Co / Hughes Helicopters
Hughes Aircraft Co was founded in 1935 by businessman/film magnate Howard Hughes to produce the Hughes H-1 racing aeroplane, in which Hughes established a world landplane speed record of 352.46mph (567.23kmh). The Hughes XF-11 experimental twin-engined, twin-boom photo-reconnaissance aircraft, which had contrarotating propellers, crashed on its maiden flight, seriously injuring Hughes. He then sponsored the massive Hughes H-4 Hercules. Made entirely of wood, this eight-engined flying-boat had the greatest wingspan (320 ft; 97.54 m) of any aircraft built to date. It made its one and only flight on November 2,1947 with Howard Hughes at the controls.
Between 1949-1952 the Hughes Aircraft Company built and tested the XH-1 heavylift helicopter, designed as a “flying crane” for the USAF.
Hughes owned Kellett designs.
Known formerly as the Hughes Tool Company, became a Division of the Summa Corporation in the early 1970s. Hughes first two-seat light helicopter, the Model 269, first flew in 1955. It continued in production, though muchmodified, as the Hughes 300. Production of the 0H-6A Cayuse turbine helicopter for the U.S. Army and other military forces led to the commercial Model 500 one/sevenseat light helicopter, with military variants in the Defender series. Hughes won the U.S. Army’s competition for an Advanced Attack Helicopter (AAH) with its Model 77, a twin-turbine design which first flew in September 1975, and which received the Army designation YAH-64 Apache. Also developed the unique NOTAR (no tail rotor) anti-torque system, initially tested on a converted 0H-6A in December 1981. Company taken over by McDonnell Douglas January 1984.
Hughes Helicopters became McDonnell Douglas Helicopters in January 1986 then later to Lynn Tilton’s Patriarch Partners in 2005.
Huffer HB.28
A parasol-wing monoplane, the HB.28, was designed and built by the company in the late 1920s.
Huffer H.9
Flugzeugbau Dr. Georg Huffer produced a civilian version of the First World War Fokker D.VII fighter, known as the Huffer H.9. It was an open-cockpit training/sporting two-seater powered by a Mercedes engine.
Huffer
Germany
Flugzeugbau Dr. Georg Huffer produced a civilian version of the First World War Fokker D.VII fighter, known as the Huffer H.9. It was an open-cockpit training/sporting two-seater powered by a Mercedes engine. A parasol-wing monoplane, the HB.28, was also designed and built by the company in the late 1920s.
Huff-Daland XHB-3
The twin Packard XHB-3, ordered from Huff Daland in 1926, was cancelled before it had been built.
Huff-Daland XHB-1
The Huff Daland XHB 1 of 1926 27 was an enlarged LB 1, with a single 800 hp Packard 2A 2540, but never progressed beyond prototype stage.
Huff-Daland XLB-1
Keystone Aircraft Corpora¬tion built a total of 220 aircraft in the US Army Air Corps LB (light bombardment) category, venturing briefly also into the B (bombardment) and HB (heavy bombardment) classifications. All except ten of the LBs were twin engined aircraft, but had their origins in the single–engined XLB 1 prototype and nine pre series LB 1 biplanes produced in 1925 by Key¬stone’s predecessor company, Huff Daland and Co Inc of Ogdensburg, New York, which became Keystone in March 1927.
The XLB-1 three-seat, single-engine light bomber was tested in 1923, mount¬ing an 800 hp Packard and was developed as the twin-engined XLB-3, with a crew of five. The basic LB 1 airframe was redesigned by Keystone in 1927 as the twin engined XLB¬3A.