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.

Howard Hughes Article

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

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 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.