The 1967 Baker Boo Ray low wing monoplane midget racer N2081 took fifth place in 1967 Nationals.
Engine: 85hp Continental C-85
Wingspan: 15’6″
Length: 16’8″
Speed: 225 mph
Seats: 1
The 1967 Baker Boo Ray low wing monoplane midget racer N2081 took fifth place in 1967 Nationals.
Engine: 85hp Continental C-85
Wingspan: 15’6″
Length: 16’8″
Speed: 225 mph
Seats: 1
The 1970 Baker Aquarius midget racer N3203 was a single-place mid-wing monoplane which qualified at Reno at 233 mph in 1975.
Engine: 85hp Continental C-85
Wingspan: 19’6″
Length: 16’9″
Seats: 1
1960: Marion Baker
Akron OH.
USA
1961: Baker Air Research
Huron OH.
USA
Built aircraft 1960-70
Built by Gil Baker, the 1968 Baker BCA-1-3 Amphibian was a two-place cabin, high wing monoplane amphibian, registered N4283C and first flown in May 1968. Only the one was built.
Engine: 180hp Lycoming O-360
Wingspan: 32’6″
Length: 25’0″
Gross wt: 2050 lb
Cruise: 92 mph
Stall: 60 mph
Seats: 2
The 1948 Pete / Special midget racer was a single-place low wing monoplane; a modified and repowered Howard DGA-3 Pete, reregistered as NX400B.
Later known as Shannon-Buente Special, it was too large and heavy to compete successfully with Goodyear racers, it was used instead for aerobatics in Cole Brothers Air Shows until c.1950.
It was bought by EAA in 1953, and redesigned as Pober Little Audrey with a replica fuselage and Luscombe shoulder-wings. The original fuselage and tail, plus some miscellaneous parts, went into a rebuild of the 1930 configuration by Repeat Aircraft, Riverside CA.
Engine: 85hp Continental C-85
Wingspan: 20’4″
Length: 17’0″
Seats: 1
Kansas City MO.
USA
Built the Baker Pete / Special midget racer in 1948

The 1913 Caudron Type K pusher seaplane was designed and built by Rene Caudron in France

The 1913 Caudron Type J tractor land- and seaplane was designed and built by Rene Caudron in France
The Caproni BH was replaced in service by the Model P which was supplied to both the Royal Air Force and French Air Force. Little more is known about the type’s history.
In 1911 John & Ross Bailey and Marsh Gray built a copy of a French Demoiselle. A single-place mid-wing monoplane, it was powered by a 15hp engine with a 6′ geared prop. Two attempts to fly were made on 12 March 1911 but it failed to get airborne.