Scottish Aviation

Formed 1935, but for several years was concerned mainly with aircraft repair work and management of flying school and airport (Prestwick, Scotland).

First aircraft produced was Prestwick Pioneer single-engined five-seat STOL monoplane, first flown 1950. Twin Pioneer of 1957 first appeared as 16-passenger civil type, but was used also by RAF.

Malayan Air Force 1959

Company re-engaged in important repair, maintenance and modification work, involving Lockheed aircraft, and made freighter conversion of Vickers Viscount. Has made large components for Lockheed Hercules over long period. Final aircraft under its own name were Bulldog (flown originally in 1968 as military trainer version of Beagle Pup); Bullfinch with retractable landing gear, first flown August 1976; and twin-turboprop Jetstream, developed 1966-1970 by Handley Page and continued by BAe.

The Beagle Aircraft Ltd Bulldog was taken up by Scottish Aviation Ltd after Beagle went into receivership in 1970 and finally found its last home with British Aero¬space in 1978.

Handley-Page, through Jetstream Aircraft, became part of Scottish Aviation in 1970.

Merged into British Aerospace in April 1977; as a British Aerospace company offered support facilities for Beagle Pup, B.206, and Basset.

Scott Light Aircraft Ltd

Albion St
Dunstable
Bedfordshire
UK

W.R. Scott built his first glider at the age of 13 after seeing a film about gliding at the local cinema in his home town of Thetford. This was a hang-type glider of about 30 feet wingspan, and was built out of materials costing 3/- saved out his weekly money. The glider was covered with thick brown paper proofed with terobene paint drier thinned with petrol.

On its first flight the glider was found to be unstable and it crashed after covering a distance of twenty to thirty feet at a height of four feet.

Several more gliders were built, with progressive results, and the last was shown to the Duke of Grafton who offered Scott facilities on his estate at Euston Hall Park near Thetford. Scott then designed and built a tandem two-seat glider which took eighteen months to complete whilst he was serving an apprenticeship in a local garage. The glider flew quite well, being towed by the Duke in one of his racing cars, until it was crashed by an RAF test pilot in Euston Hall Park in November 1933.

Scott built a similar version, using the wings salvaged from the crashed machine, and this was sold to the Duke of Grafton and made several flights on the owner’s estate near Newmarket.

The next glider Scott designed was one similar to the Abbott-Baynes Scud sailplanes. Scott completed the fuselage and some of the wing details, but he sold the incomplete machine to a club at North Walsham, Norfolk.

Scott went to work with Zander & Weyl at their newly established works at Dunstable. Whilst working there he began to build in his spare time three Hutter 17 gliders, two to sell and one for himself. Due to the financial insecurity of the Dart company Zander suggested to Scott that they should set up their own company to build these gliders, and in August 1937 they formed Zander & Scott. Initial production centered around the Hutter 17, for which they held the sole building rights for England, although several primary gliders were also built.

In 1938 Scott designed a high-performance single-seat sailplane. This was named Viking and first flew in November. By then Zander and Scott had run their capital to a very low level but Lord St. Davids offered assistance. He was therefore appointed Chairman of a Board of Directors and the company was renamed Scott Light Aircraft Ltd in December 1938. Several Vikings were then put into production and a two-seat version was designed and built in 1939. This flew for the first time one week before the war started and was therefore the only one of its type to be built.

After the outbreak of the war gliding ceased and Scott Light Aircraft Ltd only ever managed to produce parts and precision tooling.

Scott, L.L

1928:
(Leland L) Scott Aircraft Motors
Kansas City MO.
USA

1939:
L L Scott & Luther Shelton, partnership
Kansas City MO.
USA

1928 = 40hp two-stroke unknown type. Production assumed through 1949 as company is listed in city directories.
1939 = A light plane power plant of the two-stroke variety said to have only nine moving parts and to be featured by its excellent scavenging. The engine could be adapted to use oil as fuel according to claims. Specific weight is said to be 2 lb per hp, but in larger sizes a specific weight of 1 lb per hp could be obtained, according to contentions of the designer. (— 1939 Aerosphere)

Scintex-Aviation Sa

A division of Scintex SA, a mechanical and electrical equipment manufacturer, held an exclusive license to build improved versions of the Piel Emeraude. Built the CP301C, also in C1, C2 and C3 versions; the two-seat Super Emeraude with fixed landing gear as the CP1310/CP1315; and the 4/5-seat ML 250 Rubis, with retractable landing gear, which first flew on June 1962.

Schweizer Aircraft Corp

The Schweizer Aircraft Corporation was an American manufacturer of sailplanes, agricultural aircraft and helicopters located in Horseheads, New York. The company grew out of the Mercury Glider Club which produced the first two Schweizer gliders in the Schweizers’ barn. The company was originally called the Schweizer Metal Aircraft Company. Attorney Bob McDowell indicated to the Schweizers that they should move their manufacturing operation out of their father’s barn and relocate to the Elmira, New York area. The Schweizers received the suggestion positively as they needed more space to produce gliders, but they had no money with which to make the move.

It was incorporated in 1939 by three Schweizer brothers (Paul, William, and Ernest), who built their first glider in 1930.

McDowell convinced Elmira Industries Inc, the local business development corporation, to provide space for the Schweizers on the second floor of the Elmira Knitting Mill Building in return for stock in the company. This resulted in the Schweizer Metal Aircraft Company becoming the Schweizer Aircraft Corporation in 1939, with a sale of shares to Elmira Industries, local businessmen and soaring pilots.

Schweizer primarily produced light, piston-engined helicopters for use in utility and flight-training roles. The Schweizer 300CBi, originally designed and manufactured by Hughes aircraft as the Hughes 269 for the United States Army, is one of the most widely used training helicopters in the world. In 1986, Schweizer acquired all rights to the helicopter from McDonnell Douglas, who had purchased Hughes Helicopters in 1984. After Schweizer acquired the FAA Type Certificate, the helicopter was known for a short time as the Schweizer-Hughes 300C and then simply, the Schweizer 300C.

Schweizer is perhaps known best for its popular line of gliders (sailplanes), the earliest of which (the model SGP 1-1) was produced in 1930. Although very few of the early gliders were built, later models gained popularity, such as the SGS 2-8 and 2-12, which were adopted by the U.S. Army Air Corps for training as the TG-2 and TG-3, respectively.

The Schweizer SGS 1-23 was a world class competition and record setting glider between its first flight in 1948 and the end of its production in 1967.

In the 1950s and 60s the Schweizer Aircraft Corporation designed and manufactured the very popular SGS 1-26 and SGS 2-33 gliders. They are easy to fly, with simple construction, and are quite rugged and forgiving. A powered light aircraft, the Schweizer SA 1-30 was tested, but did not go into production.

The 2-33 was adopted by the United States Air Force Academy as the TG-4, for use in introductory airmanship training. The Academy used over a dozen such gliders until 2002 when they were replaced by more modern sailplanes. The Royal Canadian Air Cadets continue to operate a fleet of over seventy 2-33As.

Other popular Schweizer gliders include the single-seat SGS 1-26 and the two or three-seat 2-32, both of which can be found in many soaring clubs and in private ownership across the United States.

Primarily designers and makers of sailplanes, one of which (SGS 2-32) fitted with piston engine was tested by Lockheed Aircraft Corporation as Q-Star for ‘quiet reconnaissance’ in Vietnam. On Q-Star was based the Lockheed YO-3A, using Schweizer wings and tail, new fuselage and muffled engine.

Company also built for Grumman the Ag-Cat agricultural biplane, later for Gulfstream, before acquiring the rights in 1981 (Ag-Cat subsequently produced by Ag-Cat Corporation).

Schweizer produced the Grumman G-164 Ag Cat, a single-engine biplane agricultural aircraft originally developed by Grumman in the 1950s. Under the contract with Grumman the airplane was built almost continuously between 1957 and 1981. During this period of time Schweizer built 2,455 of the airplanes.

In 1981 Schweizer bought the rights to the design and continued production under the name Schweizer Ag Cat. In 1995 Schweizer sold the rights to the Ag Cat to Ag-Cat Corp. of Malden, Texas. In February 2001 the design was sold to Allied Ag-Cat Productions Inc. of Walnut Ridge, Arkansas. Allied Ag-Cat is not producing new aircraft although a related company operates a large fleet of Ag-Cats.

The basic airframe incorporates many safety innovations, including a pressurized cockpit to keep pesticides out, air conditioning and a fuselage structure that is designed to progressively collapse in the event of a collision.

The basic designof Schweizer S269C remained unchanged over the years. Between Hughes and Schweizer, nearly 3,000 copies of the Model 269/300 have been built and flown over the last 50 years. Schweizer continued to develop the Model 300 by adding a turbine and redesigning the body to create the Schweizer 330, and then further developments led to the development of the Schweizer 333.

An improved version in the series, the Sikorsky S-434, was released in 2008.

In 1972 Schweizer hired David Thurston and production of his Thurston Teal was part of the agreement to work at Schweizer. The company produced three Schweizer TSC-1A1 Teals and nine TSC-1A2 Teal IIs before production was moved to Teal Aircraft in 1976.

The development of the Schweizer SGM 2-37 two-place motor glider for the United States Air Force Academy in 1982 led to a new area of expertise for the company. In the mid-1960s Lockheed had used the Schweizer SGS 2-32 sailplane as the basis for its YO-3 quiet reconnaissance aircraft. Schweizer decided to develop the SGM 2-37 into a similar concept aircraft as the YO-3. The result was the SA 2-37A and B, known as the RG-8A in military use.

The RG-8A was later developed by the company into the twin piston-engined and twin-boom SA 2-38 Condor with the US military designation of RU-38A Twin Condor. This design was further refined into the turboprop-powered RU-38B Twin Condor. The RU-38 was still in production in 2008.

It is believed the US Drug Enforcement Administration purchased aircraft designated Shadowhawk from Schweizer. The aircraft had a poor operational history. They may be designated SA 38B.
Other projects

In partnership with Northrop Grumman (formerly Ryan Aeronautical), Schweizer is developing the MQ-8 Fire Scout helicopter UAV.

Schweizer is currently participating in development of Sikorsky’s X-2 Demonstrator, a prototype aircraft using co-axial rotor blades with a pusher propeller for extra forward thrust.

Makes fuselage assemblies for Piper Aircraft Corporation and structures for Bell Helicopters. Became license-holder for Hughes 300 helicopter in 1983, producing piston-engined three-seat Model 300C from 1984 to present day and developing new 3/4-seat Model 330 turboshaft-powered helicopter (first flown June 1988); also supports Hughes Model 269s.

In 1986 flew the SA 2-37A low-noise special-missions aircraft suited to surveillance and other roles, followed in May 1995 by a radical twin-boom SA 2-37A conversion known as SA 2-38A. Two joined the U.S. Coast Guard as RU-38A Twin Condors for covert patrol and surveillance (one by conversion, one built as new).

In December 1999, Schweizer Aircraft celebrated its 60th Anniversary, and had built more than 2,160 sailplanes. Schweizer was a major U.S. aerospace contractor and no longer manufactured gliders.

Helicopter products offered by the company as of February 2009 included the 300C, 300CBi, and 333.

Previously the oldest privately owned aircraft company in the United States, Schweizer was acquired by Sikorsky Aircraft Corporation of Stratford, Connecticut, in 2004, and became a diversified aerospace company.

In 2011 and 2012 Sikorsky Aircraft Corporation laid off all the workers and closed the plant.