Piccard

1982: Piccard Balloons, Box 1902, Newport Beach, California 92663, USA.
Soon to introduce its eighth model (in 1982), Piccard has a wide selection of balloons. Envelopes range in volume from 33,000 to 90,000 cubic feet, and baskets are interchangeable. Larger models have been custom built. Basic prices of Piccard balloons range from $3,656 to $16,000 in 1982.

Piasecki / P-V Engineering

Piasecki Aircraft Corporation
Piasecki Helicopter Corporation

Towards the end of 1943, Frank Nicholas Piasecki also appeared on the scene. Piasecki had worked for the Kellett Autogyro Company and Budd Aircraft. He had previously been involved in development of the Platt-LePage XR-1 and had undertaken a small-scale project of his own. Frank N. Piasecki, President of the PV-Engineering Forum, an organization he formed with F.M.Vinsie and Elliott Daland for the purpose of building his helicopter. Records show he is the first American to be granted a license to fly a helicopter before first qualifying to fly a conventional airplane. He did, however, previous to flying his own helicopter design, get in some flying time in a light plane. This helped him, too, in building the PV.

P-V Engineering Forum had completed several rotary-wing contracts for NACA and the U.S. Navy. The latter ordered an XHRP-1 helicopter which flew in 1945; following successful tests it was placed in production. Further orders followed for XHJP-1 tandemrotor helicopters for USN shipboard operations and the large XH-16, which had a fuselage of DC-4 size.

P-V Engineering became Piasecki Helicopter Corp in 1946, formed by Frank Piasecki, who was concerned in development of vertical-lift aircraft and flew the Model 59K Sky-Car flying jeep with an Artouste turboshaft engine in 1958 under a US Army contract.

Technical interchange agreements signed with Breguet Aviation in 1957 included sales rights for that company’s STOL transports in the U.S.A. and Canada, but these were dropped in 1962. Also provided engineering assistance to Agusta from 1960 for the AZ-101G and AZ-105 helicopters.

Built prototype of PiAC 16H-1C Pathfinder compound helicopter in 1962, continuing development under a U.S. Navy contract, but no production. Work included developing vectorod-thrust ducted propeller system for attack helicopters under U.S Army contract, definition of a possible U.S. Marine Corps medium-lift replacement type, and marketing the PZL Swidnik W-3A in the Americas and Pacific Rim regions.

After F N Piasecki was forced out of his company in 1955, he founded Piasecki Aircraft Corp, and his original company became Vertol Aircraft Corp, which in turn became a division of Boeing Co in 1960.

Piaggio

SA Piaggio & Co, an engineering and shipbuilding company, produced some Caproni aircraft and parts during the First World War at a Finale Ligure factory, but subsequently abandoned aircraft manufacture until it took over Pegna & Bonmartini in 1923. First product was the Piaggio-Pegna pursuit monoplane with Hispano-Suiza engine. Later was associated with Societa di Costruzioni Meccaniche Aeronautiche in license-construction of Domier Wal flying-boats. Built P.32 twin-engined heavy bomber at end of 1930s and several four-engined P.108 heavy bombers during Second World War.

Resumed aeronautical work in late 1946 with conversion of Dakotas for airline service. Built P.136 five-seat twin-engined amphibian, prototype flying in 1948, followed by a series of trainers for the Italian Air Force; the P.149 was also license-built by Focke-Wulf in Germany. Produced the P.166 executive transport in 1957, with two Lycoming engines and pusher propellers, as with the P.136; P.166-DL3 turboprop variant later developed and produced, with final P.166-DL3-SEM Maritime variant for search and surveillance, coastal patrol and other roles still available in 1998, but only to special order. Signed agreement with U.S. Douglas company in 1961 for joint development of light utility aircraft, first flown in 1964. Designated PD.808 and powered by two Bristol Siddeley Viper turbojets, only a small number was built.

The present Rinaldo Piaggio company was formed in February 1964 as a separate concern, but in 1994 was put under insolvency protection; 51 percent shareholding in the company was purchased by Tushav, a Turkish holding company, in mid-1998, and protection was thereafter lifted. P.180 Avanti twin-pusher turboprop business aircraft flown September 1986, but only 43 production aircraft ordered; turbofan derivative may be developed. Has manufactured components for Aeritalia/Alenia, AMX International, Dassault and Panavia.
In 1998 three Italian industrial families bought the debt-free assets from the Government and formed Piaggio Aero Industries SpA.

In 2024 Italy approved the sale of Piaggio Aerospace to the Turkish unmanned combat aerial vehicle (UCAV) producer Baykar. In 2023, Baykar ranked among the top 10 exporters in Türkiye across all sectors, racking up $1.8 billion in exports. Türkiye dominates 65% of the global unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) export market, with Baykar alone holding nearly 60% of the market – three times the size of its closest US competitor. In recent years, Baykar has generated more than 90% of its revenues from exports, delivering Bayraktar TB2 UCAVs and Bayraktar AKINCI UCAVs to 35 countries.

Phoenix Dynamo

UK
Bradford company which became Admiralty contractor in First World War for construction of Short 184 seaplanes, Short landplane bombers, Maurice Farman Longhoms and a pair of Armstrong Whitworth F.K.10 quadraplanes.

Later built Felixstowe F.3 and F.5 flying-boats and two Phoenix P.5 Cork flying-boats. Phoenix became part of the English Electric Co Ltd. in 1918 and continued development of flying-boats, initially the P.5 Kingston.

Phoenix Aircraft Ltd

A hangar fire at the Phoenix Works in 1943 destroyed the single example of the LA5 Major, a two-seat cabin type first flown on 4 March 1939, and also spelt the end for the company. C. H. Latimer-Needham (chief designer of Luton Aircraft) founded a new company at Cranleigh, Surrey, in March 1958, appropriately named Phoenix Aircraft Ltd, which acquired the rights for the Minor and Major. Both designs were improved, the first as the LA4A Minor, and built in the UK and in several countries across the world.

In its time the company has dealt with the Luton LA.4/A Minor and LA.5/a Major, the Currie Wot, Luton Group Beta and Jodel D.11.

Phoenix (D&H) Ltd was also involved in research work and built the mock-up of the Syinton-Warren S-31-2 in 1971.

It ceased trading in 1973-4.

Phönix Flugzeugwerft GmbH

Austria
This company manufactured a series of Phonix single-seat fighter aircraft powered by Austro-Daimler engines. The D.I and D.II were flown during First World War by the Austro-Hungarian Flying Service, a few being fitted with cameras for high-speed aerial photo-reconnaissance work. Seventeen of the final batch of 122 Phonix D.IIs were completed as improved variants and transferred to the Swedish Army Air Service after the war.