Great Lakes Sport Trainer
The Great Lakes Sport Trainer is an American biplane trainer and aerobatic aircraft. It was originally produced in large numbers before the company building it went bankrupt in the Great Depression in 1933. Owing to its continuing popularity, however, it was eventually placed back into production in the 1970s and again in 2011 by WACO Classic Aircraft. Development and designThe Great Lakes Aircraft Corporation of Cleveland, Ohio, produced a design for a small two-seat sports/trainer in early 1929, with the first prototype flying in March 1929.[1] The resulting aircraft, designated 2-T-1, was a single bay biplane of mixed, fabric-covered construction and with a tailskid undercarriage. Power was by a single 85 hp (63 kW) Cirrus III inline engine (as the Detroit Aircraft Corporation, the holding company for Great Lakes, also held the American rights to the Cirrus, so all Sports Trainers were originally sold with Cirrus engines).[2] Initial testing showed that the aircraft was tail heavy, so after the first four aircraft were built, the upper wing was swept back. Operational historyThe aircraft proved very successful, with 262 built before construction ended as a result of the closure of Great Lakes due to the Great Depression.[3] It was highly maneuverable even on the relatively modest power of a Cirrus engine. A 1929 Great Lakes Model 2T1a held for many years the world record for consecutive outside loops, a total of 131, set by Jim Moss flying the Hunt Special which by the early 1930s had been highly modified and re-powered with a Warner Scarab 165 7 cylinder radial engine.[4] The Great Lakes continued to be popular well after production ended, and many aircraft adopted more powerful engines, particularly the Jacobs radial engines.[4] Eventually, in the 1960s, the rights for the Sport Trainer were acquired by Harvey Swack, who offered plans of the aircraft for sale to homebuilders. In 1972, Swack sold the rights on to Doug Champlin, who set up a reconstituted Great Lakes Aircraft Company to produce a revised version meeting the current airworthiness requirements, powered by modern Lycoming engines and revised materials of construction (including the use of Douglas fir instead of spruce).[2] The first of the new production aircraft, the Model 2T-1A-1, powered by a 140 hp (100 kW) engine was certified in May 1973, with production starting in October that year. A more powerful version, the 2T-1A-2 followed in July 1974.[5] In 1978, production was divided between Wichita, Kansas, and Enid, Oklahoma, with the intent on relocation to Florida,[6] but production by Great Lakes Aircraft at Wichita and Enid ended that year, with 137 built.[7][8] Rights to the Sport Trainer continued to switch hands, resulting in production moving several times. In 1979, rights were acquired by Dean Franklin, who moved production to Eastman, Georgia. Production restarted at Eastman in 1980,[7][8] but ended in 1982.[7] In 1984 the company was brought out by John LaBelle, and moved to Claremont, New Hampshire, with production restarting that year,[7][9] but production ended again in 1985.[7][10] In January 2011, WACO Classic Aircraft announced that it will put the Great Lakes Model 2T-1A-1/2 model biplane back into production. The aircraft had not been available since 1980. The aircraft will incorporate several changes including metal wing spars. It will be offered in two models, a touring model, with a Lycoming IO-360-B1F6 engine and a higher-performance sport model, with a Lycoming AEIO-360-B1G6 engine. Work on the new production model was completed in June 2013 and the base price announced as US$245,000.[11][12] Waco had built 220 Sport Trainers by 2022.[13] Variants
Specifications (Model 2T-1A-2)Data from Jane's All The World's Aircraft 1976-77 [5] General characteristics
Performance
See alsoAircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era
ReferencesNotes
Bibliography
External linksWikimedia Commons has media related to Great Lakes 2T-1A Sportster.
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