Parrakeet | |
---|---|
Larry Steenstry's Rose Parrakeet. EAA AirVenture 2011 | |
Role | Sports plane |
National origin | United States of America |
Manufacturer | Rose Aeroplane and Motor Company |
First flight | 1931 |
Number built | 8, plus many in kit form |
The Rose Parrakeet was a single-seat sporting biplane produced in small numbers in the United States during the 1930s. It was a conventional design with staggered single-bay wings of equal span braced by N-struts. The cockpit was open, and the fixed tailskid undercarriage had divided main units. An unusual feature was the use of a single strut in place of the usual flying wires.
Only eight Parrakeets were built by Rose, but the design proved a popular one with homebuilders in the 1950s. Rights to produce kits of the Parrakeet were purchased by Hannaford Aircraft in 1948, and the design was marketed as the Hannaford Bee with structural modifications to strengthen weak points. [1] Kits were marketed right up to the point of Hannaford founder Foster Hannaford's death in 1971, and plans continued to be sold into the 1980s. In 1968, Doug Rhinehart obtained a licence from Jack Rose to produce five all-new Parrakeets.
Data from Specifications of American Airplanes [2]
General characteristics
Performance
Parrakeet | |
---|---|
Larry Steenstry's Rose Parrakeet. EAA AirVenture 2011 | |
Role | Sports plane |
National origin | United States of America |
Manufacturer | Rose Aeroplane and Motor Company |
First flight | 1931 |
Number built | 8, plus many in kit form |
The Rose Parrakeet was a single-seat sporting biplane produced in small numbers in the United States during the 1930s. It was a conventional design with staggered single-bay wings of equal span braced by N-struts. The cockpit was open, and the fixed tailskid undercarriage had divided main units. An unusual feature was the use of a single strut in place of the usual flying wires.
Only eight Parrakeets were built by Rose, but the design proved a popular one with homebuilders in the 1950s. Rights to produce kits of the Parrakeet were purchased by Hannaford Aircraft in 1948, and the design was marketed as the Hannaford Bee with structural modifications to strengthen weak points. [1] Kits were marketed right up to the point of Hannaford founder Foster Hannaford's death in 1971, and plans continued to be sold into the 1980s. In 1968, Doug Rhinehart obtained a licence from Jack Rose to produce five all-new Parrakeets.
Data from Specifications of American Airplanes [2]
General characteristics
Performance