Smith Miniplane

DSA-1 Miniplane
Role Sport biplane
National origin United States
Manufacturer homebuilt
Designer Frank W. Smith[1]
First flight 29 October 1956[2]
Number built 350 sets of plans sold by 1977[1]

The Smith DSA-1 Miniplane ("Darn Small Aeroplane",[1][3] "Darned Small Airplane",[2][4], or "Damn Small Airplane"[5]) is a single-seat, single-engine sport aircraft designed in the United States in the 1950s and marketed for home building.[6]

Design

The Miniplane is a conventional single-bay biplane with staggered wings of unequal span braced with N-struts and wires.[1][7] The Miniplane design has fixed undercarriage with a steerable tailwheel[7] and although designed with an open cockpit, [1][4][7] many have been fitted with canopies. The fuselage and the tail fin are of a conventional truss design constructed of welded steel tube and covered in fabric,[1][2][7][8] and the wing spars and ribs are made from spruce and also fabric-covered.[1][2][7][8] A variant has been built with an all-metal wing construction.[9]

Engines used by builders are generally the 65-hp (48-kW) Continental A65, 85-hp (63-kW) Continental C85 or the Lycoming O-235 of 100 hp to 125 hp (75 kW to 93 kW).[8]

Development

Designer Frank Smith died of a heart attack shortly after completing the prototype.[4] His wife, Dorothy, and son, Donald continued to market the plans into the 1970s[1][2][4] and Donald worked on a two-seat version,[4] the Miniplane +1.[1]

In 2010, Sky Classic Aircraft of Des Moines, Iowa markets plans for an updated version of the Miniplane, the Miniplane 2000.[10] The Miniplane 2000 incorporates several modifications to the original design, including a slightly longer and wider fuselage to accommodate larger pilots,[10] adding bracing struts to reinforce the horizontal stabilizer,[10] and changing the airfoil section[11] and angles of incidence of the wings.[10]

Operational history

In August 1959, Tom Messick flew a Miniplane on a 4,200-mile (6,700-km) round trip to attend the EAA Fly-in at Rockford, Illinois and was awarded a trophy for flying the longest distance to the event.[2]

The prototype DSA-1 is preserved at the EAA AirVenture Museum.[2] Originally lent to the museum by Dorothy Frank in 1973, Donald Frank donated the aircraft in 1988 in memory of his mother.[2]

Variants

DSA-1 Miniplane
original single-seat version by Frank Smith[3]
Miniplane +1
two-seat version by Donald Smith
Miniplane 2000
updated version by Sky Classic Aircraft

Specifications (DSA-1 prototype)

Data from Taylor 1977, p.561, and Plane & Pilot 1978, p.153 except as noted

General characteristics

Performance

See also

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration and era

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i Taylor 1977, p.561
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Smith DSA-1 Miniplane — N90P"
  3. ^ a b Montgomery 1992, p.12
  4. ^ a b c d e Davisson 1970
  5. ^ "Canadian Fly-in"
  6. ^ Taylor 1989, p.826
  7. ^ a b c d e Markowski 1980, p.351
  8. ^ a b c Plane & Pilot 1978, p.153
  9. ^ "Metal Winged Miniplane". Sport Aviation. May 1960. 
  10. ^ a b c d "WE Love Biplanes"
  11. ^ the original design had a NACA 4412 profile (Taylor 1977, p.561); the revised design uses NASA 23013 ("WE Love Biplanes")

References

External links