Clipper | |
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Role | Civil touring aeroplane |
Manufacturer | Spartan Aircraft Limited |
Designer | H.E. Broadsmith |
First flight | 14 December 1932 |
Retired | Destroyed 4 May 1942 |
Primary user | Spartan Aircraft Limited |
Produced | 1932 |
Number built | 1 |
The Spartan Clipper was a British light touring aeroplane of the 1930s. It was a single-engine, two-seat, low-wing monoplane with a fixed tailwheel undercarriage.
H.E. Broadsmith designed the Clipper as a two-seater; he employed the outer wings of the Monospar ST-4. Spartan Aircraft Limited built one example at their East Cowes works in 1932. The aeroplane was initially fitted with a 75-hp Pobjoy R motor. Registered G-ACEG it flew for the first time on 14 December 1932. After modification to undercarriage, cabin glazing and cowling, it received a Certificate of Airworthiness on 29 June 1933.
In 1933 the Clipper was raced in the King's Cup Race.
In 1938, it was re-engined with a Pobjoy Niagara III of 90-hp, after which it was used as a company hack until 4 May 1942, when it was destroyed in an air raid on Cowes.
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Data from British Civil Aircraft since 1919, Volume 3 [1]
General characteristics
Performance
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