Freiberger Ron's 1

Ron's 1
Role Two-seat homebuilt aerobatic monoplane
National origin United States
Designer Ronald Darwin Freiberger
First flight November 1971




The Freiberger Ron's 1 is an American two-seat homebuilt aerobatic monoplane designed and built by Ronald D. Freiberger, it was highly-modified aerobatic variant of the Spezio Tuholer.

Design and development

Freiberger, a design engineer at General Motors and Rose-Hulman graduate flew Ron's 1 in November 1971, it was a braced low-wing monoplane with a welded steel-tube fuselage covered with Ceconite.[1] The two-spar wing had vee-bracing struts and was made of wood with a Ceconite covering.[1] Ron's 1 had a fixed tailwheel type landing gear with fairings over the main wheels, the pilot and passenger sat in tandem open cockpits.[1] Powered by a 160 hp (119 kW) Lycoming O-320-B1B flat-four air-cooled engine driving a two-bladed metal fixed pitch propeller, Freiberger enclosed the engine in a radial-style cowling to give the aircraft a look of the early 1930s racing aircraft.[1]

Specifications

Data from Jane's All the World's Aircraft 1973-74[1]

General characteristics

Performance


References

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Taylor 1973, p. 329

Bibliography

  • Taylor, John W.R., ed. (1973). Jane's All the World's Aircraft 1973-74. London, United Kingdom: Jane's Yearbooks. ISBN 0-354-00117-5.