Circa Reproductions Nieuport | |
---|---|
Role | Homebuilt warbird replica |
National origin | Canada |
Manufacturer | Circa Reproductions |
Designer | Graham Lee |
First flight | July 1984 |
Number built | over 325 (Nieuport 11 as of 2003) |
The Circa Reproductions Nieuports are a family of Canadian 7/8 scale World War I sesquiplane aircraft replicas designed by Graham Lee of Lamont, Alberta for amateur construction from plans sold by Lee's company Circa Reproductions. Leading Edge Air Foils of Peyton, Colorado at one time also made construction kits available. Lee's Nieuports were among the earliest First World War replicas available and paved the way for later companies to produce plans and kits for a great variety of warbirds. [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6]
The aircraft's design was attributed to "the result of many years of affection for WWI type aircraft and a "too limited" flying budget." [5]
The Nieuport 11 was the first design in the family and is a 7/8 (87%) scale version of the original French Nieuport 11 Bebe fighter. The prototype, registered as a Canadian basic ultralight as C-IRCA, first flew in July 1984. [3] [4] [6]
The Nieuport 11 is constructed from 6061-T6 aluminum tubing, supported with 2024-T3 aluminum gussets, held together with blind rivets. At one point welded steel tube fuselages were also available. The wings, tail and fuselage are then covered with doped aircraft fabric. Landing gear is conventional, with 24 in (61 cm) spoked mainwheels with bungee suspension. The original design calls for a tailskid, the same as the World War One original aircraft, but since the skid is impractical on hard surfaced runways, a tailwheel is optional. The engine cowling is a horseshoe shaped semi-circular design. [1] [4] [6]
Recommended engines for the aircraft include the 40 hp (30 kW) Rotax 447, the 50 hp (37 kW) Rotax 503, Volkswagen air-cooled engines and various Hirth engines. The designer estimated that the Nieuport 11 would take 400 hours to construct. [3] [4] [5] [6]
The aircraft have been described as being "very easy to fly, even by novice pilots." [4]
By 2015 over 1200 sets of plans had been sold. [7]
The Nieuport 11 won Grand Champion Light Plane at Oshkosh in 1989 and the Nieuport 12 won Reserve Grand Champion at Oshkosh in 1990. [5]
Data from Raisner [5]
General characteristics
Performance
Armament
Avionics
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