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Rutan Quickie

Air and Space Museum

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  • Single engine, single seat, stagger wing, with white with blue trim.
  •  Single engine, single seat, stagger wing, with white with blue trim.
  • wood propellers attached to the nose of the plane.
  • Single engine, single seat, stagger wing, with white with blue trim.

    Object Details

    Designer

    Scaled Composites

    Physical Description

    Single engine, single seat, stagger wing, 16ft. 8in. span, 17ft. 4in. long, 4ft. high; white with blue trim.

    Summary

    In 1974, Tom Jewett and Gene Sheehan decided to begin designing an airplane that would provide "more flying enjoyment for less money" than other homebuilt aircraft designs popular at that time. Burt Rutan (Rutan VariEze and Voyager, see NASM collection) assisted Jewett and Sheehan in the design work and the first Quickie was finished, tested in flight, and ready for a public introduction by April 1978. In June, the two men formed the Quickie Aircraft Corporation to produce and sell complete kits to build the aircraft. They flew the airplane to the Experimental Aircraft Association's annual gathering at Oshkosh, Wisconsin, in June where the Quickie drew intense public interest and won the Outstanding New Design award. By 1980, the firm had sold 350 kits.
    The Quickie is a single-place, single-engined aircraft fitted with a canard approximately equal in area to the main wing. The layout almost qualifies the aircraft as a biplane with tremendous negative stagger between the upper and lower wings. Construction methods remain identical to other Rutan designs. A builder cuts foam cores for the various components and covers them with resin and fiberglass cloth. Rutan envisioned powering the Quickie with an Onan industrial generator engine that developed 22 horsepower but many builders found this motor too weak. A 2-place version, propelled by a 64 horsepower engine and called the Q-2, was also developed. The Q-200, equipped with a modified lower wing and powered by an 85 horsepower engine, also flew. Various organizations sold Approximately 1,000 Quickie kits and 2,000 Q-2 and Q-200 kits.

    Long Description

    In 1974, Tom Jewett and Gene Sheehan decided to begin designing an airplane that would provide "more flying enjoyment for less money" than other homebuilt aircraft designs popular at that time. Burt Rutan (Rutan VariEze and Voyager, see NASM collection) assisted Jewett and Sheehan in the design work and the first Quickie was finished, tested in flight, and ready for a public introduction by April 1978. In June, the two men formed the Quickie Aircraft Corporation to produce and sell complete kits to build the aircraft. They flew the airplane to the Experimental Aircraft Association's annual gathering at Oshkosh, Wisconsin, in June where the Quickie drew intense public interest and won the Outstanding New Design award. By 1980, the firm had sold 350 kits.
    The Quickie is a single-place, single-engined aircraft fitted with a canard approximately equal in area to the main wing. The layout almost qualifies the aircraft as a biplane with tremendous negative stagger between the upper and lower wings. Construction methods remain identical to other Rutan designs. A builder cuts foam cores for the various components and covers them with resin and fiberglass cloth. Rutan envisioned powering the Quickie with an Onan industrial generator engine that developed 22 horsepower but many builders found this motor too weak. A 2-place version, propelled by a 64 horsepower engine and called the Q-2, was also developed. The Q-200, equipped with a modified lower wing and powered by an 85 horsepower engine, also flew. Various organizations sold Approximately 1,000 Quickie kits and 2,000 Q-2 and Q-200 kits. Mr. C. M. Cunningham donated his Quickie to the National Air and Space Museum in 1983.

    Credit Line

    Gift of C. M. Cunningham

    Inventory Number

    A19830337000

    Restrictions & Rights

    CC0

    Type

    CRAFT-Aircraft

    Dimensions

    Wingspan: 5.1 m (16 ft 10 in)
    Length: 5.3 m (17 ft 5 in)
    Height: 1.2 m (4 ft)
    Weights: Empty: 111.8 kg (246 lb)
    Gross: 218.2 kg (480 lb)
    Engine: Onan 22 horsepower

    Country of Origin

    United States of America

    See more items in

    National Air and Space Museum Collection

    Location

    Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center in Chantilly, VA

    Exhibit Station

    Sport Aviation

    Data Source

    National Air and Space Museum

    Metadata Usage

    CC0

    Link to Original Record

    http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/nv9bc1bc526-ced3-421b-95bb-c578cb7387bb

    Record ID

    nasm_A19830337000

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