Dale Weejet 800

Dale Weejet 800
Role Light Jet
National origin United States of America
Manufacturer Dale-Air Engineering, Carma Mfg. Inc.
Designer Harold Dale, Eleanor Dale
First flight 30 March 1956
Number built 1


The 'Dale Weejet 800, or Weejet VT-1 was an early light jet intended for high-speed personal transport or primary military training.[1]

Design and development

Harold Dale, an engineer at North American Aviation who had designed several homebuilt aircraft, teamed up with Edward Gagnier, a former North American engineer, to develop the Weejet. The name was registered in February 1952 and the prototype was built in 2 1/2 years.[2]

The Weejet was a two-seat side-by-side, mid-winged all-aluminum, retractable tricycle gear aircraft with a V-tail arrangement. The aircraft was powered by a 920lb thrust Continental-Turbomeca Marbore II J-69-T-15 engine. Air was fed to the engine through two triangular inlets mounted on the inboard wing roots. Fuel was carried in the leading edge of the wings, and tip tanks. The aircraft had oxygen tanks and was pressurized to 3 psi differential pressure. The seats were designed to accommodate parachutes. The rudder pedals were adjustable for different pilot heights.

Operational history

The first test flight was conducted by Harold Dale on 30 March 1956. The aircraft completed several spin tests, but during one test the canopy opened and the aircraft went into an inverted spin. The pilot bailed out safely and the prototype crashed after performing an unmanned inverted loop. It was later found that the trim tab was set to full nose-down attitude during the test. A scheduled demonstration of the aircraft for the U.S. Navy was canceled. No other Weejets were produced.[3]

Specifications (Dale Weejet 800)

Data from Sport Aviation

General characteristics

Performance

Avionics

See also

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration and era

References

  1. "The Elusive Dream". Retrieved 25 June 2011.
  2. "WEEJET". Retrieved 25 June 2011.
  3. Sport Aviation. May 1959. Missing or empty |title= (help)
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 6/26/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.