A safe airplane as easy to operate and as cheap to buy as the average automobile. This was the American dream in the air-minded 1930s. I lived through that period and well recall one of the most successful attempts to fulfill that dream.
It all began when Joseph Marr Gwinn Jr., a World War I aviator and engineer at Consolidated Aircraft Corporation, chose to remain in Buffalo, N.Y., after the company moved to San Diego, Calif. He had designed what he deemed was a safe, roadable airplane after two years of dedicated research and development, and in 1935 he organized the Gwinn Aircar Company Inc. in Buffalo, serving as the new firm’s president and chief engineer.
Two years later, the prototype Gwinn Aircar was completed and test-flown by Richard K. Bennett, who also gave well-known aviator Frank Hawks the chance to test the new plane. After Hawks flew the Aircar in Buffalo, he was so enthusiastic about its performance that he agreed to become Gwinn Aircar’s vice president in charge of sales.
A biplane configuration with an 18 percent thickness airfoil was selected to keep the wingspan to a maximum 24 feet. A tricycle landing gear was selected for good roadable visibility, and a wooden four-bladed, 1,600-rpm propeller was chosen to reduce noise. In addition, a special muffler was fitted with a long engine exhaust pipe that extended over the cabin, terminating just aft of the upper wing. The 90-hp British Pobjoy Niagara II radial engine proved to be somewhat underpowered for the 1,600-pound plane, but plans were underway to construct a 130-hp Pobjoy Niagara V-7–powered version.
In order to help inexperienced pilots with coordinating the ailerons and rudder during a turn, the cabin control wheel was the only directional and pitch control device. Push-pull for nose up or down and turning the wheel operated both ailerons and elevators for directional control. The control wheel also operated the nose wheel for steering on the road and had to be manually reconnected from ailerons and elevators to the nose wheel and return as required from outside the cabin.
Flying the Aircar was very simple. When takeoff speed was reached, the pilot pushed the left-side floor pedal to the floor, lowering the flaps to takeoff position. Takeoff was immediate, and the stall-proof Aircar merely zoomed on takeoff if the elevator wheel was inadvertently pulled all the way back. The Aircar would then automatically enter a normal flight attitude. Landing was also simple. With the engine idling, the pilot merely leveled the Aircar and guided the plane to the runway.
Engine speed when flying was controlled via a conventional instrument-panel knob. On the road, the pilot used a floor pedal similar to that in a conventional automobile. Conversion from panel knob to floor pedal was done manually outside the cabin.
Converting from wheel to propeller drive and return could not be accomplished from inside the cabin, as this change required reconnecting the engine from the propeller gearbox to the road wheels gearbox. The road wheels were driven via a hydraulic system that required no gear changes by the driver.
The Aircar’s fuselage was an all-metal monocoque structure of aluminum formers with alloy skin. Seven subassemblies were bolted together to comprise the fuselage. The wings were constructed in four panels, with solid spruce spars and stamped aluminum ribs. The leading edges were covered with sheet aluminum, while the entire wing was fabric covered. A rigid diagonal strut was installed instead of the conventional landing and flying wires, facilitating alignment when removing and replacing the wing panels. The vehicle’s wings consisted of four 31⁄2-by-10-foot panels that were bolted to fittings on the fuselage. Each panel could be carried by two men and conveniently stored in a hangar, garage or shed.
The fin was integral to the fuselage. The stabilizer was an airfoil-shaped structure of aluminum, while the elevator frame was constructed of steel tubing. Both were fabric-covered. The pilot and passenger sat side by side on a bench seat. All the amenities expected in an automobile were provided in the Gwinn Aircar: cabin vents, heater, glove compartment, ashtrays, sun visors, tool compartment and first aid kit. Radio and paraflares were optional. Operating accessories included an electric engine starter, battery, generator, oil cooler, navigation lights, landing lights and wheel brakes. Two automobile-type doors with automobile handles made the Aircar seem familiar to customers comfortable with cars rather than airplanes. The control wheel swiveled upward to make it easy to get in and out of the cabin.
Basic specifications of the Gwinn Aircar were: wing area 169.4 square feet; length 16 feet, 3 inches; maximum speed 120 mph; cruising speed 108 mph; landing speed 49 mph with flaps; takeoff run 730 feet; empty weight 1,095 pounds; and rate of climb 450 feet per minute.
Tragedy struck on August 23, 1938, in East Aurora, N.Y. Frank Hawks had completed a demonstration flight in the second of two Aircars built, No. NC 16921, and was taking off with a prospective client when he failed to clear high-tension wires at the end of the field. The Aircar struck the wires and burst into flames, killing the pilot and his passenger. The resulting publicity effectively spelled the end for the Aircar. Joseph Gwinn closed his factory and faded into obscurity. The other plane, NC 1271, was still flying in Dearborn, Mich., in 1945, but its subsequent fate is unclear.
The Aircar’s demise did not put an end to the idea of the roadable airplane. During the late 1940s and early ’50s several other airplane-auto combination designs appeared. Despite considerable media coverage, however, they received a lukewarm reception and failed to catch on. But we may not have seen the end of the roadable airplane even yet: Studies and designs for roadable airplanes are once again underway today.
This feature originally appeared in the November 2005 issue of Aviation History. Subscribe here!