Arrow Sport Pursuit
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The Arrow Sport was a two-seat sporting
biplane A biplane is a fixed-wing aircraft with two main wings stacked one above the other. The first powered, controlled aeroplane to fly, the Wright Flyer, used a biplane wing arrangement, as did many aircraft in the early years of aviation. While ...
aircraft built in the United States in the 1920s and 1930s.


Design and construction

The plane was designed by
Swen Swanson Swen (Sven) Swanson (1897/98 – February 1935) was a Swedish aircraft designer. He designed aircraft for various aviation companies in the United States and also designed prototype and experimental airplanes. He was known as an innovative aircraft ...
and it was of largely conventional configuration with tailskid undercarriage, but was interesting in that the pilot and passenger sat side by side in the open
cockpit A cockpit or flight deck is the area, usually near the front of an aircraft or spacecraft, from which a Pilot in command, pilot controls the aircraft. The cockpit of an aircraft contains flight instruments on an instrument panel, and the ...
, and because as originally designed, the fully cantilever wings lacked interplane struts – the upper wing attaching directly to the top of the fuselage. This latter feature proved so alarming to many prospective pilots that the manufacturer later supplied N-type struts that were of no real function other than to allay the aviators' fears.


Survivors

Nine biplane Sports remain registered in the United States as of 2020, mostly in museums and private collections, including: * a Sport Pursuit (N8181, serial 432) preserved in the terminal building of the Lincoln Airport in Nebraska, Arrow's city of manufacture, and owned by the Nebraska State Historical Society. * a Sport (N530A, serial 304) preserved at the
Dakota Territory Air Museum The Dakota Territory Air Museum is an aviation museum on North Hill in Minot, North Dakota near Minot International Airport. The mission of the Dakota Territory Air Museum is to be a historical aviation resource honoring the men, women and mac ...
in North Dakota. * a Sport A2-60 (ex-N9325/G-AARO, serial 341) preserved at the
National Air and Space Museum The National Air and Space Museum of the Smithsonian Institution, also called the Air and Space Museum, is a museum in Washington, D.C., in the United States. Established in 1946 as the National Air Museum, it opened its main building on the Nat ...
in Washington, D.C. * a Sport Pursuit (N853H, serial 412) is on display at the Western Antique Aeroplane & Automobile Museum in Oregon.


Variants

* Sport – Two-seat sporting biplane, powered by a 60-hp (45-kW) LeBlond radial piston engine. * Sport 85 – 85 hp Leblond radial, extra four degrees of dihedral on lower wing. * Sport A2 ** Sport A2-40 ** Sport A2-60
LeBlond radial engines The LeBlond radial engines, later produced under the name Ken-Royce, were a family of 3-cylinder, 5-cylinder and 7-cylinder, air-cooled radial engines for aircraft, built in the 1930s by the LeBlond Aircraft Engine Corporation until the operatio ...
** Sport A2-66 ** Sport A2-90 Tangerine ** Sport A2-100
Kinner C-5 The Kinner C-5 was an American five cylinder radial engine for small general and sport aircraft of the 1930s. Design and development The C-5 was a development of the earlier R-5 with greater power and dimensions. The main change was the increas ...
* Sport Pursuit (renamed Sport K in 1935) – Improved version, powered by a 100-hp (75-kW)
Kinner K-5 The Kinner K-5 was a popular engine for light general and sport aircraft developed by Winfield B. 'Bert' Kinner. With the boom in civilian aviation after Charles Lindbergh's transatlantic flight the K-5 sold well. The K-5 was a rough running but ...
radial engine. * Sport V-8 (renamed the Model F) – Two-seat monoplane version, powered by a converted Ford V8 automobile engine. ** Sport M – Model F with a Menasco C-4 Pirate engine.Trade-a-Plane: "1938 Arrow Sport M"
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Specifications (A2-60)


See also


References

;Notes ;Bibliography * * * *


External links





{{Arrow aircraft 1920s United States sport aircraft Sport Single-engined tractor aircraft Biplanes Aircraft first flown in 1926