Baby Ace
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The Ace ''Baby Ace,'' a single-seat, single-engine, parasol wing, fixed-gear light airplane, was marketed as a homebuilt aircraft when its plans were first offered for sale in 1929 — one of the first homebuilt aircraft plans available in the United States. Plans are still available and Baby Aces are still being built.
Orland Corben Orland or Ørland is the name, or part of the name, of a number of places and people: Places Canada *Orland, Saskatchewan Norway * Ørland, a municipality United States *Orland, California *Orland, Georgia * Orland, Indiana *Orland, Maine *Orland ...
designed a series of aircraft for the
Ace Aircraft Manufacturing Company The Ace Aircraft Manufacturing Company was established in Wichita, Kansas in 1929 by Orland Corben to market the world's first homebuilt aircraft, a machine of his own design called the Baby Ace. The enterprise did not last long before US regu ...
, the Baby Ace, Junior Ace, and Super Ace. Corben's name was associated with the aircraft, and it is commonly known as the ''Corben Baby Ace''. Dwiggins, Don: Chapter 3: "Flying the Corben Baby Ace," ''Low Horsepower Fun Aircraft You Can Build,'' 1979,
TAB Books TAB is an imprint of McGraw-Hill Education, based in New York, New York, that publishes do-it-yourself technology books for makers, electronics hobbyists, students, and inventors. Company Originally based in Blue Ridge Summit, Pennsylvania, TAB w ...
, LOC: 79-22942; ISBN 0-8306-9710-1 / ISBN 0-8306-2267-5, as compiled in ''Modern Aviation Library,'' Vol. 10, Book No. 210, TAB, Blue Ridge Summit, Penn., USA
"My Love Affair with a Red Head Named Davis,"
September 1986, ''Vintage Airplane,'' Vol.14., No.9, p.7, retrieved September 26, 2022 (p.


Design


Original

The Baby Ace is a single-seat parasol wing monoplane of conventional
taildragger Conventional landing gear, or tailwheel-type landing gear, is an aircraft undercarriage consisting of two main wheels forward of the center of gravity and a small wheel or skid to support the tail.Crane, Dale: ''Dictionary of Aeronautical Term ...
configuration. Individual examples have been configured with tricycle landing gear. The wing uses a Clark Y-cross-section
airfoil An airfoil (American English) or aerofoil (British English) is the cross-sectional shape of an object whose motion through a gas is capable of generating significant lift, such as a wing, a sail, or the blades of propeller, rotor, or turbine. ...
; spars and ribs are spruce. The steel-tube parallel wings struts simplified internal wing structure, and enabled the wings to fold back for over-the-road towing. The fuselage is of fabric-covered tubular construction, and wing struts are steel tube. There is a door in the right side. Streamlining and fairing was largely done with balsa wood. Its landing gear is a split-axle type, with bungee cord suspension, similar to gear of the Piper Cub. Some are fitted with brakes, using
Aeronca Aeronca, contracted from Aeronautical Corporation of America, located in Middletown, Ohio, is a US manufacturer of engine components and airframe structures for commercial aviation and the defense industry, and a former aircraft manufacturer. Fr ...
-type heel pedals.


Evolutions

Under the Corben Sport Plane and Supply Co. ( Peru, Indiana), two versions were offered, using using the same wings, tails, controls and landing gear: a single-seat. open-cockpit, parasol-wing model (the Baby Ace) and an enclosed, two-seat, high-wing version ( Junior Ace). In 1955 Paul Poberezny, founder of the Experimental Aircraft Association, redesigned the plane with Stan J. Dzik (former Waco Aircraft engineer), calling its version the Model C. EAA sold the rights to the planes to Cliff DuCharme ( West Bend, Wisconsin), and the plane was redesigned for production, becoming the Model D (first flight: November 15, 1956). The similarly redesigned two-seat Junior Ace, became the Junior Ace Model E.


Powerplants

The first example flew with a
Heath-Henderson B-4 The Heath-Henderson B-4 engine was a motorcycle piston engine modified for use in aircraft. "The Heath Airplane Company's Model B-4 was an in-line, four-cylinder, air-cooled Henderson motorcycle engine converted for use in aircraft by modifying ...
modified motorcycle engine. However, a detachable motor mount accommodated an easy change of engines. Later models utilized various engines -- facilitated by the removeable motor mount -- including the 45-hp Szekeley SR-3, 40-hp Salmson AD9, 35-hp Continental A-40, or 30-hp Heath B4. A variety of aircraft
powerplants A power station, also referred to as a power plant and sometimes generating station or generating plant, is an industrial facility for the generation of electric power. Power stations are generally connected to an electrical grid. Many p ...
may be used, typically in the 65-100 hp (50-75 kW) range. Most versions flying today use the Continental A65 aircraft engine. Examples have been built using 70 hp Corvair engines.


Operational history

The original Baby Ace was built in 1929, in Topeka, Kansas. Designer O.G. ("Ace") Corben later established the Corben Sportplane Company ( Madison, Wisconsin), where six Baby Aces were built, with kits also sold. John W. Underwood (
Peter M. Bowers Peter M. Bowers (May 15, 1918 – April 27, 2003) was an aeronautical engineer, airplane designer, and a journalist and historian specializing in the field of aviation.
, Consultant): "Corben Baby Ace" (p.13) and "Corben Junior Ace" (p.14), ''Vintage Veteran Aircraft Guide,'' 1974, LOC: 68-28978, Colllinwood Press, Glendale, California, USA
The Corben Sport Plane and Supply Co. ( Peru, Indiana), began producing the Baby Ace both in kit form and as a complete, flying aircraft. Kits included pre-welded assemblies for the fuselage, controls, tail and landing gear. Two models were offered, using using the same wings, tails, controls and landing gear: a single-seat. open-cockpit, parasol-wing model, and an enclosed, two-seat, high-wing version. In America, state and federal laws banned homebuilding and flight in the uncertified designs by 1938. In 1948, Experimental aircraft were allowed to be built again in America. In 1952, EAA founder Paul Poberezny bought the rights to the Ace designs for $200, and produced a sub-$800 Baby Ace that was featured in '' Mechanix Illustrated'' (Bryan, Hal
"Baby Ace Comes Back,"
July 20, 2019, Experimental Aircraft Association, retrieved september 26, 2022
; some say '' Popular Mechanics''). The series of articles were in conjunction with a
CAA CAA may refer to: Law * Citizenship (Amendment) Act, 2019 of India ** Citizenship Amendment Act protests, Protests regarding the Citizenship (Amendment) Act * Copyright transfer agreement, Copyright assignment agreement, to transfer copyright to ...
effort to revitalize American aviation by promoting amateur built aircraft. The articles drew intense national interest, resulting in hundreds of the planes being built, with various engines -- and elevating then then-obscure EAA to national prominence. To avoid compromising its non-profit status, EAA sold the rights to the planes to Cliff DuCharme ( West Bend, Wisconsin), who resumed kit production, with a revised Model D (first flight: November 15, 1956). and a revised Junior Ace Model E. Subsequently, plans, parts, and kits for both the Baby Ace and Junior Ace became available from Thurman Baird's
Ace Aircraft Manufacturing Company The Ace Aircraft Manufacturing Company was established in Wichita, Kansas in 1929 by Orland Corben to market the world's first homebuilt aircraft, a machine of his own design called the Baby Ace. The enterprise did not last long before US regu ...
(
Asheville, North Carolina Asheville ( ) is a city in, and the county seat of, Buncombe County, North Carolina. Located at the confluence of the French Broad and Swannanoa rivers, it is the largest city in Western North Carolina, and the state's 11th-most populous cit ...
). "Progressive" kits (buy sections as you build) also became available. and remain so,"Directory of Plans You Can Build," Winter 1971, ''Air Trails'' as of 2015."2015 Homebuilt Aircraft Directory," p.29, December 2014, ''Kitplanes" magazine. In 1974, aviation historians John Underwood and Peter Bowers reported 200 Baby Aces were flying, with only one prewar example still active. They noted that only a very few of the Junior Aces had been built before the 1930's CAA crackdown on amateur-built aircraft, with just two of the 1930s two-seaters still flying. However, in 1979, aviation journalist Don Dwiggins estimated the number of flying Baby Aces in the United States and Canada had dwindled to around 70. A 1958 Baby Ace is currently the oldest Canadian homebuilt aircraft flying.


Variants

;Baby Ace :Single-seat ; Super Ace :Single-seat powered by a Ford Model A automotive engine. Plans updated by EAA founder Paul Poberezny. ; Jr. Ace :Two-seat tandem variant. ;
Pober Jr Ace The Ace ''Junior Ace'' is a two-seat sports aircraft that has been offered by the Ace Aircraft Manufacturing Company in kit and plans form for home building since the early 1930s. It was designed by Orland Corben.Vandermeullen, Richard: ''2012 K ...
:Updated plans of the Jr. Ace model


Specifications (Baby Ace D)


See also


References

* ''Our Wisconsin'' magazine ("Ace High" C Boelk) June/July 2015


External links


Web site of Ace Aircraft
provides info on the kit for building the ''Corben Baby Ace Model D''.
The History of Ace Aircraft
* article, June-October 1935, ''Popular Aviation'' (forerunner of
Flying Magazine ''Flying'', sometimes styled ''FLYING'', is an aviation magazine published since 1927 and called Ziff Davis#Popular Aviation, ''Popular Aviation'' prior to 1942, as well as ''Aeronautics'' for a brief period. It is read by pilots, aircraft owners ...
) * article, June 1985, ''The Vintage Airplane'' * "Flight Testing of Corben Baby Ace" January 1, 1978, ''Vintage Airplane'' {{Ace aircraft Homebuilt aircraft 1920s United States sport aircraft Single-engined tractor aircraft Baby Ace Parasol-wing aircraft