Druine D.61 Condor
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The Druine D.60 Condor is a light aircraft designed by Roger Druine in France in the 1950s. Druine’s primary aim was to design a trainer aircraft for amateur construction. The Condor was subsequently made in quantity in the UK by Rollason Aircraft & Engines.Jackson 1988, pp. 548-550.


History

The first Condor ''F-WBIX'' first flew in 1956. The Condor was an evolution of the Druine Turbi, but featured an extensively revised fuselage allowing the pilot and instructor to sit side by side under a full canopy. Norman Jones, the founder of the Tiger Club and owner of Rollason Aircraft & Engines, had already had a number of
Druine Turbulent The Druine D.31 Turbulent is a French single-seat ultralight Homebuilt aircraft designed by Roger Druine.Jackson Vol 2 1988, p. 303. Development The D.31 Turbulent was designed to be amateur-built and is a single-seat ultra-light aircraft with ...
s built by his company and hit upon the idea of developing the Condor for the demands of club flying. With a number of refinements to the design, Rollason Aircraft and Engines undertook series production at
Croydon Airport Croydon Airport (former ICAO code: EGCR) was the UK's only international airport during the interwar period. Located in Croydon, South London, England, it opened in 1920, built in a Neoclassical style, and was developed as Britain's main air ...
from 1961 as the Rollason Condor. As Croydon had closed for flying in 1959, all aircraft were transported to Redhill, where they were reassembled and test flown. Norman Jones was keenly interested in the development of Flying Clubs and so made Condors available on favourable loan terms. To emphasise the fact that his company was entirely independent and un-subsidised, Norman Jones had painted on the rudder of one aircraft the legend "British Made - Private Enterprise and No Taxpayers Money". In 1973, Rollasons ceased all aircraft work at Croydon and moved to Shoreham where a single Condor was completed. A number of unfinished fuselages were sold off for possible completion as amateur-built aircraft; one of these was ''G-BADM'', registered to Rollasons in 1972 and subsequently completed in 1994 by an amateur. Borea in France also produced the D.61 Condor.


Variants

;D.60: Druine's prototype with 65 hp
CNA D.4 CNA aircraft engines 1930s aircraft piston engines Boxer engines ...
;D.61: Druine production variant with 65 hp Continental A65 ;D.62: Druine or Rollason variant with 75 hp Continental A75 - 1 built by Rollason, later upgraded to 90 hp Continental C90 ;D.62A: Rollason variant with 100 hp
Continental O-200-A The Continental C90 and O-200 are a family of air-cooled, horizontally opposed, four-cylinder, direct-drive aircraft engines of 201 in³ (3.29 L) displacement, producing between 90 and 100 horsepower (67 and 75 kW).''Federal Aviation Admini ...
- 2 built ;D.62B: Rollason variant from 1964 with 4" shorter fuselage and flaps - 41 completed; some subsequently converted to D.62C standard ;D.62C: Rollason variant with 130 hp Continental O-240-A for glider towing - 4 built


Specifications (D.62B)


References


Bibliography

* * * * *Jackson, A. J. ''British Civil Aircraft 1919-1972 Vol 3'', 2nd Edition (reprint) 1988. London: Putnam


External links

*http://www.rollason-condor.co.uk/ {{Druine aircraft 1950s French civil trainer aircraft Condor Single-engined tractor aircraft Aircraft first flown in 1950