Brown-Young BY-1 explained

The Brown-Young BY-1, also called the Columbia Sesquiplane and the Model 2, was a prototype sesquiplane from Columbia Aircraft Co.

Design and development

Richard E. Young was the inventor of Spiralloy, a directional glass fibre composite material used in high-strength applications. Together with Willis C. Brown he designed and built the BY-1, a four-seat equivalent to the two-seat Luscombe Phantom parasol monoplane. After completion, a smaller lower wing was mounted below the fuselage, converting it to a sesquiplane with backward staggered wings. The lower wing also housed the retractable landing gear main wheels.[1]

The wings were fabric covered, while the fuselage was of all-metal construction and supported the non-retractable tailwheel.[2] A single Jacobs radial engine in the nose drove a two-bladed propeller.

Operational history

The engine from the BY-1 was later installed in the prototype MB-10 trainer. The BY-1 was scrapped at White Rock Airport in Dallas, Texas for materials during the Second World War.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Skyways. 55. July 2000. 47.
  2. Web site: Peter. Wood. Rocket Science. 7 January 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20100706062705/http://www.nas.org/polArticles.cfm?doc_id=438. 6 July 2010.