Pober Pixie Explained

The Pober Pixie is a single-seat light aircraft that was designed in the United States in 1974 and marketed as plans for homebuilding.[1] [2]

It is a conventional parasol-wing monoplane with fixed tailwheel undercarriage and a single open cockpit. The design was inspired by the Heath Parasol.[1] [2]

Development

In response to the 1973 oil crisis, the EAA launched "Project Econoplane" to develop an aircraft with high fuel economy that would therefore be affordable for its members to operate. The Pober Pixie was the result, with a Volkswagen air-cooled engine of 1835 cc[2] and a fuel consumption of 3 to 3.5 US Gal (11 to 13 L) per hour. Plans were completed in January 1974 and the prototype flew in late July, in time for the EAA Annual Convention that year.

After the convention, the prototype was returned to the workshop for modifications, including installation of a 600NaN0 Limbach SL 1700 EA engine and Rehm 5330 two-blade fixed-pitch propeller, details of which were incorporated into the plans.

Design

The Pixie fuselage is fabricated from welded 4130 steel tube, while the wings are made from Sitka spruce covered with Stits Poly-fiber fabric. Recommended engines include Volkswagen or the Continental A65.[3]

The design includes full-span ailerons that give it a high roll rate with minimal adverse yaw.[1] [2]

Aircraft Spruce and Specialty says of the design:

Operational history

By March 2017, 27 examples had been registered in the United States with the Federal Aviation Administration and six with Transport Canada.[4] [5]

Variants

Pober Pixie II
  • Paul Poberezny developed some drawings and started design and partial welding of a fuselage for a two-seat model. Michael Hoye of Heath Texas purchased the project in 1989, continued the design, and over a period of ten years completed building a single scratch built example of a tandem two-seat Pixie in 2000. This aircraft won an "outstanding workmanship" award at Airventure 2001 and was featured as the cover story by noted author Budd Davisson in the January 2002 issue of Sport Aviation magazine.[6]

    References

    External links

    Notes and References

    1. Plane and Pilot: 1978 Aircraft Directory, page 140. Werner & Werner Corp, Santa Monica CA, 1977.
    2. Tacke, Willi; Marino Boric; et al: World Directory of Light Aviation 2015-16, pages 91. Flying Pages Europe SARL, 2015.
    3. Web site: POBER PIXIE. 2009-07-06. Aircraft Spruce and Specialty. 2009. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20090429055829/http://home.att.net/~jbaugher1/f4_41.html. 2009-04-29.
    4. Web site: Make / Model Inquiry Results. 28 March 2017. Federal Aviation Administration. Federal Aviation Administration. 28 March 2017.
    5. Web site: Canadian Civil Aircraft Register. 28 March 2017. Transport Canada. Transport Canada. 28 March 2017.
    6. Sport Aviation. January 2002. Pober Pixie One-of-a-kind scratch-built airplane.