MIT Monarch B explained

The Monarch B was a human-powered aircraft, designed and built by graduates and undergraduates of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and won the £20,000 first prize for the Kremer World Speed Competition. It is a successor to the Monarch A HPA which preceded it.

Development

The original Monarch HPA had been damaged in a nose-over landing on September 23, 1983. Over the winter of 1983/84, aspects of the craft were redesigned and rebuilt, in order to improve its performance. Work on these alterations commenced in December 1983, and were completed by early April 1984.

Modifications made included a new, redesigned, fuselage, with the pilot being seated in a recumbent position. The fuselage had a lower, longer profile than its predecessor had, with its trailing edge having a distinct chevron profile. Lateral control was no longer by wing warping, but was now achieved using ailerons attached to the trailing edge of the wing's outer sections. Changes were made to all three parts of the power systems; for the pilot, the gearing ratio of the chain drive changed; a new set of Ni-Cad cells, using a greater voltage, was installed; the propeller was modified to be variable pitch.

Designated the Monarch B, to distinguish it from its predecessor, the monoplane first flew on April 4, 1984, at Hanscom Field airport in Bedford, Massachusetts, with Frank Scarabino as pilot. Official attempts for the Kremer prize were made on May 3, 5, 6, and 7. On May 11, 1984, it traversed the Kremer course in an official time of 2 minutes 55 seconds, for which the MIT Monarch team were awarded the £20,000 prize.

The Monarch B made its final flight on October 12, 1984. It is now on display at the Boston Museum of Science.

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