Practavia Sprite Explained
The
Practavia Sprite is a British two-seat homebuilt training or touring
monoplane designed for amateur construction. It was the winning entry in a competition sponsored by
Pilot magazine in 1968. The design had been begun as a magazine-sponsored project by
Peter Garrison, who worked for
Pilot at the time; when the project did not move forward rapidly enough to suit him, he returned to the United States, where he modified his design into what would become his first
Melmoth.
Development
The prototype Sprite, named the Pilot Sprite, was designed by a team at Loughborough University and had little in common with Garrison's design, though both were all-metal side-by-side low-wing cantilever monoplanes with tricycle landing gear. The Sprite was powered by a Rolls-Royce Continental O-240-A piston engine. Plans for amateur building were marketed by Practavia Ltd as the Practavia Sprite.
References
- Book: Jackson, A. J. . British Civil Aircraft since 1919 Volume 3 . 1974 . Putnam . London . 0-370-10014-X .
- Book: Taylor . John W. R. . John W. R. Taylor . Jane's All the World's Aircraft 1980–81 . 1980 . London . Jane's Publishing Company . 0-7106-0705-9.
- Book: Taylor, Michael J. H. . Jane's Encyclopedia of Aviation . 1989 . Studio Editions . London .