Hall Cherokee II explained
The
Hall Cherokee II is an American high-wing, single seat
glider that was designed by Stan Hall and introduced in 1956 as plans for
amateur construction.
[1] [2] Due to its low cost and ease of construction, the Cherokee II is one of the most produced home-built gliders.
Design and development
The Cherokee was designed by Hall to provide homebuilders with an easy-to-construct and inexpensive aircraft that would give performance at least equal to the Schweizer SGS 1-26, which had flown two years earlier.
The Cherokee structure is built from wood and covered in doped aircraft fabric covering. The fuselage features truss construction, with longerons and gussets and a fixed monowheel landing gear. The wing has two spars, with geodetic braces handling the torsion loads and is built with a fixed center section and removable outer wing panels. The wings have spoilers on the top surfaces and use a Gö 549 airfoil.
As with all plans-built aircraft, builders have made modifications to the design. Some examples have been built with leading edges made from aluminium, cardboard, glass reinforced plastic and plywood and with many different styles of canopy.
Operational history
The first Cherokee II to fly was built by Frank Kerns and George McGinnis in 1956. The first flight was done by the designer, Stan Hall, in the late summer of 1956.[3]
Cherokee IIs have been used to earn many Gold badges as well as some Diamond badge legs. The first 300 km flight of a Cherokee II, for Gold Distance and Diamond Goal, was done by Ray Proenneke in April 1960.[4] To date, the longest distance flown in a Cherokee II is 260miles, flown by Jim Hard in June 1965.[5] In July 2012, Tony Condon flew his Cherokee II on a 300 km FAI Triangle closed course flight.[6]
Cherokee IIs have occasionally been flown in competition, usually in regional handicapped contests. The prototype Cherokee II was entered in the 1956 US National Championships at Grand Prairie, Texas, but was not allowed to compete as it had not flown the FAA-required 50 hours of flight test time within 25miles of its home airport.[3] In 1959, two Cherokee IIs competed at the Canadian national contest, with Ross Grady placing second and a team of Jim Reid and Ken Lewandowski coming in third.[7] In Class II of the 1960 US West Coast Championship, George Asdel and Stan Hall took first and second, respectively, in their Cherokee IIs.[8] Ray Proenneke flew in many US west coast meets and contests in the early 1960s and won the Torrey Pines meet in 1964.[9] Bud Brown flew several regional contests in the US midwest in the late 1960s, placing 7th, winning the handicap trophy, in the Wright Memorial Meet of 1967.[10] In the 1968 Region 6 Contest Bud flew to 11th overall, but once again won the handicap trophy.[11] In 1967, Peter Newgard flew his Cherokee to first place in the 25:1 glide ratio and under category at the US Region 11 contest.[10] Carl Herold won the 1976 US Region 11 Sports Class contest in a borrowed Cherokee II.[12] In the 1978 US Region 4 Sports Class contest, Ted Garnett came in first in his Cherokee II.[13] Dean Gradwell placed 5th in the US Region 11 Sports Class in 1983, winning one day's competition.[14] Tony Condon placed 3rd in the 2011 US Region 10 Soaring Championships flying his Cherokee II, winning two days.[15] In 2012, Condon flew his Cherokee to a 7th-place finish in the US 13.5 Meter Super Regionals.[16]
In March 2011 there were at least two Cherokee IIs in airworthy condition, one in the USA[17] and another in Australia.[18] The original Cherokee RM, built by Ree and Miller, had recently been flown after an extensive restoration.[19] At least three Cherokee IIs were currently undergoing restoration, two in the US and one in Australia.[20]
Variants
- Cherokee II
Original design with a 401NaN1 wingspan. About 100 built in the USA, Canada and Australia.
- Cherokee RM
Modified version, designed by Terry Miller and John Ree, first flown in 1966 with a 441NaN1 wingspan. The wing has an increased aspect ratio of 16.4:1, producing a wing area of 7square feet less and a wing loading 1 lb per sq ft higher. The wing uses a NACA 63(3)-618 laminar flow airfoil and achieves a glide ratio of 28:1. About 6 were built.
- Cook LEC-1 Modified Cherokee
Built as a stock Cherokee II by Larry Cook of Hershey, Pennsylvania the aircraft was damaged and rebuilt with the wing from a Miller Tern, giving it a wingspan of 47.31NaN1. The aircraft was later further modified by later owners adding 61NaN1 span spoilers on the upper wing surfaces, removing the dorsal fin, increasing the fin chord, as well as adding flaps and small rear windows. The aircraft is listed by the FAA as having been built in 1966 and destroyed in 2002.[21] [22]
- Leonard Annebula
Version with a 49.212NaN2 wingspan, Prue-style trailing edge airbrakes and glide ratio of 31:1. One was completed in 1967.[23]
- Jobagy Bagyjo
Version built by John Jobagy and completed in 1962. It featured a Briegleb BG-12 fuselage and empennage with Cherokee II wings.[24] Aircraft on display
External links
Notes and References
- Web site: Cherokee II Hall. 23 March 2011. Activate Media. 2006. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20120405061352/http://www.sailplanedirectory.com/PlaneDetails.cfm?PlaneID=56. 5 April 2012.
- Said, Bob: 1983 Sailplane Directory, Soaring Magazine, pages 8-9. Soaring Society of America, November 1983. USPS 499-920
- Soaring Nov/Dec 1956
- Soaring July 1960
- Soaring August 1965
- Web site: OLC Flight information - Tony Condon (US) . 24 July 2012.
- Soaring, November 1959
- Soaring, November 1960
- Soaring, April 1964
- Soaring, July 1967
- Soaring, July 1968
- SSA In Action. Soaring. September 1976. 40. 13.
- Soaring, January 1979
- Soaring, September 1983
- Web site: Region 10 Soaring Championship - Contest Summary. 13 October 2011.
- Web site: 13.5 Meter Super Regional. SSA. 23 July 2012.
- VSA Bungee Cord, Summer 2010
- Web site: Vintage Times, issue 117, January 2010 . 2011-03-30 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100605005821/http://vintagekiwi.gliding.co.nz/int_news/Vintage%20Times%20117.pdf . 2010-06-05 . dead .
- VSA Bungee Cord, Fall 2010
- http://www.vintageglidersaustralia.org.au/documents/Vintage%20Times%20120.pdf Vintage Times, issue 120, October 2010
- Said, Bob: 1983 Sailplane Directory, Soaring Magazine, page 46. Soaring Society of America November 1983. USPS 499-920
- Web site: Make / Model Inquiry Results . 18 May 2011 . Federal Aviation Administration. May 2011.
- Web site: Make / Model Inquiry Results. 23 March 2011. Federal Aviation Administration. March 2011.
- Soaring, July 1962
- Web site: Cherokee Sailplanes Cherokee II, CF-REI, Aerospace Museum of Calgary . Aerospace Museum of Calgary. 29 March 2011.
- Web site: Hall Cherokee II aircraft. 23 March 2011. Pardon. Leo. March 2007.
- Web site: Federal Aviation Administration. Make/Model Inquire Results. 29 March 2011.
- Web site: Vintage Aircraft. Iowa Aviation Museum. 29 March 2011. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20110409105809/http://www.flyingmuseum.com/Aircraft.aspx. 9 April 2011.
- Web site: Sailplanes in Our Collection. 26 February 2011. National Soaring Museum. 2011. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20110516142717/http://www.soaringmuseum.org/collection.html. 16 May 2011.
- Web site: US Southwest Soaring Museum Collection. Southwest Soaring Museum. 29 March 2011.
- Web site: Federal Aviation Administration. Make/Model Inquire Results. 29 March 2011.
- Web site: Taylor. Brent. Cessna C-165 "Airmaster" & Cherokee II Glider Donated to APM by Richard Nelson. 10 April 2012.