Sheffield Skeeter X-1 Explained

The Sheffield Skeeter X-1 is an American single-seat lightweight homebuilt aircraft designed and built by Kenneth Sheffield of Littleton, Colorado.[1] Designed for amateur construction only the prototype was built.

Design and development

Kenneth Sheffield set out to design a low-cost, easy-to-build aircraft. He included folding wings, a simple structure and powered it with a Volkswagen air-cooled engine. Design was started in 1966 and by April 1970 the Skeeter X-1, registered N117 had flown. The Skeeter X-1 is a parasol strut-braced monoplane with a welded steel fuselage. The fuselage is covered in wood and metal in the cockpit area but the aft-structure is uncovered and the pilot sits in an open cockpit. The two-spar wings fold for transportation, and they have ailerons, but no trim tabs or flaps. The wooden tail is strut and wire braced and fabric covered, and the landing gear is a fixed tailwheel type with a steerable tailwheel. The Skeeter X-1 was designed to me powered by any converted Volkswagen engine from 50to, the prototype had a 720NaN0 Volkswagen converted motor-car engine driving a two-bladed fixed pitch tractor propeller designed by Sheffield.

The Skeeter X-1 was registered by the Federal Aviation Administration in the experimental homebuilt category and the company planned to sell plans and finished propellers to customers but only the prototype appears to have been built.

References

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Air Trails. Winter 1971. 76.