Heath Baby Bullet
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Baby Bullet | |
|---|---|
| General information | |
| Type | Racing aircraft |
| National origin | United States |
| Designer | |
The Heath Baby Bullet was a racing aircraft built during the interwar period.
The Baby Bullet started as a single place, mid-winged, open cockpit, conventional landing gear equipped aircraft. A Bristol Cherub engine was first used, followed by a Continental A-40.[1]
Operational history
- 1928 National Air Races
- 1934 National Air Races - Bob Chonsky renamed his plane the "Angell Whistler" and crashed with a failed landing gear.[2]
