Rawdon T-1

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Rawdon T-1 was a United States light single-engined civil utility aircraft of the 1950s.

Typeutility and crop-spraying
National originUnited States
ManufacturerRawdon Brothers Aircraft Inc
Designer
Herb Rawdon
Rawdon T-1
Rawdon T-1 at North Perry airport, Florida, in March 1987
General information
Typeutility and crop-spraying
National originUnited States
ManufacturerRawdon Brothers Aircraft Inc
Designer
Herb Rawdon
Primary usercrop spraying contractors
Number built36
History
Introduction date1951
First flight1947
Developed fromRawdon R-1

Herb Rawdon had been chief engineer of Travel Air, and later Beech Aircraft in Wichita, Kansas. He left Beech and with his brother Gene, established the Rawdon Brothers Aircraft firm.

In 1938 they designed a low-wing two-seat trainer, the Rawdon R-1. A single example was constructed, but was not ordered, as hoped, by the Civil Pilot Training Programme. Postwar, the firm developed and built a similar, but higher-powered model, the T-1.[1]

Operational history

Rawdon built 35 Model T-1s in five variants. The major commercial use of the aircraft was as a trainer and in crop spraying, but it also found other utility uses such as aerial banner towing for advertising purposes. Four examples of the T-1M military version were delivered to the Colombian Air Force. Many aircraft were re-fitted with more powerful engines including the Lycoming O-320 series of 150 h.p.[2]

On display

A 1949 Rawdon T-1 is owned by the Kansas Aviation Museum collection.[3]

Variants

Specifications (T-1SD)

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI