Stoddard-Hamilton Aircraft

Stoddard-Hamilton Aircraft, based in Arlington, Washington, was a designer and supplier of high-performance homebuilt aircraft kits, offering parts and plans to homebuilders. The company's popular Glasair aircraft series are low wing, two-seat (side by side) fiberglass designs.[1]

Stoddard-Hamilton Glastar, built 2002

The Glasair TD of 1979 was the first pre-molded composite aircraft kit on the general aviation market. The company was started by Tom Hamilton and named, tongue in cheek, after the style of large aircraft manufacturers in the United States. Using Hamilton's middle and last name, the company was incorporated as Stoddard-Hamilton.

Retractable gear and up-engined models were later introduced, with the Glasair III Turbo capable of speeds in excess of 300 mph (483 km/h), and another model being fitted with a turboprop engine. In the mid-1990s, Glasair introduced the Glastar, a high-wing, short-field capable utility aircraft with two seats.

In 2001, Thomas W. Wathen purchased the assets of the Glasair from bankrupt Stoddard-Hamilton Aircraft. New Glasair combined with New GlaStar and continued production of the Glasair and GlaStar kits at the Arlington factory and markets them under the Glasair Aviation name.[2]

Aircraft

gollark: Write down the things you're particularly good at, think about the most "interesting" things you can do with each of them, and combine them into one ultra-idea.
gollark: (3 offense)
gollark: Kit: actually think about it, yourself, for more than 28 seconds?
gollark: Make a wiki-styled graph-structured note-taking application?
gollark: Invent AVX-1024, and etch it into your CPU.

See also

References

  1. Patrick Julia (March 1993). "A Tour of the Glasair Factory". Air Progress: 25.
  2. "EAA news - New Glastar purchase of AADI". Archived from the original on 2007-09-27. Retrieved 2007-01-14.

Media related to Stoddard-Hamilton at Wikimedia Commons


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.