Victa Aircruiser | |
---|---|
Role | Four-seat light touring monoplane |
National origin | Australia |
Manufacturer | Victa Ltd |
Designer | Henry Millicer |
First flight | 18 July 1966 |
Number built | 1 |
Developed from | Victa Airtourer |
Variants | AESL CT/4 Airtrainer |
The Victa Aircruiser was an 1960s Australian four-seat touring monoplane designed by Henry Millicer and built by Victa.
Following the success of the earlier Airtourer, Millicer designed a four-seat version which he called the Aircruiser. The prototype registered VH-MVR first flew on 18 July 1966. Like the airtourer it was a low-wing monoplane with a fixed nosewheel landing gear and powered by a 210 hp (157 kW) Continental IO-360-H piston engine. Rather than the sliding clear perflex canopy of the Airtourer, the four-seat Aircruiser had a fixed cabin roof with a single "car type" door on the left hand side.
Following the sale of the design rights of the Airtourer to Aero Engine Services Limited (AESL) of New Zealand the rights to the Aircruiser were also sold to AESL in 1969. AESL's Chief Designer Pat Monk re-designed the aircraft as the AESL CT/4 Airtrainer, a fully aerobatic (+6G, -3G) military trainer.
General characteristics