The Brown B-1 Racer was an American-built small monoplane racing aircraft of the 1930s.
Brown B-1 Racer | |
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The B-1 Racer as restored postwar on display in the Wings over Miami aviation museum at Tamiami Airport, near Miami | |
Role | Racing aircraft Type of aircraft |
National origin | United States |
Manufacturer | Brown Aircraft Co. |
Designer | Dan Holloway |
First flight | 1933 |
Introduction | 1933 |
Retired | circa 1948 |
Status | preserved in a museum |
Primary user | racing pilots |
Number built | 1 |
Variants | Brown B-2 Racer Brown B-3 |
The B-1 Racer was built in 1933 by the Brown Aircraft Co. of Montebello, California, which had been founded by Lawrence W. Brown, previously of Clover Field, Santa Monica, California.
The B-1 was designed by Dean Holloway and was intended for competitive flying at the hands of Ralph Bushey. The diminutive aircraft was a low-winged monoplane with an open single-person cockpit and a fixed tail-skid undercarriage.[1]
Ralph Bushey raced the aircraft NR83Y in several prewar competitions in the United States, but the aircraft was damaged in a crash after the engine fell out during the race. It was rebuilt in 1947 with a removable closed cabin and powered by an 85 hp (63 kW) Continental C-85 engine.
The aircraft continued to compete as a "midget racer", named Suzie Jayne.[1]
The B-1 was withdrawn from flying in the late 1940s, and is currently owned by Kermit Weeks.[2] The aircraft was on public display at the Fantasy of Flight in Polk City, Florida, alongside the Brown B-2 replica.[3][4]
Data from Aerofiles.com
General characteristics
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