The Laird Baby Biplane was the second aircraft built by Matty Laird in the United States of America.
| Baby Biplane | |
|---|---|
| Replica at the Florida Air Museum | |
| Role | Homebuilt aircraft Type of aircraft |
| National origin | United States |
| Designer | Emil Matthew Laird |
| Introduction | 1912 |
| Number built | 1 |
The Baby Biplane was built by Laird at the age of 16, with assistance from his brother Charles.[1]
The Baby Biplane was a single-seat biplane made of wood with aircraft fabric covering, having conventional landing gear. Later the aircraft was covered with Irish Linen and French cellulose-nitrate dope.[2]
Laird operated from Chicago's Cicero field.[3] A self-taught pilot, his first flight resulted in the aircraft flipping over after becoming airborne. Over time, the aircraft flew up to 30 minutes at a time.[2] The instrument panel consisted of a pocket watch, used to time the fuel supply.[4]
A replica of the Baby Biplane was built by Dean Tilton and donated to the Florida Air Museum in Lakeland, Florida, United States.[5]
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Data from [citation needed]
General characteristics