The Shark.Aero Shark is a conventionally laid out, single engine, low wing ultralight aircraft and light-sport aircraft which seats two in tandem. It was first flown on 19 August 2009 and is built in both Slovakia and the Czech Republic by Shark.Aero. It has optionally fixed or retractable landing gear.
The Shark, which was formally announced at AERO Friedrichshafen in April 2007, was designed to fit into both European UL and US LSA categories. Structurally it is a mixture of carbon-fibre and a small amount of glass fibre composites, with PVC foam filled aramid honeycomb structures sandwiched between panels. The wing main spar is a dismountable two piece carbon fibre beam which joins under the front seat; an auxiliary spar carries the aileron and flap mountings. In plan the leading edge is elliptical and there is slight taper on the outer trailing edge where the ailerons are mounted. Single slotted, electrically operated flaps occupy the rest of the trailing edge. Like the wings, the slightly swept tailplanes are easily detached for storage of transport. There is an electrically operated trim tab in the elevator.[1]
The fuselage of the Shark is formed with integral fin, seat backs, floors and instrument panel. The fin, set forward so the rudder trailing edge is above the elevator hinge line, is shaped like a shark's dorsal fin, strongly swept and with a curved leading edge. There is also a small ventral fin. From the fin forward the upper fuselage line rises rapidly to merge into the side hinged, single piece canopy. There is baggage space behind the cockpit. Both of the adjustable tandem seats have flight controls; the Shark is flown by a sidestick. It is powered by a 100hp (75kW) Rotax 912ULS or 115hp (86kW)Rotax 914 turbocharged powerplant, driving a three-blade or a two-blade propeller. The Shark UL has retractable gear and a variable-pitch propeller.[1][2]
The prototype Shark, Czech registered as OK-OUR01, first flew on 19 August 2009. The first flight of the UL was expected early in 2010 but had not happened by January 2011.[1]
The Shark's wings and tail were adapted for use on the Slovenian OneAircraft One design.[2]
Operational history
The third Shark was registered in France as 83AJR with callsign F-JSOR in early 2011[3] but was destroyed whilst competing in the Paris-Madrid air race on 21 June 2011.[4] It appears however that this aircraft was later rebuilt as the callsign was noted using hex-code 381BBD from May 2015. The fourth appears on the Czech register,[5] flying as a demonstrator in Germany.[6]
In 2015 the design, equipped with a modified engine and a special DUC propeller, set a world record for class RAL2T (Microlights: Movable Aerodynamic Controls/Landplane/Flown with two persons/Thermal Engine) for speed over a straight course at 303.00km/h (188.28mph).[7]
In 2021 and early 2022, 19 year old British-Belgian pilot Zara Rutherford flew a Shark UL variant on an around-the-world flight. Rutherford set a new record for the youngest woman in history to carry out a solo circumnavigation and also the first woman to complete a circumnavigation in a microlight aircraft.[8][9][10][11]
On 24 August 2022, Zara's brother, Mack Rutherford, age 17, landed in Sofia, Bulgaria, thus becoming the youngest pilot to fly solo around the world. Like his sister, Rutherford flew a modified Shark.[12][13]
Variants
Shark LS
European UL, fixed undercarriage, fixed-pitch propeller.
Shark UL
European UL, retractable undercarriage, variable-pitch propeller.[14]
SportShark
Planned US light-sport aircraft (LSA), longer span and heavier, with fixed undercarriage. Announced in 2011, by June 2022 it was not listed as an accepted US LSA.[14][15]
Specifications (UL)
Data from Jane's All the World's Aircraft 2011/12[1] and manufacturer[16]
General characteristics
Crew: one
Capacity: one passenger
Length: 6.715m (22ft 0in)
Wingspan: 7.90m (25ft 11in)
Height: 2.51m (8ft 3in)
Wing area: 9.50m2 (102.3sqft)
Empty weight: 275kg (606lb)
Max takeoff weight: 472.5kg (1,042lb)
Fuel capacity: 100 L (26.4 US gal, 22.0 Imp gal)
Powerplant: 1 × Rotax 912ULS flat-four, air and liquid cooled., 73.5kW (98.6hp)
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