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In Daryl Murphy's "Planes & People"


Culver’s Travels

The “Spirit of Wichita,” a Culver which, appropriately, is based in Wichita

By Daryl Murphy

Al Mooney always numbered his designs with an M- prefix, and when he moved to St. Louis in 1935 to work for the Monocoupe Corp. he was ready to lay the lines down for the M-10.

It was based on his earlier two-place M-6 design that never got built, and was called the Monosport. The next year, his twin-engine Monocoach was planned, but Monocoupe, who also owned engine builder Lambert, fell on hard times and was bought out by a man named Knight Culver, who proposed building the M-10 in his hometown of Columbus, Ohio and under the name Dart Aircraft Co. It would later become the Dart at Culver, the famous Cadet, and a target drone during WWII.

Al Mooney

Certification was received in April of 1938 and it was introduced as either the Dart G, powered by a Lambert R-266; or with Ken Royce engine it was the Dart GK; with Warner Scarab Jr., the GW. Acceptance of the airplane was heartening, but production was modest.

In 1939, the company reorganized as Culver Aircraft Co. Fifty airplanes were built in Columbus, then, with encouragement from Walter Beech and other local businessmen, they moved to Wichita.

In 1940 the Culver Cadet debuted, and it took the market by storm. With 75 hp Continental or 80 hp Franklin or Continental, it could reach 130 mph. It was the best high-speed bargain in aviation.

Walter Beech and aviation investor Charles Yankey acquired control of the company and reorganized it late in 1941.

Culver PQ-8 (M-13) target drone was radio-controlled or man-carrying

As the war in Europe began to get America’s attention, a need for target aircraft arose. Target sleeves were towed by airplanes and small target-drone aircraft were being developed. Because of its apparent adaptability, a redxesigned Cadet became one of the first radar-controlled, man-carrying aerial targets-a fast, elusive airplane for ant-aircraft gunners and fighter pilots to shoot real bullets at the R/C version, gun cameras against piloted aircraft.

Fitted with tricycle gear and a 90 hp Franklin, 200 were ordered as the PQ-8 in 1941, another 200 with 125 hp Lycoming in 1942. Other powerplants were available, as well. Thousands of he most famous variant, the PQ-14, had a 150 hp Franklin.

The last Culver

The M-17 was ready for the prospect of a burgeoning postwar market. Advertised in advance as the “Victory” model, it had been in preparation since 1942. Introduced in September of 1945, the public was excited, but a flood of orders was supplanted by only a flood of inquiries.

Designed for the amateur pilot and the novice, the V had a patented system of flight control called “Simpli-Fly” so a pilot could get to a mode of flight simply by turning dials or setting levers on a panel console. The problem was that it was too simple. Experienced pilots looked at it as an insult to their skills.

The Culver V

As it debuted, it had too much weight for its wing area and the complicated nature of “Simpi-Fly” seemed more trouble than it was worth. The Model V-2 was designed to correct those faults, but it was already too late. While the company did enjoy some postwar business, it started to falter and inevitably failed.

Al Mooney had already bailed out. He and his brother, Art, would stay in Wichita and work on the next project—the M-18. Even though they wouldn’t own the company that would build it, their names would be on it and it would be known as the Mite.


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Today is: Wednesday, June 19, 2013




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