So you wanna fly this real smallest aircraft in the world? Michael Colomban Cri cri - Cricket Aircraft - Cri cri plan - Cricri construction - Drawing Plan
Monday, July 4, 2011
Tiny electric plane unveiled at Paris air show -smallest twin-engine aircraft in the world
A tiny electric powered plane, said to be the smallest twin-engine aircraft in the world, has taken flight at the Paris Air Show.
Pilot, Hugues Duval, dazzled spectators with a demonstration flight, in the "Cri-Cri".
The plane can reach speeds of up to 260km/h (160mph).
Source:youtube.com
Tuesday, October 28, 2008
Cri Cri World Smallest Twin Engine Aircraft
The Cri-Cri is a popular homebuilt design developed in France by engineer and pilot Michel Colomban. Colomban became fascinated by small aircraft and hoped to create a tiny and economical plane with good performance and aerobatic capabilities. His goal was a very simple and lightweight construction using no more than a 20-hp engine powering an airframe carrying a 172 lb (78 kg) pilot and 22 lb (10 kg) of fuel. Colomban's initial study in the late 1950s suggested that a single seat aircraft with a maximum takeoff weight of 395 lb (180 kg) and a wing area of 43 ft² (4 m²) was feasible.
Over a decade later, Colomban returned to his pet project but was able to make several improvements due to advances in technology. He incorporated new more efficient low-drag airfoils, composite parts, and thinner sheet metal for the wing skin to reduce weight and wing area to just 33 ft² (3.1 m²). The new aircraft also adopted twin 8-hp Stihl chain-saw engines, like those used aboard ultralights, in place of the planned single 20-hp engine. The change not only made the aircraft lighter but also improved the efficiency of each engine's propeller. Construction of the first example took about 1,500 hours, and several structural load tests were conducted to prove its advanced design elements were safe.