An aircraft “incapable of spinning” sold in the men's
department of Macy's department store? That is the claim to fame of the
Ercoupe—a twin-tail airplane designed by Fred Weick and named after its
manufacturer, the Engineering and Research Corporation (ERCO), located in
Riverdale, Maryland.
Weick, assistant chief of the aeronautics division of
the National Committee on Aeronautics (NACA), predecessor to the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration, designed and assembled an
experimental airplane in 1934 with a group of his colleagues. Responding
to a Bureau of Air Commerce-sponsored design competition to build an
easy-to-fly, safe airplane, Weick and his friends worked on the project in
their spare time and paid for it themselves.
The test aircraft built by Weick, known as the W-1,
featured tricycle landing gear, a high parasol wing, and a pusher
propeller configuration (with the propeller located behind the main
supporting surfaces). The single engine was used for economy of operation
and the tricycle gear was intended to prevent "nose over” landing
accidents where the airplane would flip over on its nose.
Weick left NACA in 1936 and joined ERCO's fledgling
aircraft team as chief designer, primarily to continue improving his
airplane design. Focusing his efforts on a number of design issues,
primarily simplicity and safety, Weick strove to create a reasonably
priced aircraft that would not stall or spin. Retaining the tricycle gear
(for ease of manoeuvring on the ground), Weick switched to a low-wing
monoplane configuration in his improved model, powered by a tractor engine
(the propeller located forward of the main supporting surfaces).
The refined W-1A (originally known as the ERCO 310)
made its first flight in October 1937 and was soon renamed the “Ercoupe.”
The twin-tail Ercoupe became an instant sensation because of its
easy-to-fly design and unique design features, including a bubble canopy
for great visibility. Lacking rudder pedals, the Ercoupe was flown
entirely using only a control wheel: a two-control system linked the
rudder and aileron systems, which controlled yaw and roll, with the
steerable nose wheel. This wheel controlled the pitch and the steering of
the airplane, both on the ground and in the air, simplifying control and
coordinated turning and eliminating the need for rudder pedals. A
completely new category of pilot's license had to be created for Ercoupe
pilots who had never used a rudder pedal. The Ercoupe was the first plane
to incorporate much of the original research that Weick had performed
while at the NACA, including the wholly cowled engine.
Targeted at the non-professional pilot, the Ercoupe was
also designed to be spin-proof with no dangerous stall characteristics. A
placard, which was the first for any airplane, was allowed to be placed
proudly on the instrument panel reading: "This aircraft characteristically
incapable of spinning." An elevator that could move upward and downward
only a limited amount—13 degrees—plus automatic yaw correction, enabled
the airplane to actually fly itself out of a spin. Inexpensive to operate
and maintain, the Ercoupe was able to fly into and out of small airfields,
and its nose-wheel steering made taxiing almost like driving an
automobile.
The two-seat ERCO Ercoupe 415 went on sale in 1940 but
only 112 were delivered before World War II intervened, halting all civil
aircraft production. By mid-1941, aluminium supplies were being diverted
to war-related production, so ERCO decided to manufacture Ercoupes for
military use by using wood as the principal building material. The
substitution of wood resulted in a heavier Ercoupe, but the aircraft flew
much more quietly because the wood absorbed vibrations from the engine and
air flow. Ercoupes were flown during the war by the Civilian Pilot
Training Program for flight instruction, and the Civil Air Patrol used
them to patrol for German submarines.
The Ercoupe also was the first U.S airplane to take off
assisted by a rocket. In August 1941, an Ercoupe, powered by a
65-horsepower (48-kilowatt) Continental engine, was converted into a Jet
Assisted Take-Off (JATO) airplane when six pressed-powder rockets were
attached to the Ercoupe's wings at March Field, California. Lt. Homer A.
Boushey of the U.S. Army Air Forces ignited a blend of perchlorate,
asphalt, and special oils with an instrument panel switch and the JATO
Ercoupe took off with a brilliant flash and billowing smoke, cutting the
aircraft's normal takeoff time and distance in half.
Production resumed after the war and initial sales were
strong; ERCO manufactured more than 4,000 aircraft in 1946 alone. In
February of that year, Fred Weick was recognized for his work on the
Ercoupe, receiving the Fawcett Aviation Award for the greatest
contribution to the scientific advancement of private flying.
At its peak, ERCO was turning out 34 Ercoupes per day,
operating three shifts per day. The airplane was aggressively marketed
through non-conventional outlets such as the men's department of the
Macy's department store chain. Unfortunately, however, private aircraft
sales slumped after the war and the bottom dropped out of the civil
aircraft market in late 1946, bursting the bubble held by many aircraft
manufacturers, who had expected that post-war prosperity plus a huge
number of newly trained pilots would translate into a boom market for
civil aircraft sales.
ERCO sold its remaining Ercoupe inventory to Saunders
Aircraft Company in 1947, which continued to sell the airplanes until
1950. Several other companies continued to build Ercoupes and variations
(some renamed as “Aircoupes”) for another 20 years until production ended
in 1970.
Fred Weick went on to become a pioneer in agricultural
aircraft design, leading Piper Aircraft's efforts in that field and later
helped to design the popular Piper Comanche. These notable endeavours
notwithstanding, Weick will always be remembered as the “Father of the
Ercoupe”—the revolutionary rudderless airplane.