PASPED “SKYLARK”€

1936

Gemini Sparkle

Key Takeaways:

  • The Pasped Skylark was a two-seat side-by-side cabin monoplane introduced by Pasped Aircraft Co. in Glendale, California, in 1936.
  • It was originally powered by a 125-hp Warner Scarab radial engine and featured a steel-tube fuselage with mixed Duralumin and fabric covering, and wire-braced wings.
  • Only one example of the Skylark survives and is still flying today, now fitted with a 175-hp Warner Super Scarab engine.
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STANDARD DATA: Seats 2. Gross wt. 1,885. Empty wt. 1,288. Engine 125-hp Warner Scarab.
PERFORMANCE: Top mph 139. Cruise mph 125. Stall mph 35. Initial climb rate 850. Ceiling 16,000. Range 650.

In 1936, the Pasped Aircraft Co. of Glendale, California, introduced a two-seat side-by-side cabin monoplane called the Skylark. Its engine was a 125-hp Warner Scarab radial engine housed in a low-drag cowling. The fuselage was a rectangular steel-tube welded structure covered with Duralumin metal panels forward and fabric aft. The wings were wire-braced from above, had plywood leading edges, and were covered with both fabric and Duralumin (the latter only at the center section). The single surviving example still flying is fitted with a 175-hp Warner Super Scarab.

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