Piper PWA-8 Skycycle

Gemini Sparkle

Key Takeaways:

  • Toward the end of World War II, Piper designed the Skycycle, a single-seat taildragger, as part of its post-war transition to civilian aircraft.
  • The Skycycle's first prototype was ingeniously built from an F-4U Corsair belly fuel tank and later prototypes featured a modern four-cylinder Lycoming O-145 engine and a low-wing design with a bubble canopy.
  • Despite its modern appearance and potential, Piper abandoned the Skycycle after only two prototypes, opting instead to develop more conventional designs before launching the successful Cherokee lineup in the late 1950s.
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Toward the end of World War II, Piper, like just about every other light plane manufacturer, figured that the big business it was doing with the government selling liaison planes based on the J-3 wouldn’t last forever, so it planned to transition to a civilian lineup. One of the planes it floated was the Skycycle, a single-seat taildragger, the first prototype of which was built from an auxiliary belly fuel tank of the F-4U Corsair fighter. Though it was originally outfitted with a two-cylinder opposed engine, the later prototype got a four-cylinder Lycoming engine, the O-145, which would one day grow into the O-235 series that powered a later Piper, the PA-38 Tomahawk. The Skycycle seemed to have a lot to recommend it, a modern-looking, low-wing design with a cool bubble canopy, side-by-side seating and a modern four-cylinder opposed powerplant. And was it ever cute. But, alas, Piper chose to abandon the Skycycle after it had built just two prototypes in order to pursue offshoots of existing, more conventionally Piper-looking designs—a pathway it would follow until the late ’50s, when it launched the thoroughly modern, hugely successful Cherokee lineup. And, to be fair, single-seat GA planes are real unicorns.

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