Spartan Arrow

1930s British aircraft


title: "Spartan Arrow" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["1930s-british-civil-utility-aircraft", "spartan-aircraft-ltd-aircraft", "biplanes", "single-engined-tractor-aircraft", "aircraft-first-flown-in-1930"] description: "1930s British aircraft" topic_path: "geography/united-kingdom" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spartan_Arrow" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary 1930s British aircraft ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox aircraft"]

FieldValue
nameArrow
image6229 Duchess of Hamilton York 180509 (14).jpg
captionSpartan Arrow 1 G-ABWP built in 1932 at Kemble Airfield, Glos, in May 2009
typeTourer
manufacturerSpartan Aircraft Limited
first_flight1930
produced1931-1933
number_built15
::

|name = Arrow |image = 6229 Duchess of Hamilton York 180509 (14).jpg |caption =Spartan Arrow 1 G-ABWP built in 1932 at Kemble Airfield, Glos, in May 2009 |type = Tourer |manufacturer = Spartan Aircraft Limited |designer = |first_flight = 1930 |introduction = |retired = |produced = 1931-1933 |number_built = 15 |status = |unit cost = |primary_user = |more_users = |developed_from = |variants =

The Spartan Arrow is a British two-seat biplane aircraft of the early 1930s, built by Spartan Aircraft Limited.

History

Built as a successor to the company's first design the Simmonds Spartan, the Arrow was a two-seat biplane with a spruce and plywood fuselage. The prototype G-AAWY first flew in May 1930 with a Cirrus Hermes II engine. The 13 production aircraft that followed used mainly the de Havilland Gipsy II engine.

One aircraft, G-ABBE, was fitted with floats and evaluated as a seaplane in 1931. It was converted back to a landplane and later sold in New Zealand, where it was renumbered as ZK-ACQ. A second aircraft, G-ABHD, was sold to Australia where it was renumbered as VH-UQD. A third aircraft, G-ACHG, was sold to Denmark where it was renumbered as OY-DUK.

One aircraft, G-ABST, was built to test a new air-cooled Napier engine (later knowns as the Javelin). The second prototype G-AAWY was also used by Cirrus Aero Engines as an engine test bed. Production of the Arrow ended in 1933.

Production

Two prototypes and 13 production aircraft were built at Weston, Southampton, and after 20 February 1931 at East Cowes, Isle of Wight.

Tail Number Model Serial Location G-AAWY Spartan Arrow 51 United Kingdom G-AAWZ Spartan Arrow 52 United Kingdom G-ABBE Spartan Arrow 75 United Kingdom K-ACQ Spartan Arrow 75 New Zealand G-ABKL Spartan Arrow 76 United Kingdom G-ABGW Spartan Arrow 77 United Kingdom G-ABWP Spartan Arrow 78 United Kingdom G-ABWR Spartan Arrow 79 United Kingdom G-ABHD Spartan Arrow 80 United Kingdom VH-UQD Spartan Arrow 80 Australia G-ABHR Spartan Arrow 81 United Kingdom G-ABMK Spartan Arrow 82 United Kingdom G-ABOB Spartan Arrow 83 United Kingdom G-ACHE Spartan Arrow 84 United Kingdom G-ACHF Spartan Arrow 85 United Kingdom G-ACHG Spartan Arrow 86 United Kingdom OY-DUK Spartan Arrow 86 Denmark G-ABST Spartan Arrow 87 United Kingdom

Survivors

G-ABWP a Cirrus Hermes II powered Arrow (constructor's number 78) survives in flying condition based at Redhill Aerodrome in England.

Operators

The aircraft was operated by flying clubs and private individuals:

;Australia ;Denmark ;New Zealand ;Norway ;Sweden ;United Kingdom

Specifications

|prime units?=kts

|ref=Saunders and Saro Aircraft since 1917

|length ft= 25 |length in= 0 |length m= 7.62 |span ft= 30 |span in= 7 |span m= 9.34 |height ft= 9 |height in= 6 |height m= 2.90 |wing area sqft= 251 |wing area sqm= 23.3 |empty weight lb= 965 |empty weight kg= 439 |max takeoff weight lb= 1,750 |max takeoff weight kg= 795 |eng1 name= de Havilland Gipsy II |eng1 type= inline piston |eng1 number=1 |eng1 hp=120 |eng1 kw= 90 |max speed kts= 92 |max speed mph= 106 |max speed kmh= 171 |range nmi= 376 |range miles= 432 |range km= 696 |climb rate ftmin= 830 |climb rate ms=4.2

|related= |similar aircraft= |sequence= |lists= |see also=

Notes

References

References

  1. London 1988, p. 334.

::callout[type=info title="Wikipedia Source"] This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page. ::

1930s-british-civil-utility-aircraftspartan-aircraft-ltd-aircraftbiplanessingle-engined-tractor-aircraftaircraft-first-flown-in-1930