The Super Breezy
Until 1965, if you wanted to have fun flying, you found an old Cub or Champ and took to the sky. Airport coffee shops were well attended on weekends. ...
Until 1965, if you wanted to have fun flying, you found an old Cub or Champ and took to the sky. Airport coffee shops were well attended on weekends. A few pilots (who did mostly corporate flying) decided that there had to be some way to have more fun flying. Most private pilots were happy just to log a few hours every weekend, but three pilots from the Chicago area (Charles Roloff, Carl Unger, and Bob Liposky) had something more extreme in mind when they invented the Breezy.
A friend of theirs had a pair of wings from a crashed Piper PA-12. They scrounged an empennage and a nose wheel fork from elsewhere. Unger was an expert welder, and with what can be compared to a life-sized erector set, they set about building an airframe to bring everything together.
With the money saved by salvaging used parts, they bought a new C90 with a special pusher crank and bolted it behind the wing. The airframe was a simple truss, uncomplicated by the need to enclose the passengers and systems. Everything bolted to the outside, and the pilot perched on the nose.
They flew their creation all over the mid-west, having a blast and raising eyebrows everywhere they went. Someone asked them if it was a little breezy sitting out in the open, and the name “Breezy” stuck.
At the 1965 Rockford EAA fly-in they introduced the aircraft to the public. The Breezy spent the entire weekend giving rides to enthusiastic passengers.
After returning from the fly-in and much to their surprise, they began receiving a large volume of mail asking for plans from which to build their own Breezy aircraft. They hadn’t drawn any plans while they were building the plane, so they reverse-engineered a set. Since then they have sold over 1,000 copies of the simple drawings.
Although the Breezy had outstanding performance for its power, some thought that it could be improved upon. Always up for new challenges, Yakima Aerosport decided to do just that. They were already building the Super 18 Turbo Cub and a Super Cub using the Dakota Cub slotted wing. It made a big improvement in the STOL performance of the Super Cub, so it was natural to assume that it would do the same for a “Super Breezy.”
Equipped with a 200HP IO-360 engine, the Super Breezy has STOL performance comparable to a Super Cub which is something never accomplished in a breezy aircraft. The Super Breezy is piloted from the back seat allowing the passenger to sit up front and enjoy an impressive panoramic view of the sky and earth.
The is a “cousin” to the and is built by Yakima Aerosport. They have the innovation and expertise to work on any aircraft that can get to the front of their hangar located on McAllister Field in Yakima, Washington.
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