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DSK Airmotive Hawk

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DSK-1 Hawk and DSK-2 Golden Hawk
Role Recreational aircraft
Manufacturer Homebuilt
Designer Richard Killingsworth
First flight 26 May 1973

The DSK Airmotive DSK-1 Hawk was an unusual homebuilt aircraft designed in the United States in the early 1970s. While the design itself was utterly conventional - a single-seat low-wing cantilever monoplane with fixed tricycle undercarriage - its method of construction was not, since the DSK-1 Hawk used a surplus 200 US Gal military drop tank as its fuselage. Designer Richard Killingsworth sold over 250 sets of plans.[1]

Development

The DSK-1 featured "drooping ailerons" that acted as flaps for short field operations.

Variants

A follow-on design, the DSK-2 Golden Hawk with a more conventional fuselage for builders who could not obtain a suitable drop tank. This was expected to fly in 1976, but on 12 April 1975, Killingsworth was killed when the Hawk prototype crashed shortly after takeoff.

Specifications (DSK-1)

General characteristics

  • Crew: One pilot

Performance

References

  1. ^ "The Homebuilt You Have to See to Believe". Popular Mechanics. May 1974.
  • Taylor, Michael J. H. (1989). Jane's Encyclopedia of Aviation. London: Studio Editions. p. 347.
  • Jane's All the World's Aircraft 1977-78. London: Jane's Yearbooks. p. 535.