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The Piper J-3 Cub is an American light aircraft that was built between 1938 and 1947 by Piper ... Cruise speed: 65 kn (75 mph, 121 km/h) Stall speed: 33 kn (38 mph ...
The Piper PA-18 Super Cub is a two-seat, single-engine monoplane. Introduced in 1949 by Piper Aircraft, ... Stall speed: 43 mph (69 km/h, 37 kn) (flaps down)
The Piper PA-11 Cub Special is a later-production variant of the J-3 Cub manufactured by Piper ... Cruise speed: 100 mph (162 km/h, 87 kn) Stall speed: 40 mph (65 km ...
The Piper J-5 Cub Cruiser was a larger, more powerful version of the basic Piper J-3 Cub. It was designed just two years after the J-3 Cub, and differed by having a wider fuselage with the pilot sitting in the front seat and two passengers sitting in the rear seat. Equipped with a 75-hp Continental engine the plane's cruising speed was 75 mph ...
The PA-16 Clipper retained the control sticks that had up to that point been common in aircraft derived from the "Cub" family. In 1949, the Clipper sold for $2995. The average four-place airplane on the market at that time cost over $5000. Only 736 Clippers were built in the one year of production before Piper changed to the Piper PA-20 Pacer. [3]
The Carbon Cub weighs 300 pounds (140 kg) less than a Piper PA-18 Super Cub. [4] The carbon cowling weighs six pounds (2.7 kg). [5] The fuselage is welded SAE 4130 chrome-molybdenum steel tubing with fabric covering. The wings are fitted with vortex generators for low-speed flight control. Some models use a partial color on silver base coat ...
The British Auster WW2 reconnaissance aircraft had a placarded stall speed of 24 knots (44 km/h; 28 mph), [5] but that was merely the speed at which its control surfaces lost authority. As reported in many personal accounts by the pilots in their memoirs, the speed at which the aircraft would actually stall was 24 miles per hour (39 km/h).
The Piper J-4 Cub Coupe is a two place side-by-side version of the Piper J-3 that was built between 1938 and 1942 by Piper ... Cruise speed: 92 mph (148.06 km/h, 80 kn)