Bush plane

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An American Champion Scout. Note the oversized tundra tires, for use on rough surfaces.

A bush airplane is a general aviation aircraft used to provide both scheduled and unscheduled passenger and flight services to remote, undeveloped areas, such as the Canadian north or bush, Alaskan tundra, the African bush, or savanna, Amazon rainforest and the Australian Outback. They are used where ground transportation infrastructure is inadequate or does not exist.[1]

Common traits[edit]

A bush plane is defined by how it is used, and many different aircraft with different configurations have been so used over the years. However, experience has shown certain traits to be desirable (though not mandatory), especially on aircraft specifically designed as bush planes.

  • Undercarriage designed to be fitted with floats, skis or wheel/skis to permit operation from water or snow—primarily for Canadian, Alaskan and Russian use.
  • High wings ease loading and unloading, particularly from docks; improve downward visibility during flight; and increase clearance to reduce the potential for damage during landing, take-off, loading, and unloading.
  • Conventional or "tail dragger" landing gear—two large main wheels and a small rear wheel—reduces both weight and drag, increasing the aircraft's speed and useful load. It reduces stress on the airframe compared to a nosewheel. A failure is also less critical, as a broken tailwheel is easily repaired and does not prevent the aircraft from flying, unlike a broken nose wheel.
  • Short runway performance and low-speed flight characteristics are typically improved by high aspect ratio wings and high-lift devices such as flaps, slots and slats.
  • Very large, low-pressure tundra tires may be fitted to enable the pilot to operate from broken ground. It is not uncommon for a bush pilot to land and take off from unprepared surfaces.
  • Piston engines are preferred over turboprops, as they are cheaper to build and maintain and easier to start without the aid of ground facilities. In extremely remote areas where avgas can be difficult to acquire, some bush pilots prefer turboprop engines that can burn kerosene-derived jet fuel.

Current and historical bush planes[edit]

Years in brackets are of first flight.

Aviation museums with large collections of bush planes[edit]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

Citations[edit]

  1. ^ "Bush planes used in areas where roads do not exist". Archived from the original on 2016-11-01. Retrieved 2010-01-13.
  2. ^ Anderson, 2004, p.82
  3. ^ Foster, 1990, p.74-79
  4. ^ Foster, 1990, p.189-191
  5. ^ Foster, 1990, p.174, 190
  6. ^ Foster, 1990, p.191
  7. ^ Anderson, 2004, p.31
  8. ^ Foster, 1990, p.97, 102, 175
  9. ^ Foster, 1990, p.156
  10. ^ Foster, 1990, p.64-65, 156
  11. ^ Foster, 1990, p.191, 197
  12. ^ Foster, 1990, p.43-45
  13. ^ Foster, 1990, p.48
  14. ^ Cole, 1986, p.4
  15. ^ Foster, 1990, p.74, 131, 188
  16. ^ Foster, 1990, p.139
  17. ^ Foster, 1990, p.105, 200
  18. ^ Foster, 1990, p.173, 190
  19. ^ Foster, 1990, p.199
  20. ^ Foster, 1990, p.199, 201
  21. ^ Foster, 1990, p.202, 207, 210
  22. ^ Foster, 1990, p.177, 188
  23. ^ Foster, 1990, p.204
  24. ^ Cole, 1986, p.34-38
  25. ^ Foster, 1990, p.135
  26. ^ Foster, 1990, p.107, 115, 138
  27. ^ Foster, 1990, p.136, 138
  28. ^ Cole, 1986, p.49-55
  29. ^ Foster, 1990, p.4
  30. ^ Foster, 1990, p.53, 56-57
  31. ^ Foster, 1990, p.52-53, 56-57, 70-71
  32. ^ Cole, 1986, p.39-42
  33. ^ Foster, 1990, p.152, 155
  34. ^ Foster, 1990, p.207-208
  35. ^ a b Foster, 1990, p.197
  36. ^ Foster, 1990, p.204, 208
  37. ^ Foster, 1990, p.36-41
  38. ^ Foster, 1990, p.180
  39. ^ Foster, 1990, p.101-102, 158, 166, 188.
  40. ^ Foster, 1990, p.180-181
  41. ^ Foster, 1990, p.95-98
  42. ^ Foster, 1990, p.142-143, 174, 188
  43. ^ Foster, 1990, p.195, 198
  44. ^ Cole, 1986, p.45-48
  45. ^ Foster, 1990, p.47
  46. ^ Foster, 1990, p.194

Bibliography[edit]

External links[edit]