Pritchard Rocket Air Ship
The Pritchard Rocket Air Ship was an experimental wingless homebuilt aircraft designed by Charles Pritchard of Emporia, Virginia. It was tested, without success, in 1955.
Design and development
Pritchard, according to contemporary reports, was interested in developing an aircraft capable of "air travel and highway travel". He had previously built a model and studied it for a year before commencing the building of a full-sized craft. His design was a wingless aircraft, with an otherwise conventional configuration. The fuselage was a faceted streamlined body of revolution, with an octagonal cross-section. A number of 6 inch-wide lateral fins extended from the nose towards the tail. A large vertical fin was positioned immediately behind the propeller and above the fuselage. A small pair of anhedral wings, fitted with ailerons, were located near the bottom of the fuselage.The aircraft was made entirely of aluminum, with riveted joins. Construction began in February 1955, and was completed by that June. Components from a damaged Cessna 120 were used in its construction, with that providing the engine, propeller, undercarriage, instrumentation, seating, and the empennage. Overall cost was stated to be $1,500, with the building taking "hundreds of hours."
The Rocket Air Ship shares many design features with a wingless free flight model aircraft called the Martian Space Ship, designed by Roy L. Clough, the details of which first appeared in the April 1954 issue of Air Trails magazine.