Righton Big Wing
The Big Wing was the name given to a large glider designed and built by Douglas Huntly Righton during the 1950s and 60s.
Design and development
Righton was a farmer from Ruawai in Northland, New Zealand. In 1931 he had been granted a patent for a variable incidence wing design. Design of his glider is believed to have begun in the early 1950s, with construction lasting through to the late 1960s.The glider was a cantilevered parasol-wing monoplane of conventional configuration, notable for its large wingspan of. The incidence of both the main wing and the tailplane could be adjusted in flight. The fuselage was a simple slab-sided design and had a box-like cross-section. A long boom, extending from the nose of the glider, was fitted with a movable counterweight, allowing the glider's centre of gravity to be adjusted in flight.