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MA5

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The Marquart MA-5 Charger is a homebuilt two place biplane .

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5-398: (Redirected from MA-5 ) MA-5 may refer to: Marquart MA-5 Charger , an American biplane aircraft design Massachusetts's 5th congressional district Massachusetts Route 5 Mercury-Atlas 5 , a test flight of Project Mercury [REDACTED] Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles associated with

10-487: The metal brackets utilized in the construction of the Charger's wings and fuselage. The aircraft uses a welded steel tube fuselage with doped aircraft fabric covering . The wings use wooden spars and ribs . The biplane uses conventional landing gear and has two tandem open cockpits. The wings are constant chord and swept 10 degrees. The first prototype took seven years to build. Since Ed Marquart's death in 2007,

15-557: The plans have been placed in the public domain, and are available as free PDF files via the Marquart Charger MA-5 website, or the Charger groups on either Facebook or groups.io (formerly Yahoo). In 1982, Jim Smith's Marquart Charger won Grand Champion Plans-built Aircraft at the EAA AirVenture Oshkosh airshow. In 1987, Remo Galeazzi's Marquart Charger won Grand Champion Plans-built Aircraft at

20-526: The same title formed as a letter–number combination. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=MA5&oldid=1120095445 " Category : Letter–number combination disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Marquart MA-5 Charger The MA-5 Charger

25-466: Was designed and developed by Ed Marquart with the first prototype being built and flown by Daniel W. Fielder Jr. at Flabob Airport . It is an all-new design based around Marquart's single place homebuilt biplane, the MA-4. The aircraft was designed to perform mild aerobatics . Marquart sold plans for scratch building the aircraft, no kits were manufactured. For a number of years, Ken Brock offered kits of

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