‘Coupe de Thrill: Aviat Resurrects Monocoupe’s Racy 110 Special as a 1950s-Style Hot Rod with Speed and Spunk

Come with us now, back to those glorious days of yesteryear, as Aviat resurrects a classic 1932 race design, the Monocoupe 110 Special, and upgrades it for the next millennium. The result is a fully aerobatic hot rod for the sky, complete with a pair of fuzzy dice dangling from the overhead. But, as AVweb's Dave Higdon writes in this pilot report, the dice don't always hang straight down.

0

Aviat 110 Special wheelpantAnytimea vector takes me across the scene of a hot-rod show or an ad hocdrive-in gathering, memories of weekend nights spent idling through hometowncruising spots nearly always sweep me back to my teenage years. That neverhappened with an airplane, though. Until, that is, those same hot-rod imagesflashed back to me upon my first glimpse of Aviat Aircraft’s 110 Special, a 1932race design modernized into an all-around personal airplane for two.

The long, low lines of the high-wing design, those short windows, and itsstiff-tailwheel ride over the tarmac combined to launched me back to my drive-incruising days as swiftly as a cat shot flings a fighter off a flight deck. Thesleek, steep sweep of the cowling reinforced the street-rod aura and theunmuffled exhaust note growling from the flat-four Lycoming shrouded insidedrove home the point, too. Those features, plus the pair of white, fuzzy dicedangling from a frame tube and the eight ball finishing off the elevator-trimhandle made it clear: This ‘Coupe is made for serious fun.


The hot rod-like appeal of Aviat Aircraft’s resurrected Monocoupe 110 Special is obvious: small, elliptical wing, even smaller-looking tail feathers, wheel pants and fairings on virtually everything else that could be considered remotely draggy.

There was no escaping it. Aviat’s latter-day incarnation of this 67-year-olddesign looked and sounded positively chopped and channeled in the bestcustom-rod tradition. Aviat’s highly engaged staff further encourages thecustom-rod image with their nickname for the 110: "The ‘Coupe."

Utterly appropriate, in light of both its heritage and its future.

Certificate holder Ed Saurenman brought Aviat Aircraft president Stuart Hornthe original 1932 Monocoupe design as a type that could expand Aviat beyond itsrange as the maker of the Husky and Pitts while building on the same in-houseskills already employed to produce both specialty designs. Indeed, reviving theMonocoupe 110 Special racer gives Aviat a product positioned to capture pilotsinterested in flying fast, in flying far and with the capability for the oddaerobatics fling available as a bonus.

The ‘Coupe’s hot-rod styling visually bridges the eras of then and now.

And that hot-rod-with-wings approach was the brainchild of Horn and hisstaff, building on Saurenman’s adaptation of a 200-horsepower Lycoming AEIO-360in place of the 145- and 185-horsepower Warner radials on the first seven 110s.

Although some details of the ‘Coupe’s final configuration remain in flux,most of its equipment and finish are already frozen. Of course, in addition tothe engine change, Aviat’s designers substituted airframe and covering materialsand avionics unavailable when the 110 was still part of the Monocoupe productline, from 1932 to 1950. But Aviat’s changes take nothing away from the 110Special’s precise handling. Its ability to maneuver at high speeds close to theground instills the confidence that racers of aviation’s Golden Years must havecoveted in their mounts and which can be all too rare today.

And the loops, the hammerheads, spins and, heaven help me, the rolls — snap,barrel, aileron, as quickly as you make them and as many as you can stand —take little more effort than the unconscious translation of thought into stickmotion.

Come along for a ride and be among the first to sample the formidable speed,solid handling and dynamic aerobatic capabilities of the 2000 110 Special. Justwatch out for those white fuzzy dice; they don’t always hang straight down.

Depending on the maneuver, they can rise and fall with each pass of thehorizon or orbit around some invisible point from taut strings.

And you don’t want to get snake-eyed over the old drive-in profiling Aviat’snew "’Coupe de Thrill."

Aviat’s Aerial Deuce ‘Coupe

Man, if the gang from the Class of ’68 could only see me in this ‘Coupe. Allthose now-bald jocks would ogle in wonder while formercheerleaders-turned-grandmothers would give a stack of used pompoms for a ride.And what a ride, this ‘Coupe.


Front office of the 110 Special, showing the hardwood panel, digital instruments, control sticks and "barefoot" rudder pedals.

At the basic end of the equation, the ‘Coupe is your fundamental,straightforward, honest stick-and-rudder airplane. Nothing more than yoursimple, proven steel-truss fuselage; strut-braced, no-dihedral wood-frame wings,covered in aircraft-cloth; all perched atop conventional landing gear. Thestraight-back fuselage sports two doors and four short windows, one in andbehind each door. Throw in the bungee-sprung main gear, stiff tailwheel,stick-and-rudder controls, and you could have any one of dozens of classicdesigns.

Similarly, a Deuce Coupe is nothing more than a 1930s budget automobile withall the basics and an updated engine and drive train. It’s in the details of thebasics where the differences emerge.

For example, this bird’s wings span only an inch more than a mere 23 feet,all curving lines thanks to their graceful elliptical, semi-scalloped planform;almost 80 percent of each trailing edge is aileron that grows in chord from rootto tip. No flaps clutter up the lifting surfaces nor complicate the design withunneeded control linkages. The short vertical stab looks far too small for theaerodynamic job it performs; likewise, the horizontal surfaces, both fixed andmoveable, seem undersized. But together, the compact size and contoured lines ofthe tail feathers fit the hot-rod image to a bucket-T. And, as you’ll readbelow, the control surfaces deliver all the power needed to impressivelymaneuver the ‘Coupe through its paces.

The 110 Special carries the hot-rod theme into the cabin interior. Forexample, Horn and his staff detailed the ‘Coupe with pleated leather seats, ahardwood panel, wool carpeting, and with that bad-boy-image Eight Ball trimknob, the fuzzy dice, of course, and the capper of the cabin: bright-polishedrudder pedals custom-crafted into shiny silhouettes of four bare feet.

The combined effect is like something straight out of an R. Crumb comic.About the only thing missing from this nostalgia flight is a Hurst gear shiftknob on the control sticks, Buddy Holly on the A.M., a poodle-skirtedSaturday-night date in matching bobby socks and saddle loafers, my white sportscoat and a pink carnation.

Spare The Keys, Dad…?

Puttin’ Her On, Firin’ Her Up, Showin’ Her Off…


A pre-flight-eye view of the 110 Special.

If drivers performed pre-drive inspections to the same extent we take ourwalk-arounds, your French fries wouldn’t cool in the time it takes. So muchhot-rod hardware sits open to inspection. Other than the occasional need tode-cowl the ‘Coupe for periodic checks firewall-forward, little more thanlooking and touching something already visible is required for preflightinspections. In fact, some parts of the ‘Coupe control system provide moreaccess than the average airplane, including the aileron and elevator controllinks and rudder connections visible inside the cabin. Modern rod-end bearingsfinish out every pivoting connection in the linkage, making the controls smooth,precise and lash free.

The toughest checks: oil and fuel, each of which demand a ladder, unless youexceed six feet; then, only checking the fuel and securing the caps need someadded elevation.

If conducting the outside checks is easy and logical, getting into the cabinis nearly as simple — and less contortion-inducing than some other tailwheelhigh-wings. Just open the door (to be top-hinged on the production units) backup to the fuselage, lean backward into the cabin, grab an overhead tube withboth hands, pull yourself up onto the seat, swing in your legs, belt yourselfin, latch and lock the door. It may take a bit of practice and it helps to belimber of limb. But no one of average flexibility should need chiropractic carebecause of ‘Coupe-induced bending.

If cabin access is a bit different, little else departs from common practice.For example, starting the four-cylinder mill is typical of modern fuel-injectedLycomings: with the mixture pulled to idle cut-off, run the boost pump untilfuel pressure peaks; with the pump off, hit the starter and advance the mixtureto full rich when the engine catches and rumbles to life; adjust the idle andmixture to the temperature and elevation, sit back and listen to a soundreminiscent of an old flat head V-8 Ford or in-line eight-cylinder Duesenberg.As the needles work their way into the green, we can work our way to the activeat Afton.

…Warming The Tires, Weaving And Watching Ahead…


Taxiing at Afton. Don’t forget to S-turn.

Anyone familiar with the all-American hot rod knows that these custom carshave some drawbacks as practical transportation, occasionally including limitedvisibility and little luggage space. In those regards, the ‘Coupe is similar.

Luggage space, while not as Spartan as one of Aviat’s other two offerings,the Pitts Special for instance, should suffice for two traveling comfortably.Thank the ‘Coupe’s side-by-side seat configuration.

Conversely, the ‘Coupe affords its occupants no straight-ahead view on theground because of to its tailwheel stance. But simply swing the fuzzy dice portand starboard with small S-turns and the world ahead quickly appears beyond theshort, tapered cowl hugging the Lycoming.

The tailwheel/rudder combination made a snap of turning and stopping the’Coupe, with no strong tendency to over-control or grab or chatter. A bettertaildragger pilot than me might better judge the sensitivities of the steerabletailwheel and the efficacy of those big Cleveland brakes. But steering seemedpositive and proportional to me, as my toes adapted to the feel of the brakesand the sensitivity of the tail wheel during my taxi out to the run-up pad. Andfrom my perspective, if the ‘Coupe gave me little trouble, most other pilotsshould face even fewer worries.

In the time it took me to discover the taxi traits, we taxied just over amile from Aviat’s ramp to the Runway 34 run-up pad, allowing the ‘Coupe to warmfully along the way.

With a warm engine, a clear runway and only the final checks between groundand sky, it’s almost show-me time.

…Ready To Romp And Stomp..

Run-up is also typical for the engine: advance the throttle to set power at2,000 rpm, lean for the 6,200 msl field elevation, check the left mag, then theright — an easy chore with the ‘Coupe’s electronic tach calculating eachmagneto’s drop and the resulting differential — cycle the prop a couple oftimes, and bring the power back to idle.

As my toes swing the ‘Coupe in line with Afton’s Runway 34 centerline,Saurenman gives me a nod; brakes set, the 200-hp Lycoming hits 2,700 rpm andwith the stick near neutral, the ‘Coupe vaults ahead the instant the brakes comeoff.

At 65 indicated, tail up and level, the world visible through the glass, thefirst Aviat ‘Coupe lifts swiftly off Runway 34, the Lycoming growling itsstrength through the unrestricted stacks.

Initial rate of climb easily pegged the meter beyond its 2,000-foot ratelimit at max climb power, 2,700 rpm and 22 inches of manifold pressure. Yeah,only 22 inches; remember, we launched from just over 6,200 msl to start with. At48 F, it may seem less than warm, but for this elevation, it’s cookin’ outside.And it’s cookin’ in the ‘Coupe. The ‘Coupe stayed hot in the climb as we passedthrough 7,000 feet, pattern altitude at Afton.


In flight, the ‘Coupe tracks tenaciously to the line you choose, whether straight and level, curved or circular.

Power back to 2,500 rpm, trim for 110 indicated, and the ‘Coupe is stillcharging skyward at more than 1,000 feet per minute. This power setting andairspeed lowers the deck angle to give an unobstructed view of the world ahead,mountains, horizon and sky. In this configuration, the ‘Coupe needs only fourminutes to get us above the 11,000-foot mountains south of Afton, as we steer175 to an appointment with the inside edges of the ‘Coupe’s envelope.

Meanwhile, the ensuing 40 minutes of my first cruise in the ‘Coupe helped meadjust my reference standard for "cookin’" to something a few degreeshotter, smoking, perhaps. In fact, "smokin’" may come closer to theimpression this so-hot ‘Coupe burned into my mind on this evening.

South out of Afton, the terrain rises less quickly to a much-lower height androlls more gently than terrain along any other cardinal heading. And there’snothing to disturb down that way save a few cows, mountain sheep and antelope,an important consideration for our mission considering how low we’ll"stoop" to fulfill our ambitions. Down here, through this shallow,narrow valley, Horn promised me a ride equal in visual sensations to the viewfrom the saddle of a "hover bike" in a Star Wars saga, driven toeye-tearing speeds scant feet above ground. That fast, that radical, that closeto trees and terrain. Horn overstated nothing in his description.

Within 15 minutes of takeoff, Saurenman has the ‘Coupe settled into cruisemode a little more than a wing-span away from the smooth, rounded slopes of ariver valley.


Aviat Aircraft’s 110 Special shows off its stuff near the company’s Afton, Wyoming factory.

For the next five minutes we raced the ‘Coupe a few scant feet above a wide,shallow river, following its random ambling through the amber grasses of alpinemeadows flanking its banks. Making almost three miles a minute, the landscapeand flora blur into an autumnal smear of glowing golds, translucent reds andfading greens and browns, whether scant feet away off the left wing or directlybelow our wheels.

Where the river turns, we turn; where it drops off a short ledge we pitchdown appropriately; and when towering trees stand together like slalom gates, wesplit the middle in knife-edge flight as easily as the best downhill skier. The’Coupe’s natural feedback through the stick keeps alive the connection betweenman and machine, providing an aerial action in direct response to pilot thoughtand input.

When the setting sun stretches the mountain shadows to the east edge of ourriver-bottom road course, we know time’s come to turn the ‘Coupe back towardAfton.

But climbing to clear the 11,000-foot terrain and turning northwest to exitthe valley didn’t end the fun and frolic of cruising in the ‘Coupe de Thrill.

…Speed Thrills…

Cruising back toward Afton, now nearly 70 miles away after only 25 minutesaloft, gives me time to run some numbers impossible to tackle while flying somecombination akin to equal parts air racer, moonshine runner and slalom skier.Outside the cabin the air temperature at 11,500 MSL showed as 38 chilly degrees,yet warm enough above standard for the density altitude to hover near 13,500.

Throttled back to a cruise setting, we gallop along at a whopping 167 KTAS -at 11,500 msl, where at best the ‘Coupe makes 65 percent power. Questioning theresults, we check the run again and again run the numbers through the old speedwheel: Yep, an honest 193 mph.

Can’t say whether to expect Aviat to adjust upward its book speed for the’Coupe, from the 160 knots the company expected. Other manufacturers haveenjoyed some great responses from buyers who found their new planes faster thanthe pessimistic book numbers the factory knowingly printed despite betterflight-test numbers. If the 110 Special doesn’t break 170 KTAS at 75 percentpower, with all the fairings and gap seals not-yet installed during my flight,well, the next malted’s on me.

With fuel flowing in the mid-ten gallon-per-hour range, cruising range forthe ‘Coupe should be more than respectable enough for long-distance travel —approaching 600 nautical miles — particularly considering the speed availableper leg. Who could object to a three-hour tour?

…Back To Earth…


Aviat Aircraft brought the 110 Special to EAA’s AirVenture ’99 for its public debut. AVweb was there.

Landing the ‘Coupe posed no special problems, demanded no exotic technique,just the coordination of a light hand and nimble toes common to many othertailwheel planes.

The numbers run a bit higher than, say, an Aeronca or Taylorcraft, evenhigher than an RV-6, but not out of line for the wing size and weight involved.Touching down at 70 knots indicated made for relatively easy transitions fromtotally in control aloft to totally down and back in control.

Again, the trick, if that’s what it is, seems to be that blend of hand touchand toe feel always in demand when the third wheel comes in last.

And the ‘Coupe has more than ample control authority to deal with conditionsacross a wide range. They are much the same traits that make the ‘Coupe anentertaining aerobatic outlet — control authority to spare, power to execute —plus, of course, the strength to withstand the overloads of mistakes.

…Shake, Rattle … And Roll

Seldom do aerobatic pilots actually reach the load limits of their machines,and most of the most-common acrobatic maneuvers fall into that scale. Spins,scarcely over one G; snap rolls, hardly even two; loops, not even four; and theplane is rated for six.

The treat of knowing the differential between those loads and the airframe’slimits, and having the authority to execute accordingly, is, well, like havingDad’s permission to take his new fuel-injected Corvette cruising on a Saturdaynight. Similarly, tossing the ‘Coupe around the air outside Afton is pure treatmade up of equal parts guilty pleasure and unadulterated adrenaline.

Nose down to 180 indicated, raise it smoothly to 3.5 Gs on the meter, holdthe attitude and release the backpressure as the horizon returns in the oppositespot through the windscreen. Continue to ease off the backpressure until time topull out of the dive to level again. Congrats, you’ve just done a loop.

My biggest problem: Like a great roller coaster ride, the ride through theloop ended too quickly. So, the ‘Coupe being my E ticket to self-stimulatedthrill, we did another.


The steel-tube-truss fuselage is a vast improvement on the original 1930’s design.

The aileron rolls nearly lasted too long for me photographing the horizonswapping sky and terrain every couple seconds for a half-minute – particularlysince my vantage point for a couple dozen rolls was through the viewfinder of acamera.

The sacrifices demanded of this work… Ah, well; can’t fault the ‘Coupe fordoing its job.

Camera safely stowed, linking roll after roll after roll after roll tumbledmy own gyros a lot less with me in control of horizon decisions.

Saurenman flew with me three times in the ‘Coupe, and for a fourth lift inWyoming, Aviat’s chief test pilot Mark Hiner exposed me to the capabilities ofthe formidable Pitts S2-C, a lighter, more-powerful, specialty machine oflegendary prowess. Indeed, flying the Pitts gave me something of a rudimentaryyardstick for comparison between the Pitts and the ‘Coupe.

My impression? Unless aerobatics dominate your reasons for flying, thetwo-hole Pitts does little the ‘Coupe can’t. Admittedly, the Pitts can beexpected to outshine the monowinged racer where unusual attitudes are concerned,making any maneuver more quickly, more easily and maybe even in less cubicairspace. But for other flying missions, whether tooling around on weekendjaunts, traveling cross country to a get-away destination, the ‘Coupe gives awaynothing in comfort or capability or cruising velocity.

And, on top of that, the aerobatics serve more as the whipped cream on themalted.

Bedazzled By The Details


The Lycoming AEIO-360 of 200 hp nestles nicely in the 110 Specials’ cowling.

For this blend of capabilities, one must give credit to the originaldesigners, and their devotion to the mission of the 110 Special: speed in amodern, personal airplane.

Interestingly enough, what counts today matches what counted 67 years ago,when the first 110 Special first emerged from the Monocoupe factory. And the new’Coupe delivers every ounce of speed possible, thanks to the head start providedby the original designers.

The Monocoupe creators worked to reduce drag at every conceivable source inthat day, resulting in an airplane devoid of what’s considered shortcomings ofmany factory planes today — and fodder for after-market speed-hardwaresuppliers.

Some examples: The original 110 Special sported gap seals at everycontrol-surface joint, whether aileron-to-wing, rudder-to-stab or elevator tostab; every intersection of structure received a fairing to smooth the airflowing around that juncture, whether the wing/fuselage convergence,strut-to-fuselage or strut-to-wing. Naturally, the landing gear received theirown streamlining, the gear-to-fuselage points, the gear legs and, of course, thewheels, with smooth, proportional wheel pants. And there’s more. The designerswent even farther, fairing out of the airflow all the brake hardware and many ofthe fasteners exposed to the air in the tail surfaces.

The biggest drag source left when the first ‘Coupe first flew: that big,round, draggy radial engine.

Which brings us to where Saurenman and his design team achieved the lion’sshare of the ‘Coupe’s improved performance: firewall forward.


Ribs, anyone? These wood wings will mate to the steel tube fuselage to ensure that the 110 Special includes the best of its original design and modern materials.

To start with, the form factor, frontal area, power-to-weight andpower-per-inch ratios of the AEIO-360 engine give the Lycoming four-banger adistinct advantage in each area over any radial available in the 1930s — ortoday, for that matter.

To finish, the details attended to inside the new cowling focused largely onreducing cooling drag to the greatest extent possible without resorting tolengthy, time-consuming and expensive objective testing.

Aviat’s composites staff made two completely different cowls and theexperimental-shop folks integrated the cowl with an internal cooling plenumchamber with baffling that keeps cooling air out of the cowling space anddirected through the engine.

Fortunately, Saurenman’s well-informed, more seat-of-the-pants testing, seemsmore than a suitable substitute, given the ‘Coupe’s numbers.

History Revisited – And Resurrected

As noted above, what worked well in the ’30s continues to work well today,while what made an airplane attractive then works now, as well.

Between what Saurenman retained and what was shed from the original, whatmakes the contemporary ‘Coupe hot stuff remains true to the design’s originalpurpose — and better. For example, operating and maintaining radial enginestoday imposes burdens on the operator absent for those of us flying behind theflat four- and six-cylinder engines dominant in today’s airplanes.

The advantages, beyond those mentioned above, include lower purchase costs,maintenance and parts expenses. The new-generation composite prop translatesrotation into thrust as smoothly as any two blade I’ve flown, and makes a goodmatch for the ‘Coupe’s aerobatic abilities, not to mention the weight it saves.

Panel accoutrements, once set, will also tilt the Coupe more toward the 21stcentury than the middle-20th. And inside the cabin, the eras melt away to a timewhen black leather jackets, chinos and Brylcream were standard fare for post-warteens.

The cream and brown leather seats, the hardwood panel overlay and plush woolcarpeting all blend with the ‘Coupe’s low-slung lines into an image of customcars cruising the hometown "strip" that could fit into the frames of"American Graffiti."

Only the wing structure itself is unchanged, made of wood ribs and spars,exactly like what flew with the original seven. In fact, it’s hard to believe anairplane with such attractive traits only exists in single digits, seven, to beexact. But that’s all the 110 Specials that Monocoupe built between the design’sorigins in 1932 and when the last rolled off the Monocoupe line as the lastairplane the company ever made in 1950. Those numbers make Aviat’sproof-of-concept prototype only the eighth 110 made.

Back To The Future?


An Aviat Aircraft family portrait: (L to R) the Husky, the 110 Special and the Pitts Special.

Of course, given Horn’s plans for the ‘Coupe, its status as something uniquewon’t last as long as its status as a hot-rod with wings. With certificationexpected by year’s end, Horn anticipates deliveries of about 30 by the true endof the millennium, 2001.

And by then, Horn expects Aviat to be near to its next goal, certificationand initial production of the upcoming Millennium Swift, a modernized version ofthe 1940s Globe Swift, made an even-faster traveler with new aerodynamics, a hotIO-360-ES Continental making 210 horses, made entirely from CNC-produced sheetmetal parts.

But there are doubts in my mind that either design will interfere with themarket for the other.

When the ‘Coupe’s engine barks to life, the song of those four-into-twostraight exhaust pipes makes me want to strap my honey into the right seat andgo looking for a race — or at least a cheeseburger and a shake at Ardy and Ed’sin Oshkosh.

Heck, if one of those roller-skating waitresses could finesse an overloadedaluminum tray onto the inside of a cabin window, we should be able to roll the’Coupe like Bob Hoover — without spilling a drop of a milkshake or a cherryCoke.

And should anyone be bold enough to take it up on a race, be forewarned: Youmay only get a rear view — at least until the pilot takes his victory roll andshows you all the other views of this ‘Coupe designed to thrill.

LEAVE A REPLY