The Aériane Swift is a lightweight (48 kg) foot-launched
tailless sailplane
A glider or sailplane is a type of glider aircraft used in the leisure activity and sport of gliding (also called soaring). This unpowered aircraft can use naturally occurring currents of rising air in the atmosphere to gain altitude. Sailplan ...
whose rigid wings have a span of 40 feet. The Swift has been succeeded by the "Swift'Lite".
Although designed in California, Swift aircraft are now manufactured by Aériane, a European firm based in
Gembloux
Gembloux (; wa, Djiblou; nl, Gembloers, ) is a city and municipality of Wallonia located in the province of Namur, Belgium.
On 1 January 2006 the municipality had 21,964 inhabitants. The total area is 95.86 km², yielding a population den ...
,
Belgium
Belgium, ; french: Belgique ; german: Belgien officially the Kingdom of Belgium, is a country in Northwestern Europe. The country is bordered by the Netherlands to the north, Germany to the east, Luxembourg to the southeast, France to ...
. Aériane first manufactured the Swift under licence, but the firm is now the sole manufacturer.
Design & development

The Swift (an acronym for 'Swept Wing with Inboard Flap for Trim') was originally conceived as a rigid
hang glider
Hang gliding is an air sports, air sport or recreational activity in which a pilot flies a light, non-motorised foot-launched heavier-than-air aircraft called a hang glider. Most modern hang gliders are made of an aluminium alloy or Composite ma ...
with sailplane-like performance. Bright Star Gliders had developed the 1989 U.S. National Hang Gliding Championship winning Odyssey prototype. Meanwhile Professor Ilan Kroo and a group of graduate students at
Stanford University had developed the Stanford SWIFT design project. When Brian Porter of Bright Star met Stanford student Steve Morris, the projects merged. Bright Star constructed the revised SWIFT and its first flight took place in December 1989.
[Ilan Kroo and Eric Beckman, with Brian Robbins, Steve Morris, and Brian Porter; "Development of the SWIFT: A Tailless Foot-Launched Sailplane", ''Hang Gliding'', January 1991]
IHPA online copy
(retrieved 22 July 2020)
(retrieved 22 July 2020)
The swept wing has control surfaces along the entire trailing edge:
flaps occupy the inner 42%, and
elevons take up 58% of the outer span. Large winglets act as vertical stabilizers and the models with an enclosed cockpit also have conventional fuselage stabilising surfaces that contribute to yaw stability. The winglets on the 1989 prototype were fixed surfaces, so the pilot effected turns using the elevons.
The original Swift is now out of production, having been replaced by a refined version called the Swift'Lite. This new model has winglets that, like those on the
Rutan Long-EZ
The Rutan Model 61 Long-EZ is a tandem 2-seater homebuilt aircraft designed by Burt Rutan's Rutan Aircraft Factory. The Long-EZ has a canard layout, a swept wing with wingtip rudders, and a pusher engine and propeller. The tricycle landing ge ...
, are rudders when used singly, and air-brakes when used together.
[Bertrand, Noel; Rene Coulon; et al: ''World Directory of Leisure Aviation 2003-04'', pages 41 and 52. Pagefast Ltd, Lancaster OK, 2003. ISSN 1368-485X] In addition, compared to its predecessor, the Swift'Lite is claimed to be: 20% lighter, with lighter and more responsive controls, a lower stall speed, an improved glide ratio of 27:1, better pilot visibility and comfort, and simplified assembly procedure.
Model range
A variety of different "fuselage pods" have been fitted beneath the wings to create a range of aircraft, as follows:
*the core product is the foot-launched glider (the Swift'Lite)
*a self-launching glider (the Swift-PAS) with
two-stroke engine
A two-stroke (or two-stroke cycle) engine is a type of internal combustion engine that completes a power cycle with two strokes (up and down movements) of the piston during one power cycle, this power cycle being completed in one revolution of t ...
, later with an 18 hp Bailey 175 four stroke engine
*a motor-glider (the P-Swift) with 2-stroke engine
*an electric-powered variant (Swift-Light E) has 20 minutes of powered flight per charge. Power comes from an Eck-Geiger HPD-10, 10-kilowatt motor, controller and battery system, part of a setup designed and sold by Austrian hang-gliding champion Manfred Ruhmer.
* a two-seat glider used for training (the Tandem Swift)
The various fuselage frames are interchangeable and any can be added to the same basic wing. Swift gliders with engines originally had
Arplast EcoProp folding propellers, which feather for soaring when then engine is turned off. Powered Swift gliders are not foot-launched, having instead two main wheels in tandem layout, and small wing-tip castors.
Current types
As of October 2020, Aériane are producing only 2 versions of the Swift'Lite:
* The Swift’Light, foot-launchable, and
* The E-Swift’Light, with an electric motor.
[Statement by Vincent Piret, Aeriane s.a., 14 October 2020]
Specifications (Swift'Lite)
data from flight manual
Technical data and speeds
* Empty weight without fairing: 48kg
* Maximum take off weight: 158 kg (version without motor)
* Span: 12,8 m
* Surface area: 12,5 m²
* Aspect ratio: 12,9
* Sweep (at 25% of the chord): 20°
* Recommended pilot weight: 55 - 100 kg
* V
ne (Never Exceed Speed): 120 km/h
* V
ra (Maximum Rough Air Speed): 100 km/h
* V
fe (Maximum speed with flaps set to 20° or more): 80 km/h
* V
a (Manœuvre Speed): 85 km/h
* V
s (Stall Speed):
** flap sets to 0° at maximum take-off weight: 37 km/h
** flap sets to 20° at maximum take-off weight: 32 km/h
* Best Glide: 27: 1 @ 70 km/h
* Minimum Sink: 0,6 m/s @ 43 km/h
* Load Factor: + 5,3 g/- 2,65 g (with 1.5 safety coefficient).
Specifications (Swift)
References
External links
Official website1992 video footage
*
Ruhm sailplanes (''UL RuhmAir Leichtflugzeuge'' / Mannfred Ruhm)
{{DEFAULTSORT:Aeriane Swift
Hang gliders
Tailless aircraft
1990s United States sailplanes
1990s United States ultralight aircraft
Aircraft first flown in 1989
Sailplanes designed for foot-launching