Waco Aircraft Company
      Long synonymous with aviation's “golden age,” the Weaver Aircraft Company 
      (soon to be known by its acronym WACO) was founded in 1920 in Lorain, Ohio 
      by George “Buck” Weaver, Elwood “Sam” Junkin, Clayton “Clayt” Bruckner and 
      Charles “Charlie” William Meyers. For the next 26 years, the WACO name 
      would be associated with a popular line of versatile open-cockpit and 
      cabin biplanes.  
      Bruckner and Junkin actually began designing aircraft 
      in 1919 with a flawed plan for a floating airplane that never flew. 
      Meyers, too, had already designed an aircraft with Weaver and the pair 
      approached Bruckner and Junkin, asking them to join their construction 
      efforts on a single-seat monoplane named the “Cootie.” Unfortunately, 
      Weaver crash-landed the Cootie during its first flight attempt and 
      suffered extensive injuries in the crash. 
      The WACO partners persevered, designing a practical 
      three-seat biplane, the WACO 4, and building it out of parts left over 
      from the Cootie and other biplane efforts. The team continued to assemble 
      airplanes from parts salvaged from surplus World War I Curtiss Jennys, 
      continuously tinkering with their designs and making improvements. 
      Eventually, they sold two WACO 5 biplanes. 
      Weaver Aircraft moved to Troy, Ohio, in 1923 and the 
      company name was changed to the Advance Aircraft Company although the 
      aircraft retained the WACO designation. The company became a pioneer in 
      the development of reasonably priced, easy-to-fly small aircraft and the 
      first Troy-built model in a long line of WACO aircraft, the WACO 6, was 
      soon being marketed.  
      The next aircraft design, the three-passenger WACO 7, 
      powered by a Curtiss OX-5 engine, was modestly successful with 16 aircraft 
      sold. In 1924, the first cabin WACO aircraft was manufactured, the 
      six-passenger WACO 8, featuring an open cockpit positioned behind the 
      cabin for the pilot and co-pilot. Only one WACO 8 was ever sold and it was 
      eventually used to aerially map the Ozarks. 
      Following Buck Weaver's death in 1924, Clayt Bruckner 
      and Sam Junkin reorganized the business and soon introduced the company's 
      popular Model 9 (or Nine) in 1925. Powered by a Curtiss OX-5 or Wright 
      Hispano engine, the WACO Nine delivered better performance than the 
      readily available war surplus Curtiss Jennys at a affordable price.  
      The design of the Nine was state-of-the-art for its 
      time—a fabric-covered wooden wing structure strengthened with welded steel 
      tubing. The front cockpit was equipped with a bench seat that accommodated 
      two passengers with a single cockpit for the pilot in the rear of the 
      aircraft. An engine radiator mounted under the forward edge of the upper 
      wing became a distinguishing WACO trait.  
      The stylish WACO Nine made a good showing during the 
      1925 Ford Air Tour. The accompanying publicity quickly translated into 
      increased aircraft sales and 276 Nines were sold between 1925 and 1927. An 
      outstanding barnstormer, more than 14 Nines competed in the 1926 National 
      Air Races with several finishing first in their events. WACO Nines also 
      saw duty as crop-dusters—the airplane could be outfitted with floats for 
      water landing—and were also used as an early commuter aircraft.  
      The improved WACO Model 10 replaced the Nine in 1927, 
      featuring a larger wing area, bigger cockpit, an adjustable stabilizer, 
      and the first shock absorber landing gear built into a small aircraft. The 
      WACO 10's performance was markedly enhanced and the aircraft was sold with 
      several different engine options (OX-5, OXX-6, Hispano-Suiza and Wright 
      J-5 Whirlwind). 
      Noted for quick and straightforward takeoffs, a speedy 
      rate of climb and equally tolerable landing speeds, the WACO 10's 
      performance soon made it the most popular small aircraft in the United 
      States. By 1927, more than 40 percent of small aircraft sold in the 
      country were WACOs, including 350 WACO 10s at a sticker price of $2,460 
      (with the OX-5 engine). The WACO 10's reputation extended to the air race 
      circuit as well: an OX-5 engine-powered model won the 1927 New York to 
      Spokane, Washington, transcontinental Air Derby (Class B) and a Wright 
      J-5-powered WACO 10 won the National Air Tour the following year. 
      Advance Aircraft went on to manufacture the notable 
      WACO Taperwing in 1928 and then, in 1929, the company officially renamed 
      itself the WACO Aircraft Corporation to correspond with its now-famous 
      line of aircraft. In 1931, WACO entered the burgeoning business aircraft 
      market by introducing its four-passenger “QDC” cabin biplane to compete 
      with such established manufacturers as Bellanca and Stinson. 
      The QDC label marked the 1930 introduction of a 
      cryptographic system of model designation that WACO used to identify its 
      various models. The first letter identified the engine-type, the second 
      the wing style, and the third the fuselage design. Each letter also 
      indicated if the aircraft was built before or after 1930—a very confusing 
      conglomeration of letters that required a scorecard to decipher. 
      WACO replaced the QDC in 1933 with its most successful 
      cabin design—the UIC. Powered by a 210-horsepower Continental radial 
      engine, the UIC was a four-person biplane with a conventional fixed tail 
      wheel landing gear. The well-appointed cabin was accessed by 
      automobile-style doors on each side, with a pair of individual front seats 
      and a roomy rear bench seat for another two passengers. 
      The UIC's fabric-covered fuselage was constructed from 
      welded steel tubing, shaped with wooden formers and stringers while the 
      wings were fabricated with spruce spars, spruce and wooden ribs, and 
      aluminium edges. Ailerons on both wings were covered in aluminium and 
      connected with push-pull struts that operated them in pairs. The UIC's 
      stable handling characteristics were considered to be forgiving, with good 
      performance. Delivered with a full set of flight controls and 
      instrumentation, the UIC was priced at a modest $6,000—well within the 
      reach of smaller corporations and airlines.  
      WACO delivered 83 UICs before replacing the model with 
      the UKC/YKC/CJC series of cabin aircraft in 1934. These trendy airplanes 
      became a favourite of aviators like Jacqueline Cochran and corporate 
      magnates such as Henry Dupont. 
      WACO continued to refine the aircraft design and 
      accessories on an annual basis, but retained the basic configuration to 
      maintain quality and avoid the high costs of wholesale redesign; as a 
      result, selling prices remained stable and affordable. 
      Production of WACO civil aircraft was suspended in 1942 
      after U.S. entry into World War II. The company contributed to the war 
      effort by building assemblies for a variety of military aircraft and 
      manufactured the well-known CG4-A troop-carrying gliders.  
      WACO ceased producing aircraft in 1946, another victim 
      of the post-war general aviation bust, but the brand still enjoys enormous 
      popularity among aviation enthusiasts. Many WACOs remain flying today, 
      their style and mystique evoking images of aviation's “golden age” or, in 
      the words of one WACO fan, “After the last WACO gracefully flies, the sky 
      will become merely air."