The J-3's first 
                                    evolutionary step was the J-4 Cub Coupe. 
                                    Same airplane, different seating. The two 
                                    occupants sat side by side, rather than in 
                                    tandem. 
                                    
                                    The second step 
                                    up the passenger-carrying ladder was the J-5 
                                    Cruiser. This was Piper's first move into 
                                    multi-passenger aircraft. The J-5 was also 
                                    the first indication Piper was looking past 
                                    the training market at bigger goals. 
                                    
                                    
                                    Let's not kid 
                                    ourselves: The J-5 IS a J-3. It's a Cub with 
                                    fat hips where the rear seat was widened 
                                    out. 
                                    
                                    An important 
                                    change in the fuselage and general layout 
                                    was moving the pilot up front and moving the 
                                    front seat away from the pedals. Any who 
                                    have flown a J-3 in the front remember that 
                                    folded-like-a-pocket-knife seating position 
                                    and the chest-high control stick. The Piper 
                                    engineering crew made an effort to civilize 
                                    the front seat by giving it more leg room. 
                                    In addition, when widening the back seat and 
                                    tapering the fuselage to the firewall, they 
                                    couldn't help but give the front seat lots 
                                    of shoulder room. In fact, the front seat 
                                    clearance may be the widest of any aircraft 
                                    of its type, before or since. 
                                    
                                    
                                    
                                    The original 
                                    J-5A came out in January of 1940 being 
                                    pulled along by a 75 hp Continental. A year 
                                    later it was replaced by the J-5B which used 
                                    the 75 hp Lycoming 0-145, an engine which 
                                    has never had a reputation for lots of 
                                    power. 
                                    
                                    In 1942 Piper 
                                    made a major jump forward when it announced 
                                    the J-5C which was powered by the 100 hp 
                                    0-235 Lycoming. Yes, this is the same 0-235 
                                    Lycoming (with very minor changes) still 
                                    being used in C-152s and, yes, that makes 
                                    the basic engine 55 years old! The only 
                                    difference is that in the J-5C the engine 
                                    was carrying three people not two, as in the 
                                    C-152. Sorry, just a little editorializing.
                                    
                                    
                                    The Charlie 
                                    model included some major structural 
                                    changes. Among other things the windshield 
                                    was now one piece and the wood spars gave 
                                    away to aluminium. Early J-5C's will be 
                                    found with wood spars because they didn't 
                                    complete the change-over until using up all 
                                    the wood then in inventory. The landing gear 
                                    was redesigned to bring the bungees up 
                                    inside the airplane and the engine was 
                                    completely cowled for the first time. 
                                    
                                    
                                    The cowling and 
                                    landing gear mods amounted to a huge drag 
                                    reduction which, when coupled with the 
                                    equally dramatic increase in power made the 
                                    airplane live up to its name. At 95-100 mph 
                                    it truly was a Cruiser. Plus it offered 
                                    amenities like a starter and nav lights. An 
                                    18 gallon wing tank was standard in all 
                                    Cruisers, but another seven or 18 gallons 
                                    could be put in the other wing. With the 
                                    J-5C Cub Cruiser, Piper had stepped into the 
                                    serious cross country market. Unfortunately, 
                                    the war shut down Piper's civilian aircraft 
                                    production after cranking-out only 35 J-5Cs.
                                    
                                    The new design 
                                    didn't go to waste, however. The Navy liked 
                                    what they saw in the airplane and, with 
                                    several of their own mods, including a 
                                    top-opening rear fuselage for a litter, 
                                    ordered the aircraft as the HE-1. Something 
                                    over 100 were produced.
                                    
                                    After the war, 
                                    the J-5C was re-certified to 1,750 pounds 
                                    gross weight (Normal Category) and the 1020 
                                    mild steel in the fuselage tubing replaced 
                                    with chrome-moly. The new airplane was the 
                                    PA-12 Super Cruiser. It was produced for two 
                                    years, 1946-'47 and over 3,700 were built. 
                                    Approximately 1,400 J-5s were built.
                                    
                                    It appears the 
                                    Piper marketing department had as much to do 
                                    with the design of the PA-12 as engineering 
                                    did. In most respects, it's structure was 
                                    identical to the J-5C but marketing's 
                                    contribution was in taking a noticeable step 
                                    away from the stark interior of the 
                                    traditional Cub to much more luxurious 
                                    appointments. The 1946 market place was 
                                    fiercely competitive and they needed to 
                                    change their image to survive. Accordingly, 
                                    many of the Cub's old control layouts, some 
                                    of which were the result of its trainer 
                                    role, were changed. For instance the carb 
                                    heat was now on the panel, as was the 
                                    mixture for the 0-235. The panel itself was 
                                    arranged to make room for a radio ($65 
                                    installed!). The interior was tastefully 
                                    appointed and an effort made to bring it up 
                                    to automotive standards of style and 
                                    comfort. 
                                    
                                    It should be 
                                    pointed out, however, that the back seat of 
                                    either Cruiser isn't really two people wide. 
                                    It's more like 1 3/4 people wide since they 
                                    have to twist and let their shoulders 
                                    slightly over lap. With only one person in 
                                    the seat, the extra room is overkill.
                                    
                                    
                                    
                                    Mechanical 
                                    Description
                                    
                                    As originally 
                                    designed, the J-5 Cruiser is a Piper Cub in 
                                    every respect and so needs little mechanical 
                                    discription. The steel tube fuselage was 
                                    widened and that was the only discernable 
                                    difference. In fact, most major components, 
                                    wings, tail surfaces, landing gear vees, are 
                                    interchangeable. 
                                    
                                    One minor 
                                    control change is that the carb heat was 
                                    moved from its awkward location by the 
                                    pilot's right foot to make it more 
                                    convenient by his left hip. The aluminium 
                                    cup holding the carb heat and fuel cut off 
                                    is unique to the J-5, even though the Cub 
                                    has something similar. 
                                    
                                    The original 
                                    brakes were the traditional expander-tube 
                                    type which are terribly expensive to rebuild 
                                    today because of the cost of the expander 
                                    tubes and the individual brake blocks. Many 
                                    J-5s are seen with either the hydraulic drum 
                                    brakes of the PA-12 or Cleveland/McCauly 
                                    disk brakes. 
                                    
                                    The brake 
                                    pedals on both models are of the heel 
                                    variety, with those on the PA-12 moved 
                                    slightly out board to make them more readily 
                                    available. This also puts them slightly in 
                                    the way and easy to touch inadvertently on 
                                    the first few flights. 
                                    
                                    The J-5C and 
                                    PA-12 landing gears moved the bungees up 
                                    inside the airplane, so the bungee struts 
                                    and the structure at the front end of the 
                                    fuselage is noticeably different. 
                                    
                                    
                                    Other than the 
                                    usual fuselage rust concerns, the Cruiser 
                                    series also have the Piper strut AD's to be 
                                    complied with. The wing ribs are aluminum as 
                                    are the later spars.
                                    
                                    Flight 
                                    Characteristics
                                    
                                    Not wanting to 
                                    rely on memory, we travelled to Tailwheels 
                                    and More in Prescott, Arizona which use a 
                                    J-5A in their instruction programme and have 
                                    a pristine PA-12 on line for rent. There we 
                                    evaluated both airplanes with Allen Steffey, 
                                    owner/operator of Tailwheels, acting as 
                                    instructor pilot. 
                                    
                                    Steffy's J-5A 
                                    is redone in the colours it carried in 1941 
                                    when delivered to Muncie Aviation, where it 
                                    served in a CPT school. In speaking with 
                                    old-time Muncie instructors, Allen learned 
                                    they used the J-5's as night trainers with 
                                    motorcycle batteries providing the lighting 
                                    power.
                                    
                                    The airplane 
                                    was wrecked at least three times before 
                                    being purchased by a doctor in Bisbee, 
                                    Arizona who re-engined it with a C-90. Each 
                                    year, the doctor used the airplane to 
                                    deliver medical supplies to Panama, which, 
                                    according to the logs, took 70 hrs each way! 
                                    In the late 1980's the doctor was having the 
                                    airplane re-built when he passed away. 
                                    Steffy bought the airplane as a nearly 
                                    completed project and incorporated it into 
                                    his school, which also uses Champs, C-140's 
                                    and a Stinson. 
                                    
                                    The airplane's 
                                    bad luck wasn't left behind when it moved up 
                                    to Prescott. After Allen took it to Oshkosh 
                                    '96, it wound up on its back when, it is 
                                    surmised, a passenger surprised a renter 
                                    pilot by inadvertently locking the brakes. 
                                    Steffey completely rebuilt the airplane, 
                                    correcting many of the non-original features 
                                    it had picked up over the years. He did not, 
                                    however, rebuild the expander tube brakes 
                                    because of the expense involved, and 
                                    retained the Clevelands.
                                    
                                    In climbing 
                                    into the cockpit, I was first struck by it's 
                                    size, when compared to a Cub. Spacious would 
                                    be the best adjective to apply. The rudders 
                                    were still just a little closer than I'd 
                                    like, but we have to remember this 
                                    generation is taller than that for which the 
                                    airplane was designed. Even better than the 
                                    room, was the over-the-nose visibility. 
                                    Straight ahead visibility was only slightly 
                                    impaired. 
                                    
                                    "Mags hot! 
                                    Brakes!" One flip of the prop and we were on 
                                    our way. The heel brakes were a fair amount 
                                    inboard of the rudders which was of no 
                                    consequence because they were only needed 
                                    for tight manoeuvring during taxi. Also, 
                                    even though we had a 20-25 knot wind 
                                    battering us during taxi, the tendency to 
                                    weathervane was easily controlled with 
                                    rudder only. A J-5 is at least 100 pounds 
                                    heavier than a J-3 and its ability to ride 
                                    out the wind is one place it helps. 
                                    
                                    
                                    The wind was 
                                    varying between 30°-60° off our nose on 
                                    takeoff and I expected an "interesting" 
                                    flight. I wasn't disappointed but I was 
                                    surprised at how well the airplane handled 
                                    it. The takeoff run had to be partially on 
                                    one wheel to keep it straight but the 
                                    controls were absolutely up to the task. 
                                    Even though the airplane had 90 hp, we were 
                                    at 5,000 ft MSL (density altitude around 
                                    6,500 ft.), so the power was probably the 
                                    equivalent of the original 75 hp 
                                    Continental. This gave the wind plenty of 
                                    time to work us over during the takeoff 
                                    roll. At no time did it feel as if the wind 
                                    was about to get the upper hand so long as I 
                                    used a firm touch. At lower altitudes, with 
                                    that engine, takeoffs happen 
                                    instantaneously, with a 150 foot take-off 
                                    roll being typical.