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General Aviation (single engine)
List of single engine general aviation aircraft in alphabetical order390 aircraft in this category
By red750, in General Aviation (single engine),
The Questair Venture is a homebuilt aircraft manufactured by Questair at John Bell Williams Airport in Bolton, Mississippi, United States. The aircraft first flew on 1 July 1987.By red750, in General Aviation (single engine),
The Steen Skybolt is an American homebuilt aerobatic biplane. Designed by teacher Lamar Steen as a high school engineering project, the prototype first flew in October 1970.By red750, in General Aviation (single engine),
The Stoddard-Hamilton Glasair III is an American two-seat dual-control monoplane designed and built by Stoddard-Hamilton Aircraft of Arlington, Washington as an addition to the Glasair range of aircraft for amateur constructionBy red750, in General Aviation (single engine),
The Ultimate 10-200 is a Canadian homebuilt aerobatic biplane that was designed produced by Streamline Welding of Hamilton, Ontario, introduced in the 1990s.By red750, in General Aviation (single engine),
The Bushby Mustang II, aka Mustang Aeronautics Mustang II is a two-seat aerobatic sports airplane developed and marketed in the United States for homebuilding.By red750, in General Aviation (single engine),
The Sukhoi Su-26 is a single-seater aerobatic aircraft from the former Soviet Union, powered by a single radial reciprocating engine.By red750, in General Aviation (single engine),
The Bakeng Deuce (formerly the Duce) is a parasol-wing monoplane designed in the United States in the early 1970s and marketed for homebuilding.By red750, in General Aviation (single engine),
The Thorp T-18 is a two-place, all-metal, plans-built, homebuilt aircraft designed in 1963 by John Thorp.By red750, in General Aviation (single engine),
The Seawind is a family of composite, four-seat, amphibian airplanes that all feature a single tail-mounted engine, produced in kit forms and as fully built up aircraft in Canada and the United States.