The Boa Type S is a sports car built by Aerocon California Inc. in the United States from 1978 to 1979. The car features a lightweight aluminum chassis and was sold without an engine. Fifteen examples were built before production ended.[1]
Boa Type S | |
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Overview | |
Manufacturer | Aerocon California Inc. |
Production | 1978–1979 |
Body and chassis | |
Class | Sports car |
Body style | 2-door coupe |
Layout | M/R |
Platform | Custom aluminum monocoque |
Powertrain | |
Transmission | 4-speed manual |
Dimensions | |
Wheelbase | 101 in (2,565 mm) |
Length | 178.5 in (4,534 mm) |
Width | 66 in (1,676 mm) |
Height | 47.5 in (1,206 mm) |
Curb weight | 1,800 lb (816 kg) |
David Saunders
editDavid A. Saunders was both designer and builder of the Boa Type S.[2] Saunders was born in the United Kingdom (UK) and apprenticed at de Havilland, where he worked on a variety of their aircraft, including the de Havilland Comet.
In 1955 Saunders emigrated to Canada, where he was hired by Avro Canada and worked on the Avro Arrow project. He left Avro in 1958, before the Arrow's cancellation, and in 1959 joined the Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF). Saunders left the RCAF in 1962 and established the Cheetah Light Aircraft Company (Clairco) to manufacture an all-wood four passenger aircraft called the Cheetah, superseded in 1964 by the all-metal Super Cheetah.[3] In 1965 he established aeronautical design and manufacturing company Canadian Aerocon in Montréal.
In 1968 Saunders was made president of the newly formed Saunders Aircraft Company, also in Montréal. This company re-engineered the de Havilland Heron for extra passenger space and short takeoff and landings by extending the fuselage, revising the wings, and replacing the Heron's piston engines with a pair of Pratt & Whitney PT-6A turboprops to create the Saunders ST-27 and, later, the ST-28.[4] In a deal with the Manitoba Development Corporation (MDC) that brought new funding to the company, Saunders Aircraft moved to an airfield at Gimli, Manitoba that had been recently vacated by the Canadian military. Saunders himself was unhappy with the deal with the Manitoba government and the move to Gimli, and by April 1971 had left the company.[5]
After this Saunders immigrated to the US. He incorporated Aerocon California on 25 October 1974.[6] The company offered aeronautical design consultancy services.[7]
History
editThe Boa Type S was built at Aerocon's facility in Ventura, California.[8]
Development of the car occurred over a three-and-a-half-year period, and progressed through four prototypes.[2]
The emblem for the Boa Type S was a stylized letter "S" with the upper arc ending in a snake's head with its jaws open and tongue extended.
The Boa Type S was to retail for $17,000 without engine, and $18,500 with engine. All cars were sold fully assembled but without engines to save Aerocon from having to certify the car's emissions compliance. A 12-month/12,000-mile factory warranty came with each car.[2][7]
Aerocon had secured an order for twenty cars from a distributor, and were making plans to move into a new 20,000 square feet (1,900 m2) production facility. Saunders hoped to ramp production up to between four hundred and six hundred cars per year, and was considering opening multiple production sites to meet future demand.[2]
Production ran for two years; 1978 and 1979. Fifteen cars were built.[8]
Features
editReflecting the designer's aircraft engineering background, the Boa Type S is built with a riveted aluminum monocoque chassis. The structure is composed of front and rear torsion boxes and a center section made up of the sills, backbone tunnel, and floor. A steel roll cage is attached to the chassis. The bodywork is of fiberglass and is unstressed.[7]
The car's front suspension is essentially the same as that of the Triumph Spitfire, using Alford & Alder components. The steering column is also sourced from the Triumph.[2] The rear suspension is based on trailing arms fabricated by Aerocon, with Girling coil springs over telescopic shock absorbers.[2]
The braking system is a combination of Spitfire front discs and VW rear drums. Adapter plates on the front hubs match the front bolt pattern to the rear.[2]
On the interior, the seats are Stylex Huntmaster items, and instrumentation is from Stewart-Warner.[2]
Other parts come from a variety of sources. The windscreen and windshield wipers are from the Ford Pinto, the door latches from Chevrolet, and the bumper hydraulic dampers from the Honda Civic.[2]
The car's roof has a removable panel above each seat, making it a T-top. In the roof's flying buttresses behind the B-pillar are bubbled, louvered inserts rather than glass. One reference also reports that the windshield frame and entire roof structure can be unbolted and removed.[9]
The engine recommended by the factory is a version of the four cylinder boxer engine used in the Volkswagen Type 4, the Porsche 914, the Volkwagen T3 Transporter, and the Porsche 912E. This air-cooled engine has a flat (vertical axis) fan and a single cam-in-block driving two valves per cylinder through pushrods and rocker arms. Promotional material from Aerocon highlights the later, US specification, 1.8 L (110 cu in) model fitted with Bosch L-Jetronic fuel injection.
The engine compartment is said to have been large enough to mount a flat six cylinder Porsche engine.[9]
Estimates of the car's performance included a 0–60 mph (0–97 km/h) time of 8.5 seconds, and fuel economy of 30 mpg‑US (7.8 L/100 km)[7] Contemporary reviews found the car's quality of fit and finish acceptable or better.[2][7] Reactions to the car's styling were mixed.[1]
Technical data
editDetail: | |
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Engine: | Mid-mounted four cylinder boxer engine |
Displacement: | 1,795 cc (109.5 cu in) |
Bore × Stroke: | 93 mm × 66 mm (3.66 in × 2.60 in) |
Maximum power: | 72 hp (53.7 kW) at 5000 rpm |
Maximum torque: | 99 ft⋅lb (134.2 N⋅m) at 3500 rpm |
Compression ratio: | 7.3:1 |
Valvetrain: | Single cam-in-block, pushrods, 2 overhead valves per cylinder |
Induction: | Naturally aspirated, Bosch electronic fuel injection |
Cooling: | Air cooled |
Transmission: | 4-speed manual transaxle |
Steering: | Rack and pinion, 3.5 turns lock-to-lock |
Brakes f/r: | Disc/drum |
Suspension front: | Upper and lower A-arms, coil springs over telescopic shock absorbers, anti-roll bar |
Suspension rear: | Trailing arms, coil springs, telescopic shock absorbers, anti-roll bar |
Body/Chassis: | Aluminum monocoque chassis with fiberglass body |
Track f/r: | 53.25 / 54 in (1,353 / 1,372 mm) |
Weight distribution % f/r: | 47/53 |
Wheelbase: | 101 in (2,565 mm) |
Fuel capacity: | 16 US gal (60.6 L; 13.3 imp gal) |
Wheels: | 14×5.5 inches |
Tires f/r: | DR 70×14 |
Length Width Height: |
178.5 in (4,534 mm) 66 in (1,676 mm) 47.5 in (1,206 mm) |
Weight: | 1,800 lb (816.5 kg) |
References
edit- ^ a b Haas, Steve (18 April 2017). "eBay Find of the Week: The Aerocon Boa has Porsche power without all that unnecessary style". Hagerty.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Lamm, John (April 1978). "The Boa Constructed". Road & Track. pp. 136, 137. Archived from the original on 2022-07-07. Retrieved 2024-09-13.
- ^ "CHEETAH LIGHT AIRCRAFT COMPANY LTD". All the World's Rotorcraft.
- ^ Lymburn, Tom (1 July 2015). "Mystery Airplane: July 2015". Minnesota Flyer.
- ^ Fortier, Rénald (12 August 2019). "A venture worthy of success, the Saunders ST-27 and ST-28 commuter airliners". Ingenium Channel.
- ^ "AEROCON CALIFORNIA INCORPORATED". Open Corporates.
- ^ a b c d e Rettie, John G. (August 1978). "The BOA". dune buggies and hot VWs. pp. 37–39.
- ^ a b Hacker, Geoffrey R. (ed.). "Boa (Aerocon) – Home". Undiscovered Classics.
- ^ a b Hacker, Geoffrey R. (ed.). "Miscellaneous". Undiscovered Classics.
External links
edit- Grover, Cason (17 April 2017). "California-Made 70s Oddball: The Aerocon Boa". Oddimotive.
- Kozak, Graham (18 April 2017). "Let's get weird: Polarizing Porsche-powered Aerocon Boa is up for grabs on eBay". Autoweek.
- "Double Vision: 1978 Aerocon Boa". Daily Turismo. 9 December 2018.