The Akro was designed as a
homebuilt aircraft for pilots who competed in
aerobatic competitions. It was the first U.S. aircraft design to be guided by the
Aresti Catalog of manoeuvres for such events. The structure absorbs high stresses, +12/-11g. The Akro is a
cantilever mid wing monoplane with a wooden, two spar
mahogany skinned wing built in one piece, its forward
spar passing unbroken through the
fuselage and the rear spar in two parts. The plain, statically balanced
ailerons have steel spars with
spruce ribs and
trailing edges ; they are
fabric covered and carry ground adjustable
trim tabs. The tail unit is a fabric covered steel tube structure, wire braced and with swept, straight tapered surfaces. Like the ailerons, all the rear control surfaces are statically balanced. The
rudder has a ground adjustable trim tab. The
tailplane is mounted at the top of the fuselage, with variable
incidence and a flight controllable trim tab in the
elevator. The Akro has a 180 hp (134 kW)
Avco Lycoming AIO-360-A1A air-cooled
flat-four engine in the nose, driving a two blade metal fixed
pitch propeller. Its fuel is stored in a fuselage tank between the single seat
cockpit and the engine. The cockpit has a fixed screen and a rearward sliding bubble
canopy. In addition, there is a large window in the forward cockpit floor. There is a fixed,
conventional undercarriage, with the mainwheels under
glass fibre fairings on cantilever sprung steel legs.
Hydraulic disc brakes are fitted. The tailwheel is steerable. Two slightly different models were designed specifically for the first two customers. The Model A design, begun in July 1966 was for Margaret Ritchie, the winner of the 1966 U.S. Women's Aerobatic Championship and first flew on 27 July 1967. The Model B had less tapered wings of greater area (6%) and bigger ailerons, though of unchanged span, slightly heavier (8%) and with windows in the fuselage sides below the wings. The B also carried 16% less fuel but had a lubrication system adapted to prolonged inverted flight. It first flew on 9 July 1969. ==Operational history==