The AD-1 aircraft was delivered to Dryden in February 1979. The Ames Industrial Co.,
Bohemia,
New York, constructed it, under a
US$240,000 fixed-price contract. NASA specified the overall vehicle design using a geometric configuration studied by
Boeing Commercial Airplanes,
Seattle,
Washington. The
Rutan Aircraft Factory,
Mojave, California, provided the detailed design and load analysis for the intentionally low-speed, low-cost aircraft (there, the aircraft was known internally as the
Model 35). The low speed and cost, of course, limited the complexity of the vehicle and the scope of its technical objectives. Piloting the aircraft on its first flight December 21, 1979, was NASA research pilot
Thomas C. McMurtry, who was also the pilot on the final flight August 7, 1982. Another well-known test pilot involved in the project was
Pete Knight. The AD-1 was powered by two small
Microturbo TRS18-046 turbojet engines, each producing of static thrust at sea level. These were essentially the same engines used in the
BD-5J. The aircraft was limited for reasons of safety to a speed of about . The AD-1 was in length and had a wingspan of unswept. It was constructed of plastic reinforced with
fiberglass, in a sandwich with the skin separated by a rigid foam core. It had a gross weight of , and an empty weight of . A fixed
tricycle landing gear, mounted close to the
fuselage to lessen aerodynamic drag, gave the aircraft a very "squatty" appearance on the ground. It was only high. The wing was pivoted by an electrically-driven gear mechanism located inside the fuselage, just forward of the engines. ==Flight research==