The Glider Boat was intended as a strictly recreational aircraft, to be towed from the water surface by a powered boat. The company intended to produce a very inexpensive aircraft to cash in on the sudden popularity of aviation following
Charles Lindbergh’s 1927 solo flight across the
Atlantic Ocean. The aircraft is of mixed construction. The span wing has a wooden
spar, steel ribs and is covered in doped
aircraft fabric covering. The two wings have a large total area of and combined with the light gross weight of give a very light wing loading of just 2.2 lb/sq ft (11 kg/m2). The lower wing tips feature wingtip floats. The hull is made from
duralumin and features a stepped shape, similar to most powered flying boats. The aircraft has conventional aircraft controls and was delivered without instruments. The aircraft was normally launched by a tow rope attached to the glider by a Y-shaped bridle, with release hooks on both sides of the front
cockpit. Climbing to a maximum height of as limited by the supplied tow rope, the glider would then release and glide to a landing on the water surface. The aircraft was placed in quantity production and sold for
US$595 each. Thirty were built before the company went out of business in the
Great Depression. ==Operational history==