ADVENT OF THE ALL-METAL AIRPLANE
By the early 1930s, aircraft design and construction technology
throughout the world had advanced to the point where it was possible
to mass-produce all-metal airplanes. There had been an all-metal
plane as early as World War I, but it was an exception. Most airplanes
of the WWI period and the 1920s had been primarily of wood and
fabric construction, although many later ones had tubular steel
fuselage frameworks.
The Air Corps' first all-metal monoplane bomber
was the Boeing B-9. Produced during 1932-1933, the B-9 was outclassed
by its contemporary all-metal Martin B-10 and only seven were
purchased. The Air Corps' first all-metal fighter was the Consolidated
P-25 of 1933. Although only two were procured, the P-25 design
was modified into the P-30, later redesignated the PB-2, of which
54 were purchased in 1935. The first all-metal fighter ordered
in quantity was the Boeing P-26; 139 were purchased from 1932-1936.
The Martin B-10 was the first all-metal monoplane
bomber to go into regular use by the United States Army Air Corps,
entering service in June 1934. It was also the first mass-produced
bomber whose performance was superior to that of the Army's pursuit
aircraft of the time.
The B-10 began a revolution in bomber design. Its all-metal monoplane
build, along with its features of closed cockpits, rotating gun
turrets, retractable landing gear, internal bomb bay, and full
engine cowlings, would become the standard for decades. It made
all existing bombers completely obsolete.
In 1932 the prototype of one of the
last bombers of the interwar generation, the Martin B-10, appeared
as an aircraft which incorporated the best technology of the time.
Whats more, in 1932, Martin received
the Collier Trophy for designing the XB-10
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These two beauties (same on actually), were
sent in by designer, Rob Carleen photographed at his home
in Florida |
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HARLEY-FAIRFAX K-55 AIR-PAL
TRAINER
"You can't send those nineteen kids up in
a crate like that!"
.. Bandied the wags whenever a near score of student pilots
filed aboard this controversial Army Air Corps ship in
the late Thirties; and as the Senate hearing later confirmed,
they were chillingly close to the truth. The 19 neophytes
could be sent up, all right; it was a matter of how suddenly
and how violently they came back down. Trouble started
with the pilot and worked its way back to the man at the
rear.
Conceived as "an economical flying
trainer", the Air-Pal was so economical that it lacked
any intercom system among instructor and pupils. No problem
in a two- or even three-seater-but with 19 sets of controls?
Elaborate pre briefings, hand signals, screaming all were
tried but all fell short of the desired result, unanimity
of action, as in "Bank left!" Happily for all
concerned, a further economy move halted production altogether
only five months after it began. But those who flew or
tried to fly her are not likely to ever forget this stillborn
regent of the cloud lanes-memories shared by those on
the ground lucky and sharp-eyed enough to catch a necessarily
brief glimpse of an Air-Pal cartwheeling across the sky
while 19 plucky, if somewhat perplexed students tried
outguessing one another, their teacher and fate itself.
more
silliness
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