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Douglas C-133 Cargomaster

The Douglas C-133 Cargomaster is an American large turboprop cargo aircraft built between 1956 and 1961 by the Douglas Aircraft Company for use with the United States Air Force. The C-133 was the USAF's only production turboprop-powered strategic airlifter, entering service shortly after the Lockheed C-130 Hercules, which is designated a tactical airlifter. It provided airlift services in a wide range of applications, being replaced by the C-5 Galaxy in the early 1970s.

C-133 Cargomaster
Douglas C-133B Cargomaster, AF Ser. No. 59-0529 (1501st Air Transport Wing), over San Francisco Bay
Role Military transport aircraft
National origin United States
Manufacturer Douglas Aircraft Company
First flight 23 April 1956
Retired 1971 (USAF)
Primary users United States Air Force
NASA
Produced 1956–1961
Number built 50

Design and development edit

The C-133 was designed to meet the requirements for the USAF's Logistic Carrier Support System SS402L for a new strategic transport.[1] The aircraft differed considerably from the C-74 Globemaster and C-124 Globemaster IIs that had preceded it. A high-mounted wing, external blister fairings on each side for the landing gear, and rear-loading and side-loading doors ensured that access to, and the volume of, the large cargo compartment were not compromised by these structures. The cargo compartment (90 ft/27 m in length and 12 ft/3.7 m high) was pressurized, heated, and ventilated.[2]

 
C-133A of 436 MAW Military Airlift Command at RAF Lakenheath England in 1969

The Cargomasters went directly into production as C-133A; no prototypes were built. The first Cargomaster flew on 23 April 1956.[3] The first C-133As were delivered to the Military Air Transport Service (MATS) in August 1957 and began flying MATS air routes throughout the world. Two C-133s established transatlantic speed records for transport aircraft on their first flights to Europe. The fleet of 50 aircraft proved itself invaluable during the Vietnam War. The Cargomaster soldiered on until the Lockheed C-5 Galaxy entered service in the early 1970s. The C-133 was then retired and most airplanes were cut up within months of being delivered to Davis-Monthan Air Force Base, Tucson, Arizona, after their final flights in 1971.

Fifty aircraft (35 C-133A and 15 C-133B) were constructed and put into service with the USAF.[4] A single C-133A and a C-133B were built and kept at Douglas Long Beach as "test articles". They had no construction numbers or USAF tail numbers.

The C-133 had large tail doors and side doors and a large, open cargo area. The C-133A carried many large and heavy loads, including Atlas and Titan ICBMs, although it was not designed specifically to transport ICBMs. It may, indeed, have been the reverse. The C-133 design was frozen by 1955 in order to build the airplanes that first flew in April 1956. The designs of both the Atlas and Titan were not firm until after 1955, when their contracts were signed. With the C-133B, the rear cargo doors were modified to open to the side (petal doors), making ICBM loading much easier. Air transporting the ballistic missiles such as the Atlas,[4] Titan and Minuteman was much less expensive, safer and faster than road transport. Several hundred Minuteman and other ICBMs were airlifted to and from their operational bases by C-133s. The C-133 also transported Atlas, Saturn and Titan rockets to Cape Canaveral for use as launch boosters in the Gemini, Mercury and Apollo space programs. After the Apollo capsules splashed down, they were airlifted in C-133s from Naval Station Norfolk, Virginia, or Hickam AFB, Hawaii, to Ellington AFB, Texas, or to California.

Operational history edit

 
Preserved C-133A
 
C-133B Cargomaster N77152 of the Foundation for Airborne Relief at Tucson Airport Arizona in 1973 still wearing MAC markings

The C-133 was for many years the only USAF aircraft capable of hauling very large or very heavy cargo. Despite the Douglas C-124 Globemaster II's capabilities, there was much cargo that it could not carry because of its configuration with a cargo deck 13 ft (4 m) off the ground and its lower, though substantial, engine power. The C-133 continued in service after the formation of the USAFs Military Airlift Command on 1 January 1966.

By 1971, shortly before the introduction of the Lockheed C-5 Galaxy, the Cargomaster was obsolete as well as being worn out, and all were withdrawn from service. The C-133 had a 10,000-hour airframe that was life-extended to 19,000 hours. Severe vibration caused critical stress corrosion of the airframes to the point that the aircraft were beyond economical operation. The Air Force managed to keep as many of the C-133 fleet in service as possible until the C-5 entered squadron service.

C-133s set a number of unofficial records, including records for military transport aircraft on trans-Atlantic and trans-Pacific routes. Among the longest were non-stop flights from Tachikawa Airfield, Japan, to Travis Air Force Base, California (17:20 hours on 22 May 1959, 5,150 mi/8,288 km, 297.2 mph/478.3 km/h), and Hickam Air Force Base, Hawaii, to Dover Air Force Base, Delaware, in about 16 hours (4,850 mi/7,805 km 303.1 mph/487.8 km/h). The only FAI officially sanctioned record was in December 1958, when C-133A 62008 lifted a payload of 117,900 lb (53,480 kg) to an altitude of 10,000 ft (3,048 m) at Dover Air Force Base, Delaware.

Operators edit

Data from:C-133 units,[5] C-133 Tail Numbers[6]

  United States

Accidents and incidents edit

Early in its life-cycle the airplane developed a reputation of crashing. Crew members referred to it as a "widowmaker". Some would not fly in the C-133, since the cause of the crashes was unknown. Several issues were discovered after crash investigations. The first issue was with the auto-pitch controller on the propellers. A time delay was added to relieve stress on the nose casing. The second issue was that the stall characteristics gave little warning to the crew. The left wing was found to stall before the right wing. The fix was simple, a small strip of metal was attached to the right wing causing it to stall simultaneously with the left wing. As the aircraft neared the end of its 10,000-hour life-cycle the last C-133B crash occurred on 6 February 1970. It was determined the airframe split at the cargo door. The final fix was a band around the airframe to strengthen; the end of the C-133 was near. The C-5A Galaxy debuted in 1971 and marked the end of the C-133. Of 50 aircraft built, nine were lost in crashes and one was destroyed in a ground fire.[6][7]

13 April 1958
AF Serial No. 54-0146, 1607 ATW — Destroyed 13 April 1958, crashed 26 mi (23 nmi; 42 km) south of Dover AFB, Delaware in Ellendale, Delaware.[8]
10 June 1961
AF Serial No. 57-1614, 1501 ATW — Destroyed 10 June 1961, crashed into the Pacific Ocean off Japan[9]
27 May 1962
AF Serial No. 57-1611, 1607 ATW — Destroyed 27 May 1962, crashed into water near Shad Intersection (37° 43' N 73° W),[10] east of Dover AFB, Delaware.[11]
10 April 1963
AF Serial No. 59-0523, 1501 ATW — Destroyed 10 April 1963, crashed while in traffic pattern, Travis AFB, California[12][13]
13 July 1963
AF Serial No. 56-2005, 1607 ATW — Destroyed 13 July 1963 during refuelling ground fire, Dover AFB, Delaware.[14]
22 September 1963
AF Serial No. 56-2002, 1607 ATW — Destroyed 22 September 1963, crashed into Atlantic Ocean near Shad Intersection (37° 43' N 73° W),[10] southeast of Dover AFB, Delaware; aircraft apparently stalled near top of climb to cruising altitude.[15]
7 November 1964
AF Serial No. 56-2014, 1607 ATW — Destroyed 7 November 1964 in crash on takeoff at CFB Goose Bay, Labrador. Probable cause was a power stall on takeoff due to icing or possibly aerodynamic instability of the aircraft.[16]
11 January 1965
AF Serial No. 54-0140, 1607 ATW — Destroyed 11 January 1965, crashed into water after takeoff from Wake Island.[17]
30 April 1967
AF Serial No. 59-0534, 1501 ATW — Destroyed 30 April 1967, ditched off the east coast of Okinawa, Japan after propeller pitch became fixed, due to electrical problems in either propeller control or propeller power circuits.[18]
6 February 1970
AF Serial No. 59-0530, 60 MAW — Destroyed 6 February 1970, disintegrated in flight over southwestern Nebraska, due to catastrophic propagation of old 11 in (280 mm) skin crack hidden under paint to a total length of 17 ft (5.2 m); large sections of skin peeled off and the aircraft came apart at 23,000 ft (7,000 m).[19][20]

Surviving aircraft edit

 
C-133A Cargomaster 56-2008 at the National Museum of the United States Air Force
 
C-133B Cargomaster 59-0527 on display at the Pima Air & Space Museum.
C-133A AF Ser. No. 56-2008
Preserved at the National Museum of the United States Air Force at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base near Dayton, Ohio. On 16 December 1958, this aircraft established a world record for propeller-driven aircraft by carrying a payload of 117,900 lb (53,500 kg) to an altitude of 10,000 ft (3,000 m). It was flown to the museum on 17 March 1971.[4]
C-133B AF Ser. No. 59-0527
In the collection of the Pima Air & Space Museum adjacent to Davis–Monthan Air Force Base in Tucson, Arizona.
C-133B AF Ser. No. 59-0536
Located at the Air Mobility Command Museum at Dover Air Force Base, Delaware. This aircraft had previously been at the Strategic Air Command Museum at Offutt Air Force Base, Nebraska for many years and was donated to the AMC Museum when the SAC Museum moved from its on base location in the late 1990s to its new location near Ashland, Nebraska.
 
C-133B Cargomaster 59-0536 on display at the Air Mobility Command Museum.
C-133A AF Ser. No. 56-1999
N199AB, previously owned by Cargomaster Corporation, was never certificated by the Federal Aviation Administration for civilian operation, and could only be flown as a government aircraft, mostly for the State of Alaska. N199AB was based at ANC and was flown as a transport until 2004, carrying cargo, such as pipeline sections. It also flew frontend loader trash trucks and heavy equipment to the Alaskan bush, i.e., Point Hope, Point Lay, Wainright, Barrow, Deadhorse, Barter Island, and Anatovich Pass in April 2006. In August 2008, it flew its last flight to the Jimmy Doolittle Air & Space Museum at Travis Air Force Base, Fairfield, California, where it has been restored to USAF markings and maintained on static display.

Specifications (C-133B) edit

 
3-view line drawing of the Douglas C-133A Cargomaster

Data from American military transport aircraft since 1925[21]

General characteristics

  • Crew: five (two pilots, navigator, flight engineer, loadmaster)
  • Capacity: 200 passengers or 110,000 lb (50,000 kg)
  • Length: 154 ft 3 in (47.01 m)
  • Wingspan: 179 ft 9 in (54.78 m)
  • Height: 48 ft 3 in (14.7 m)
  • Wing area: 2,673 sq ft (248.3 m2)
  • Empty weight: 120,263 lb (54,550 kg)
  • Gross weight: 275,000 lb (124,738 kg)
  • Max takeoff weight: 286,000 lb (129,727 kg)
  • Powerplant: 4 × Pratt & Whitney T34-P-9W turboprop engines, 7,500 hp (5,600 kW) each with water injection
  • Propellers: 3-bladed Curtiss Electric fully feathering, reversible-pitch propellers.

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 312 kn (359 mph, 578 km/h) at 8,700 ft (2,700 m)
  • Cruise speed: 281 kn (323 mph, 520 km/h)
  • Range: 3,560 nmi (4,100 mi, 6,590 km) with 52,000 lb (24,000 kg) payload
  • Service ceiling: 29,950 ft (9,130 m) service ceiling
  • Rate of climb: 1,280 ft/min (6.5 m/s)
  • Wing loading: 102.9 lb/sq ft (502 kg/m2)
  • Power/mass: 0.1087 hp/lb (0.1787 kW/kg)

See also edit

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

References edit

  1. ^ Norton, Bill (March 2004). "Forgotten Airlifter: The Short-Lived Douglas C-133 Cargomaster". Air Enthusiast. Stamford, Lincs: Key Publishing (110): 45–53. ISSN 0143-5450.
  2. ^ "Latest Flying Freighter Can Carry 200 Troops". Popular Mechanics: 109. April 1956.
  3. ^ Francillon, René J. (1988). McDonnell Douglas aircraft since 1920 Vol. 1. London: Putnam. pp. 509–512. ISBN 0-851778275.
  4. ^ a b c "Douglas C-133A Cargo Master". National Museum of the US Air Force™. Retrieved 17 March 2018.
  5. ^ Taylor, Cal. "C-133 Units". www.angelfire.com. Retrieved 17 March 2018.
  6. ^ a b Taylor, Cal. "C-133 Tail numbers". www.angelfire.com. Retrieved 17 March 2018.
  7. ^ John Sotham (September 2010). "The Curse of the Cargomaster". Air & Space/Smithsonian.
  8. ^ Ranter, Harro. "ASN Aircraft accident Douglas C-133A Cargomaster 54-0146 Georgetown, DE". aviation-safety.net. Retrieved 17 March 2018.
  9. ^ Ranter, Harro. "ASN Aircraft accident Douglas C-133A-35-DL Cargomaster 57-1614 Tachikawa AB, Japan". aviation-safety.net. Retrieved 17 March 2018.
  10. ^ a b The Code of Federal Regulations of the United States of America. U.S. Government Printing Office. 1961. p. 225.
  11. ^ Ranter, Harro. "ASN Aircraft accident Douglas C-133A-35-DL Cargomaster 57-1611 Dover AFB, DE, USA". aviation-safety.net. Retrieved 17 March 2018.
  12. ^ "The Crash of the C-133B near Travis AFB, CA". Check-Six.com. Retrieved 21 July 2013.
  13. ^ Ranter, Harro. "ASN Aircraft accident Douglas C-133B-DL Cargomaster 59-0523 Fairfield-Travis AFB, CA (SUU)". aviation-safety.net. Retrieved 17 March 2018.
  14. ^ Ranter, Harro. "ASN Aircraft accident Douglas C-133A Cargomaster 56-2005 Dover AFB, DE (DOV)". aviation-safety.net. Retrieved 17 March 2018.
  15. ^ Ranter, Harro. "ASN Aircraft accident Douglas C-133A Cargomaster 56-2002 Cape May, NJ, USA". aviation-safety.net. Retrieved 17 March 2018.
  16. ^ Ranter, Harro. "ASN Aircraft accident Douglas C-133A-30-DL Cargomaster 56-2014 Goose Bay Airport, NL (YYR)". aviation-safety.net. Retrieved 17 March 2018.
  17. ^ Ranter, Harro. "ASN Aircraft accident Douglas C-133A-5-DL Cargomaster 54-0140 Wake Island AFB (AWK)". aviation-safety.net. Retrieved 17 March 2018.
  18. ^ Ranter, Harro. "ASN Aircraft accident Douglas C-133B-DL Cargomaster 59-0534 Okinawa". aviation-safety.net. Retrieved 17 March 2018.
  19. ^ "Last of the Giants… Near Palisade, Nebraska". Check-Six.com. Retrieved 9 October 2016.
  20. ^ Ranter, Harro. "ASN Aircraft accident Douglas C-133B-DL Cargomaster 59-0530 Palisade, NE". aviation-safety.net. Retrieved 16 March 2018.
  21. ^ Johnson, E.R.; Jones, Lloyd S. (2013). American military transport aircraft since 1925. McFarland & Company, Inc. pp. 222–226. ISBN 978-0-7864-6269-8.

Further reading edit

  • Taylor, Cal (2005). Remembering an unsung giant : the Douglas C-133 Cargomaster and its people. Olympia, WA: Firstfleet Publishers. ISBN 978-0977676200.

External links edit

  • The Air Mobility Command Museum
  • Remembering "Remembering An Unsung Giant – The Douglas C-133 Cargomaster and Its People"
  • Final Flight 7 March 2014 at the Wayback Machine, Boeing 377 blog
  • Douglas C-133 Cargomaster – Boeing Fact Sheet
  • "C-133 Cargomaster Specifications". The Aviation Zone (2005) Retrieved 28 August 2005.

douglas, cargomaster, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, this, article, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, schola. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this article Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Douglas C 133 Cargomaster news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2008 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Douglas C 133 Cargomaster is an American large turboprop cargo aircraft built between 1956 and 1961 by the Douglas Aircraft Company for use with the United States Air Force The C 133 was the USAF s only production turboprop powered strategic airlifter entering service shortly after the Lockheed C 130 Hercules which is designated a tactical airlifter It provided airlift services in a wide range of applications being replaced by the C 5 Galaxy in the early 1970s C 133 CargomasterDouglas C 133B Cargomaster AF Ser No 59 0529 1501st Air Transport Wing over San Francisco BayRole Military transport aircraftNational origin United StatesManufacturer Douglas Aircraft CompanyFirst flight 23 April 1956Retired 1971 USAF Primary users United States Air ForceNASAProduced 1956 1961Number built 50 Contents 1 Design and development 2 Operational history 3 Operators 4 Accidents and incidents 5 Surviving aircraft 6 Specifications C 133B 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksDesign and development editThe C 133 was designed to meet the requirements for the USAF s Logistic Carrier Support System SS402L for a new strategic transport 1 The aircraft differed considerably from the C 74 Globemaster and C 124 Globemaster IIs that had preceded it A high mounted wing external blister fairings on each side for the landing gear and rear loading and side loading doors ensured that access to and the volume of the large cargo compartment were not compromised by these structures The cargo compartment 90 ft 27 m in length and 12 ft 3 7 m high was pressurized heated and ventilated 2 nbsp C 133A of 436 MAW Military Airlift Command at RAF Lakenheath England in 1969The Cargomasters went directly into production as C 133A no prototypes were built The first Cargomaster flew on 23 April 1956 3 The first C 133As were delivered to the Military Air Transport Service MATS in August 1957 and began flying MATS air routes throughout the world Two C 133s established transatlantic speed records for transport aircraft on their first flights to Europe The fleet of 50 aircraft proved itself invaluable during the Vietnam War The Cargomaster soldiered on until the Lockheed C 5 Galaxy entered service in the early 1970s The C 133 was then retired and most airplanes were cut up within months of being delivered to Davis Monthan Air Force Base Tucson Arizona after their final flights in 1971 Fifty aircraft 35 C 133A and 15 C 133B were constructed and put into service with the USAF 4 A single C 133A and a C 133B were built and kept at Douglas Long Beach as test articles They had no construction numbers or USAF tail numbers The C 133 had large tail doors and side doors and a large open cargo area The C 133A carried many large and heavy loads including Atlas and Titan ICBMs although it was not designed specifically to transport ICBMs It may indeed have been the reverse The C 133 design was frozen by 1955 in order to build the airplanes that first flew in April 1956 The designs of both the Atlas and Titan were not firm until after 1955 when their contracts were signed With the C 133B the rear cargo doors were modified to open to the side petal doors making ICBM loading much easier Air transporting the ballistic missiles such as the Atlas 4 Titan and Minuteman was much less expensive safer and faster than road transport Several hundred Minuteman and other ICBMs were airlifted to and from their operational bases by C 133s The C 133 also transported Atlas Saturn and Titan rockets to Cape Canaveral for use as launch boosters in the Gemini Mercury and Apollo space programs After the Apollo capsules splashed down they were airlifted in C 133s from Naval Station Norfolk Virginia or Hickam AFB Hawaii to Ellington AFB Texas or to California Operational history edit nbsp Preserved C 133A nbsp C 133B Cargomaster N77152 of the Foundation for Airborne Relief at Tucson Airport Arizona in 1973 still wearing MAC markingsThe C 133 was for many years the only USAF aircraft capable of hauling very large or very heavy cargo Despite the Douglas C 124 Globemaster II s capabilities there was much cargo that it could not carry because of its configuration with a cargo deck 13 ft 4 m off the ground and its lower though substantial engine power The C 133 continued in service after the formation of the USAFs Military Airlift Command on 1 January 1966 By 1971 shortly before the introduction of the Lockheed C 5 Galaxy the Cargomaster was obsolete as well as being worn out and all were withdrawn from service The C 133 had a 10 000 hour airframe that was life extended to 19 000 hours Severe vibration caused critical stress corrosion of the airframes to the point that the aircraft were beyond economical operation The Air Force managed to keep as many of the C 133 fleet in service as possible until the C 5 entered squadron service C 133s set a number of unofficial records including records for military transport aircraft on trans Atlantic and trans Pacific routes Among the longest were non stop flights from Tachikawa Airfield Japan to Travis Air Force Base California 17 20 hours on 22 May 1959 5 150 mi 8 288 km 297 2 mph 478 3 km h and Hickam Air Force Base Hawaii to Dover Air Force Base Delaware in about 16 hours 4 850 mi 7 805 km 303 1 mph 487 8 km h The only FAI officially sanctioned record was in December 1958 when C 133A 62008 lifted a payload of 117 900 lb 53 480 kg to an altitude of 10 000 ft 3 048 m at Dover Air Force Base Delaware Operators editData from C 133 units 5 C 133 Tail Numbers 6 nbsp United StatesUnited States Air Force Military Air Transport Service Military Airlift Command 1501st Air Transport Wing 60th Military Airlift Wing Travis AFB California 84th Air Transport Squadron Military Airlift Squadron 1957 71 1607th Air Transport Wing 436th Military Airlift Wing Dover AFB Delaware 1st Air Transport Squadron Military Airlift Squadron 1957 71 39th Air Transport Squadron Military Airlift Squadron 1957 71Accidents and incidents editEarly in its life cycle the airplane developed a reputation of crashing Crew members referred to it as a widowmaker Some would not fly in the C 133 since the cause of the crashes was unknown Several issues were discovered after crash investigations The first issue was with the auto pitch controller on the propellers A time delay was added to relieve stress on the nose casing The second issue was that the stall characteristics gave little warning to the crew The left wing was found to stall before the right wing The fix was simple a small strip of metal was attached to the right wing causing it to stall simultaneously with the left wing As the aircraft neared the end of its 10 000 hour life cycle the last C 133B crash occurred on 6 February 1970 It was determined the airframe split at the cargo door The final fix was a band around the airframe to strengthen the end of the C 133 was near The C 5A Galaxy debuted in 1971 and marked the end of the C 133 Of 50 aircraft built nine were lost in crashes and one was destroyed in a ground fire 6 7 13 April 1958 AF Serial No 54 0146 1607 ATW Destroyed 13 April 1958 crashed 26 mi 23 nmi 42 km south of Dover AFB Delaware in Ellendale Delaware 8 10 June 1961 AF Serial No 57 1614 1501 ATW Destroyed 10 June 1961 crashed into the Pacific Ocean off Japan 9 27 May 1962 AF Serial No 57 1611 1607 ATW Destroyed 27 May 1962 crashed into water near Shad Intersection 37 43 N 73 W 10 east of Dover AFB Delaware 11 10 April 1963 AF Serial No 59 0523 1501 ATW Destroyed 10 April 1963 crashed while in traffic pattern Travis AFB California 12 13 13 July 1963 AF Serial No 56 2005 1607 ATW Destroyed 13 July 1963 during refuelling ground fire Dover AFB Delaware 14 22 September 1963 AF Serial No 56 2002 1607 ATW Destroyed 22 September 1963 crashed into Atlantic Ocean near Shad Intersection 37 43 N 73 W 10 southeast of Dover AFB Delaware aircraft apparently stalled near top of climb to cruising altitude 15 7 November 1964 AF Serial No 56 2014 1607 ATW Destroyed 7 November 1964 in crash on takeoff at CFB Goose Bay Labrador Probable cause was a power stall on takeoff due to icing or possibly aerodynamic instability of the aircraft 16 11 January 1965 AF Serial No 54 0140 1607 ATW Destroyed 11 January 1965 crashed into water after takeoff from Wake Island 17 30 April 1967 AF Serial No 59 0534 1501 ATW Destroyed 30 April 1967 ditched off the east coast of Okinawa Japan after propeller pitch became fixed due to electrical problems in either propeller control or propeller power circuits 18 6 February 1970 AF Serial No 59 0530 60 MAW Destroyed 6 February 1970 disintegrated in flight over southwestern Nebraska due to catastrophic propagation of old 11 in 280 mm skin crack hidden under paint to a total length of 17 ft 5 2 m large sections of skin peeled off and the aircraft came apart at 23 000 ft 7 000 m 19 20 Surviving aircraft edit nbsp C 133A Cargomaster 56 2008 at the National Museum of the United States Air Force nbsp C 133B Cargomaster 59 0527 on display at the Pima Air amp Space Museum C 133A AF Ser No 56 2008 Preserved at the National Museum of the United States Air Force at Wright Patterson Air Force Base near Dayton Ohio On 16 December 1958 this aircraft established a world record for propeller driven aircraft by carrying a payload of 117 900 lb 53 500 kg to an altitude of 10 000 ft 3 000 m It was flown to the museum on 17 March 1971 4 C 133B AF Ser No 59 0527 In the collection of the Pima Air amp Space Museum adjacent to Davis Monthan Air Force Base in Tucson Arizona C 133B AF Ser No 59 0536 Located at the Air Mobility Command Museum at Dover Air Force Base Delaware This aircraft had previously been at the Strategic Air Command Museum at Offutt Air Force Base Nebraska for many years and was donated to the AMC Museum when the SAC Museum moved from its on base location in the late 1990s to its new location near Ashland Nebraska nbsp C 133B Cargomaster 59 0536 on display at the Air Mobility Command Museum C 133A AF Ser No 56 1999 N199AB previously owned by Cargomaster Corporation was never certificated by the Federal Aviation Administration for civilian operation and could only be flown as a government aircraft mostly for the State of Alaska N199AB was based at ANC and was flown as a transport until 2004 carrying cargo such as pipeline sections It also flew frontend loader trash trucks and heavy equipment to the Alaskan bush i e Point Hope Point Lay Wainright Barrow Deadhorse Barter Island and Anatovich Pass in April 2006 In August 2008 it flew its last flight to the Jimmy Doolittle Air amp Space Museum at Travis Air Force Base Fairfield California where it has been restored to USAF markings and maintained on static display Not on display Two C 133As have been in storage at Mojave Air and Space Port California since the 1970s They are N201AR ex AF Ser No 56 2001 and N136AR ex AF Ser No 54 0136 They are owned by Cargomaster Corporation based at Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport Alaska Specifications C 133B edit nbsp 3 view line drawing of the Douglas C 133A CargomasterData from American military transport aircraft since 1925 21 General characteristicsCrew five two pilots navigator flight engineer loadmaster Capacity 200 passengers or 110 000 lb 50 000 kg Length 154 ft 3 in 47 01 m Wingspan 179 ft 9 in 54 78 m Height 48 ft 3 in 14 7 m Wing area 2 673 sq ft 248 3 m2 Empty weight 120 263 lb 54 550 kg Gross weight 275 000 lb 124 738 kg Max takeoff weight 286 000 lb 129 727 kg Powerplant 4 Pratt amp Whitney T34 P 9W turboprop engines 7 500 hp 5 600 kW each with water injection Propellers 3 bladed Curtiss Electric fully feathering reversible pitch propellers Performance Maximum speed 312 kn 359 mph 578 km h at 8 700 ft 2 700 m Cruise speed 281 kn 323 mph 520 km h Range 3 560 nmi 4 100 mi 6 590 km with 52 000 lb 24 000 kg payload Service ceiling 29 950 ft 9 130 m service ceiling Rate of climb 1 280 ft min 6 5 m s Wing loading 102 9 lb sq ft 502 kg m2 Power mass 0 1087 hp lb 0 1787 kW kg See also editAircraft of comparable role configuration and era Antonov An 22 Blackburn Beverley Boeing C 97 Stratofreighter Convair XC 99 Douglas C 124 Globemaster II Lockheed L 1249 Super Constellation R7V 2 YC 121F Lockheed C 141 Starlifter Short BelfastReferences edit Norton Bill March 2004 Forgotten Airlifter The Short Lived Douglas C 133 Cargomaster Air Enthusiast Stamford Lincs Key Publishing 110 45 53 ISSN 0143 5450 Latest Flying Freighter Can Carry 200 Troops Popular Mechanics 109 April 1956 Francillon Rene J 1988 McDonnell Douglas aircraft since 1920 Vol 1 London Putnam pp 509 512 ISBN 0 851778275 a b c Douglas C 133A Cargo Master National Museum of the US Air Force Retrieved 17 March 2018 Taylor Cal C 133 Units www angelfire com Retrieved 17 March 2018 a b Taylor Cal C 133 Tail numbers www angelfire com Retrieved 17 March 2018 John Sotham September 2010 The Curse of the Cargomaster Air amp Space Smithsonian Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Douglas C 133A Cargomaster 54 0146 Georgetown DE aviation safety net Retrieved 17 March 2018 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Douglas C 133A 35 DL Cargomaster 57 1614 Tachikawa AB Japan aviation safety net Retrieved 17 March 2018 a b The Code of Federal Regulations of the United States of America U S Government Printing Office 1961 p 225 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Douglas C 133A 35 DL Cargomaster 57 1611 Dover AFB DE USA aviation safety net Retrieved 17 March 2018 The Crash of the C 133B near Travis AFB CA Check Six com Retrieved 21 July 2013 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Douglas C 133B DL Cargomaster 59 0523 Fairfield Travis AFB CA SUU aviation safety net Retrieved 17 March 2018 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Douglas C 133A Cargomaster 56 2005 Dover AFB DE DOV aviation safety net Retrieved 17 March 2018 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Douglas C 133A Cargomaster 56 2002 Cape May NJ USA aviation safety net Retrieved 17 March 2018 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Douglas C 133A 30 DL Cargomaster 56 2014 Goose Bay Airport NL YYR aviation safety net Retrieved 17 March 2018 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Douglas C 133A 5 DL Cargomaster 54 0140 Wake Island AFB AWK aviation safety net Retrieved 17 March 2018 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Douglas C 133B DL Cargomaster 59 0534 Okinawa aviation safety net Retrieved 17 March 2018 Last of the Giants Near Palisade Nebraska Check Six com Retrieved 9 October 2016 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Douglas C 133B DL Cargomaster 59 0530 Palisade NE aviation safety net Retrieved 16 March 2018 Johnson E R Jones Lloyd S 2013 American military transport aircraft since 1925 McFarland amp Company Inc pp 222 226 ISBN 978 0 7864 6269 8 Further reading editTaylor Cal 2005 Remembering an unsung giant the Douglas C 133 Cargomaster and its people Olympia WA Firstfleet Publishers ISBN 978 0977676200 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to C 133 Cargomaster The Air Mobility Command Museum Remembering Remembering An Unsung Giant The Douglas C 133 Cargomaster and Its People Final Flight Archived 7 March 2014 at the Wayback Machine Boeing 377 blog Douglas C 133 Cargomaster Boeing Fact Sheet C 133 Cargomaster Specifications The Aviation Zone 2005 Retrieved 28 August 2005 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Douglas C 133 Cargomaster amp oldid 1206431378, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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