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Ford Trimotor

The Ford Trimotor (also called the "Tri-Motor", and nicknamed the "Tin Goose") is an American three-engined transport aircraft. Production started in 1925 by the companies of Henry Ford and ended on June 7, 1933, after 199 had been made.[1] It was designed for the civil aviation market, but also saw service with military units.

Trimotor
Experimental Aircraft Association (EAA) Ford 4-AT-E Trimotor (2014)
Role Transport aircraft
Manufacturer Stout Metal Airplane Division of the Ford Motor Company
Designer William Bushnell Stout
First flight June 11, 1926
Introduction 1926
Status Limited excursion service
Primary users about 100 airlines
United States Army Air Corps
United States Navy
Royal Canadian Air Force
Number built 199
Variants Stout Bushmaster 2000

Design and development edit

 
Ford Trimotor interior

In the early 1920s, Henry Ford, along with a group of 19 others including his son Edsel, invested in the Stout Metal Airplane Company. Stout, a bold and imaginative salesman, sent a mimeographed form letter to leading manufacturers, blithely asking for $1,000 and adding: "For your one thousand dollars you will get one definite promise: You will never get your money back."[clarify] Stout raised $20,000, including $1,000 each from Edsel and Henry Ford.[2]

In 1925, Ford bought Stout and its aircraft designs. The single-engined Stout monoplane was turned into a trimotor, the Stout 3-AT with three Curtiss-Wright air-cooled radial engines. After a prototype was built and test-flown with poor results, the "4-AT" and "5-AT" emerged.

The Ford Trimotor using all-metal construction was not a revolutionary concept, but it was certainly more advanced than the standard construction techniques of the 1920s. The aircraft resembled the Fokker F.VII Trimotor (except for being all metal which Henry Ford claimed made it "the safest airliner around").[3] Its fuselage and wings followed a design pioneered by Junkers[4] during World War I with the Junkers J.I and used postwar in a series of airliners starting with the Junkers F.13 low-wing monoplane of 1920 of which a number were exported to the US, the Junkers K 16 high-wing airliner of 1921, and the Junkers G 24 trimotor of 1924. All of these were constructed of aluminum alloy, which was corrugated for added stiffness, although the resulting drag reduced its overall performance.[5] So similar were the designs that Junkers sued and won when Ford attempted to export an aircraft to Europe.[6] In 1930, Ford countersued in Prague, and despite the possibility of anti-German sentiment, was decisively defeated a second time, with the court finding that Ford had infringed upon Junkers' patents.[6]

Although designed primarily for passenger use, the Trimotor could be easily adapted for hauling cargo, since its seats in the fuselage could be removed. To increase cargo capacity, one unusual feature was the provision of "drop-down" cargo holds below the lower inner wing sections of the 5-AT version.[3][7]

 
Corrugated wing of a 1929 Ford 4-AT-E Trimotor

One 4-AT with Wright J-4 200-hp engines was built for the U.S. Army Air Corps as the C-3, and seven with Wright R-790-3 (235 hp) as C-3As. The latter were upgraded to Wright R-975-1 (J6-9) radials at 300 hp and redesignated C-9. Five 5-ATs were built as C-4s or C-4As.

The original (commercial production) 4-AT had three air-cooled Wright radial engines. It carried a crew of three: a pilot, a copilot, and a stewardess, as well as eight or nine passengers [N 1].[3] The later 5-AT had more powerful Pratt & Whitney engines. All models had an aluminum corrugated sheet-metal body and wings. Unlike many aircraft of this era, extending through World War II, its control surfaces (ailerons, elevators, and rudders) were not fabric covered, but were also made of corrugated metal. As was common for the time, its rudder and elevators were actuated by metal cables that were strung along the external surface of the aircraft. Engine gauges were also mounted externally, on the engines, to be read by the pilot while looking through the aircraft windshield.[3] Another interesting feature was the use of the hand-operated "Johnny brake."[8]

Like Ford cars and tractors, these Ford aircraft were well designed, relatively inexpensive, and reliable (for the era).[citation needed] The combination of a metal structure and simple systems led to their reputation for ruggedness. Rudimentary service could be accomplished "in the field" with ground crews able to work on engines using scaffolding and platforms.[5] To fly into otherwise-inaccessible sites, the Ford Trimotor could be fitted with skis or floats.[5]

 
Externally mounted control wires of a Ford Trimotor

The rapid development of aircraft at this time (the vastly superior Boeing 247 first flew at start of 1933), along with the death of his personal pilot, Harry J. Brooks, on a test flight, led to Henry Ford's losing interest in aviation. While Ford did not make a profit on its aircraft business, Henry Ford's reputation lent credibility to the infant aviation and airline industries, and Ford helped introduce many aspects of the modern aviation infrastructure, including paved runways, passenger terminals, hangars, airmail, and radio navigation.[1] [N 2]

In the late 1920s, the Ford Aircraft Division was reputedly the "largest manufacturer of commercial airplanes in the world."[9] Alongside the Ford Trimotor, a new single-seat commuter aircraft, the Ford Flivver or "Sky Flivver" had been designed and flown in prototype form, but never entered series production.[9] The Trimotor was not to be Ford's last venture in aircraft production. During World War II, the largest aircraft manufacturing plant in the world was built at the Willow Run, Michigan plant, where Ford produced thousands of B-24 Liberator bombers under license from Consolidated Aircraft.[10]

William Stout left the Metal Airplane division of the Ford Motor Company in 1930. He continued to operate the Stout Engineering Laboratory, producing various aircraft. In 1954, Stout purchased the rights to the Ford Trimotor in an attempt to produce new examples. A new company formed from this effort brought back two modern examples of the trimotor aircraft, renamed the Stout Bushmaster 2000, but even with improvements that had been incorporated, performance was judged inferior to modern designs.

Operational history edit

 
Restored 1929 Ford 4-AT-E Trimotor "NC8407" owned by the Experimental Aircraft Association (EAA) and painted in the colors of Eastern Air Transport

Production ran from 1926 and 1933 and 199 were built, including 79 4-ATs, and 117 5-ATs, plus some experimental craft. Well over 100 airlines of the world flew the Ford Trimotor.[1] From mid-1927, the type was also flown on executive transportation duties by several commercial nonairline operators, including oil and manufacturing companies.

The impact of the Ford Trimotor on commercial aviation was immediate, as the design represented a "quantum leap over other airliners."[11] Within a few months of its introduction, Transcontinental Air Transport was created to provide coast-to-coast operation, capitalizing on the Trimotor's ability to provide reliable and, for the time, comfortable passenger service. While advertised as a transcontinental service, the airline had to rely on rail connections with a deluxe Pullman train that would be based in New York being the first part of the journey. Passengers then met a Trimotor in Port Columbus, Ohio, that would begin a hop across the continent ending at Waynoka, Oklahoma, where another train would take the passengers to Clovis, New Mexico, where the final journey would begin, again on a Trimotor, to end up at the Grand Central Air Terminal in Glendale, a few miles northeast of Los Angeles.[11] This demanding trip would be available for only a year before Transcontinental was merged into a combine with Western Air Service.

Ford Trimotors were also used extensively by Pan American Airways, for its first international scheduled flights from Key West to Havana, Cuba, in 1927. Eventually, Pan American extended service from North America and Cuba into Central and South America in the late 1920s and early 1930s.[12] One of Latin America's earliest airlines, Cubana de Aviación, was the first to use the Ford Trimotor in Latin America, starting in 1930, for its domestic services.

The heyday for Ford's transport was relatively brief, lasting only until 1933, when more modern airliners began to appear. Rather than completely disappearing, the Trimotors gained an enviable reputation for durability with Ford ads in 1929 proclaiming, "No Ford plane has yet worn out in service."[12] First being relegated to second- and third-tier airlines, the Trimotors continued to fly into the 1960s, with numerous examples being converted into cargo transports to further lengthen their careers, and when World War II began, the commercial versions were soon modified for military applications.

 
On display in The Smithsonian's National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C.

Some of the significant flights made by the Ford Trimotor in this period greatly enhanced the reputation of the type for strength and reliability. One example was Ford 4-AT Trimotor serial number 10, built in 1927. It flew in the United States and Mexico under registration number C-1077, and for several years in Canada under registration G-CARC. It had many notable accomplishments; it was flown by Charles Lindbergh and Amelia Earhart, among many others. It made the first commercial flight from the United States to Mexico City, as well as the first commercial flight over the Canadian Rockies. After damage on landing in 1936, it was grounded and remained for decades at Carcross, Yukon. In 1956, the wreck was salvaged and preserved, and in the mid-1980s, Greg Herrick took over C-1077 and began restoring it. As of 2006, C-1077 is in flying condition again, restored to its December 1927 appearance.[1]

On November 27 and 28, 1929, Commander Richard E. Byrd (navigator), chief pilot Bernt Balchen, and two other crewmen, the copilot and the photographer, made the first flight above the geographic South Pole in a Ford Trimotor that Byrd named the Floyd Bennett. This was one of three aircraft taken on this polar expedition, with the other two being named The Stars and Stripes and The Virginian, replacing the Fokker Trimotors that Byrd previously used.[5]

A Ford Trimotor was used for the flight of Elm Farm Ollie, the first cow to fly in an aircraft and to be milked mid-flight.[13]

Franklin Roosevelt flew aboard a Ford Trimotor in 1932 during his presidential campaign in one of the first uses of an aircraft in an election, replacing the traditional "whistle stop" train trips.[14]

 
The cockpit of NC-8407

A Ford Trimotor was used in a search for the lost flyers of the Sigizmund Levanevsky trans-polar flight in 1937. Movie stunt flyer Jimmie Mattern flew a specially modified Lockheed Electra along with fellow movie flyer, Garland Lincoln, flying a stripped-down Trimotor donated by the president of Superior Oil Company. With 1,800 gallons of avgas and 450 gallons of oil in the modified cabin, the Trimotor was intended to act as a "tanker" for the expedition. The Electra was able to transfer fuel in the air from the Trimotor, through a hose cast out the 4-AT's door. With the first aerial refueling test successful, the pair of pilots set out for Fairbanks, landing first at Burwash Landing, Yukon Territory, Canada, on August 15, 1937, but the Trimotor ran out of fuel and crashed in inclement weather the following day. The Trimotor was abandoned on the tundra.[15]

One of the major uses of the Trimotor after it was superseded as a passenger aircraft by more modern aircraft like the Boeing 247 (1933) or the Douglas DC-2 (1934), then DC-3, was the carrying of heavy freight to mining operations in jungles and mountains. The Trimotor was employed for decades in this role.[16]

In 1942, during the Battle of Bataan, a Trimotor was used in evacuations. The aircraft would haul 24 people nearly 500 miles a trip, twice daily. The aircraft was eventually strafed and destroyed by Japanese aircraft.[17]

 
Former Royal Australian Air Force (33 Squadron) Ford 5-AT-C A45-1 displayed at the Papua New Guinea National Museum and Art Gallery, Port Moresby.

In postwar years, the Ford Trimotors continued in limited service with small, regional air carriers. Scenic Airways Ford Trimotor N414H was used for 65 years as a sightseeing aircraft flying over the Grand Canyon.[3]

Variants edit

Ford designations edit

2-AT Pullman
Stout's monoplane with a single 400 hp (300 kW) Liberty L-12 V-12 engine, developed into 3-AT. 11 Built.
3-AT
Stout's tri-motor prototype with three 200 hp (150 kW) Wright J-4 Whirlwind radial engines. Outboard engines on wings, and nose engine mounted very low. One built.
4-AT
Prototype with three 200 hp (150 kW) J-4 Whirlwinds, with outer engines below wings. Two pilots in open cockpit, and eight passengers given half-round windows. One built.
4-AT-A
Production enclosed-cockpit version with rectangular windows with top corners rounded. 14 built.
4-AT-B
4-AT-Bs with three 220 hp (160 kW) Wright J-5 Whirlwind radials. Carried 12 passengers. 39 built.
4-AT-C
4-AT-B with nose engine replaced by a 400 hp (300 kW) Pratt & Whitney R-1340 Wasp radial. One built.
4-AT-D
4-AT-Bs with lengthened 78 ft 0 in (23.77 m) wings and fitted with various engines and other minor modifications. One built and two modified.
4-AT-E
4-AT-Bs with three 300 hp (220 kW) Wright J-6-9 Whirlwind nine-cylinder radials. 24 built with rectangular windows as used on 5-AT-A.
4-AT-F
4-AT-E but stressed for higher loads. One built.
5-AT-A
4-AT-E with longer 77 ft 10 in (23.72 m) wing and fuselage with an extra window on each side, powered by three 420 hp (310 kW) Wasps. Carried 13 passengers. Three built.
 
TAT Ford 5-AT-B flown by Lindbergh
5-AT-B
5-AT-A powered by 420 hp (310 kW) Wasp C-1 or SC-1 radials. Carried 15 passengers. 41 built.
5-AT-C
Improved version with engine cowlings and wheel pants, similar to the Ford 5-AT-A. Carried 17 passengers. 51 built.
5-AT-CS
5-AT-C floatplane with twin Edo floats. One built.
5-AT-D
Wings 8 in (20 cm) higher for taller cabin, and weights increased. Powered by three 450 hp (340 kW) Wasp SC radials. 20 built.
5-AT-DS
5-AT-D floatplane with Edo floats. One built.
5-AT-E
Version with outboard engines moved to wing leading edges. One 5-AT-C modified for tests, but converted back.
6-AT-A
Economy 5-AT-A with reduced power, load and performance. Three 300 hp (220 kW) Wright J-6-9 Whirlwind radials. Three built.
6-AT-AS
6-AT-A floatplane with Edo floats. One modified.
7-AT-A
6-AT-A with 420 hp (310 kW) Pratt & Whitney Wasp radial in the nose.
8-AT
5-AT-C converted to single-engine freighter. Six different engines ranging from 575 to 700 hp (429 to 522 kW) installed. One built.[18]
9-AT
4-AT-B with three 300 hp (220 kW) Pratt & Whitney R-985 Wasp Junior radial engines. One built.
10-AT
Project for larger aircraft with two engines above fuselage and two on wings. None built but developed into 12-AT and built as 14-A as a trimotor.
11-AT
4-AT-E with three 225 hp (168 kW) Packard DR-980 Diesel radial engines. One built.
12-AT
Project, development of 10-AT, not built.
13-A
5-AT-D with two 300 hp (220 kW) Wright J-6-9 Whirlwind radials, and a 575 hp (429 kW) Wright Cyclone radial in the nose. 1 built.
 
Ford 14-A photo from L'Aerophile May 1932
14-A
Similar to 10-AT and 12-AT, 1 built but not flown, was to have carried 32 passengers.[citation needed]

United States military designations edit

United States Army Air Corps edit

XC-3
One 4-AT-A evaluated by the USAAC.[19]
C-3
4-AT-A redesignated from XC-3 following evaluation[19]
C-3A
4-AT-E with three 235 hp (175 kW) Wright R-790-3 Whirlwind radials. Seven built, all converted to C-9 standard.[19]
C-4
One 4-AT-B for evaluation.[19]
 
Ford C-4A
C-4A
5-AT-D, with three 450 hp (340 kW) Pratt & Whitney R-1340-11 Wasp radials. Four built[19]
C-4B
Single C-4A re-engined with three 450 hp (340 kW) R-1340-7 Wasps.[19]
C-9
Redesignation of C-3As fitted with 300 hp (220 kW) Wright R-975-1 Whirlwind radials[20]
XB-906
5-AT-D modified into bomber with three 500 hp (370 kW) Wasps for United States Army Air Corps. One built.

US Navy and US Marines edit

XJR-1
One 4-AT-A evaluated by the United States Navy[21]
JR-2
U.S. Marine Corps 4-AT-E transport, with three Wright J-6-9 engines. Two built, redesignated RR-2 in 1931.[21]
JR-3
5-AT-C for U.S. Navy (one) and U.S. Marine Corps (two). Three built.[21]
 
Ford RR-1 at Langley, Virginia 1934
RR-1
XJR-1 redesignated in 1931.[22]
RR-2
JR-2 redesignated in 1931.[22]
RR-3
JR-3 redesignated in 1931.[22]
RR-4
Single 5-AT-C for Navy.[22]
RR-5
4-AT-Ds, one each for the U.S. Navy and U.S. Marines.[22]

Operators edit

Civil operators edit

 
Grand Canyon Airlines Ford Trimotor with wing baggage compartment open
  Colombia
  Canada
  • BYN Co.(British Yukon Navigation Company) CF-AZB flew in the Yukon from April 1936 until damaged in August 1940.[23]
  Republic of China
  Cuba
  Czechoslovakia
  Dominican Republic
  Mexico
  Spain
  USA
  Venezuela

Military operators edit

 
Royal Canadian Air Force Ford 6-AT-A G-CYWZ
  Australia
  Canada
  Colombia
  Spain
  United Kingdom
  USA

Accidents and incidents edit

  • On March 17, 1929, a Colonial Western Airways 4-AT-B Tri-Motor, NC7683, suffered a double engine failure during its initial climb after takeoff from Newark Airport in Newark, New Jersey. It failed to gain height and crashed into a railroad freight car loaded with sand, killing 14 of the 15 people on board the aircraft. At the time, it was the deadliest airplane accident in American history.[27][28]
  • On April 21, 1929, a Maddux Air Lines 5-AT-B Tri-Motor, NC9636, collided with a United States Army Air Service (USAAS) Boeing PW-9D fighter, 28-037, over San Diego; all six on board both aircraft died. The pilot of the Boeing PW-9D was performing stunts and then attempted to pass in front of the airliner, but misjudged the speed of the Maddux aircraft and his aircraft struck the cockpit of the Ford Tri-Motor.[27][29]
  • On September 3, 1929, a Transcontinental Air Transport 5-AT-B Tri-Motor, NC9649, named City of San Francisco, crashed into Mount Taylor near Grants, New Mexico in a thunderstorm; all eight people on board died.[30][31]
  • On January 19, 1930, a Maddux Air Lines 5-AT-C Tri-Motor, NC9689, operating as Flight 7, crashed near Oceanside, California due to adverse weather conditions, killing all 16 on board.[30][32]
  • On January 24, 1933, a Pacific Air Transport Ford Trimotor on a cargo flight crashed on takeoff, killing 2 out of the 3 occupants on board.[33]
  • On June 24, 1935, a Tri-Motor 5-AT-B of SACO (Servicio Aéreo Colombiano), registered F-31, collided with a Tri-Motor of SCADTA (Sociedad Colombo-Alemana de Transportes Aéreos), registered C-31, at Olaya Herrera Airfield near Medellín, Colombia; of the 20 on board both aircraft, only three passengers survived. Among the dead was the tango singer Carlos Gardel.[30][34]

Surviving aircraft edit

As of 2011, there are 18 Ford Trimotors in existence, eight of which have current FAA airworthiness certificates.[35][N 3]

Airworthy edit

 
Oldest flying Ford, a 1927 4-AT-A, Serial No. 10, NC1077
 
Ford 5-AT-C NC8419 at the Air Zoo in Michigan

On static display edit

Under restoration edit

  • C/N:38 tail number: N7584 (4-AT-B, January 1928) Originally owned by: Robertson Aircraft, St Louis. Currently owned by: Kermit Weeks. It was badly damaged in Florida by Hurricane Andrew, in the fall of 1992. Currently Located: Vicksburg, Michigan, USA.[68]
  • C/N:58 tail number: NC9642 (4-AT-E, January 1929) Originally owned by: Mohawk Airways, NY. Currently owned by: Maurice Hovius' Hov-aire, Inc. Possible rebuild. Sale reported. Currently Located: Vicksburg, Michigan, USA.[69]
  • C/N:62 tail number: NC8400 (4-AT-E, January 1929) Originally owned by: Mohawk Airways, NY. Currently owned by: Maurice Hovius' Hov-aire, Inc. Possible rebuild. Currently Located: Vicksburg, Michigan, USA.[70]
  • C/N:65 tail number: NC8403 (4-AT-E, May 1929) The "Ptarmigan II" Originally owned by: Mamer Flying Service. Currently owned by Alaska Aviation Heritage Museum. Possible restoration. As of February 10, 2005, currently Located at Golden Wings Museum near Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA.[71]
  • C/N:13 tail number: NC9667 (5-AT-B, 1929) The "AN-AAR" Originally owned by Southwest Air Fast Express (S.A.F.E.way). Currently owned by: Maurice Hovius' Hov-aire, Inc. This is a restoration project undertaken by the "Tin Goose Chapter", EAA 1247, in Port Clinton, Ohio, USA.[72][73]

From 1954 onwards, efforts were made to modernize the Trimotor as the Stout Bushmaster 2000.[8] Saddled with financial, management and marketing problems, only two examples were completed with a third fuselage started but never completed.[74]

Specifications (Ford 4-AT-E Trimotor) edit

Short recording alongside EAA's Ford TriMotor while in Miami, Fl, USA

Data from Flight International 14 November 1930[75]

General characteristics

  • Crew: 3 (pilot, co-pilot, flight attendant)
  • Capacity: 11 passengers
  • Length: 49 ft 10 in (15.19 m)
  • Wingspan: 74 ft 0 in (22.56 m)
  • Height: 11 ft 9 in (3.58 m)
  • Cabin length: 16 ft 3 in (5 m)
  • Cabin width (average): 4 ft 6 in (1 m)
  • Cabin height (average): 6 ft 0 in (2 m)
  • Cabin volume: 461 cu ft (13 m3)
  • Airfoil: root: Göttingen 386; tip: Göttingen 386 [76]
  • Empty weight: 6,500 lb (2,948 kg)
  • Gross weight: 10,130 lb (4,595 kg)
  • Fuel capacity: 231 US gal (192 imp gal; 874 L)
  • Oil capacity: 24 US gal (20 imp gal; 91 L)
  • Powerplant: 3 × Wright J-6-9 Whirlwind 9-cylinder air-cooled radial piston engines, 300 hp (220 kW) each for take-off
  • Propellers: 2-bladed fixed-pitch propellers

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 132 mph (212 km/h, 115 kn)
  • Cruise speed: 107 mph (172 km/h, 93 kn) at 1,700 rpm
  • Stall speed: 57 mph (92 km/h, 50 kn)
  • Range: 570 mi (920 km, 500 nmi)
  • Service ceiling: 16,500 ft (5,000 m)
  • Absolute ceiling: 18,600 ft (5,669 m)
  • Absolute ceiling on 2 engines: 7,100 ft (2,164 m)
  • Rate of climb: 920 ft/min (4.7 m/s)
  • Time to altitude: 7,200 ft (2,195 m) in 10 minutes

Notable appearances in media edit

See also edit

Related development

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Up to 12 passengers could be accommodated in special configurations.
  2. ^ Note: The 28-page booklet, The Amazing Story of America's Oldest Flying Airliner, describes the history of the Ford Trimotor 4-AT-10, C-1077, also known as G-CARC "Niagara". It also describes the restoration process and some general history of Ford's Trimotor, as well as his aviation enterprises.
  3. ^ Note: The Ford Tri-Motor List is an enthusiast's register of existing Ford Trimotors, Bushmasters and Stinson Trimotors.

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c d Herrick, Greg A. (PDF). Archived from the original on June 28, 2017. Retrieved April 4, 2019.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) fordtri-motor.com, Yellowstone Aviation, Inc (Jackson, Wyoming), 2004. Retrieved: April 4, 2019.
  2. ^ "Ford Trimotor." April 23, 2006, at the Wayback Machine Smithsonian. Retrieved: July 14, 2010.
  3. ^ a b c d e Winchester 2004, p.151.
  4. ^ Larkins 1992, p.29
  5. ^ a b c d Winchester 2004, p. 150.
  6. ^ a b Larkins 1992, pp.154–156
  7. ^ "Plane Carries Mail In Wing To Increase Load"(photo of under wing cargo carriers). Popular Mechanics, February 1931.
  8. ^ a b "Return of the Tin Goose." 2011-05-29 at the Wayback Machine Time, January 6, 1967. Retrieved: July 29, 2008.
  9. ^ a b Head and Pretzer 1990, p. 53.
  10. ^ Head and Pretzer 1990, p. 57.
  11. ^ a b O'Leary 2006, p. 54.
  12. ^ a b O'Leary 2006, p. 55.
  13. ^ C. B. Harding (2000). The Guernsey Breed: An Illustrated Chronicle. Hillsboro Press. ISBN 978-1-57736-177-0.
  14. ^ Larkins 1992, p. 170.
  15. ^ Wynne 1987, p. 53.
  16. ^ Jardine, T. F. "Airplanes Help Mine Gold" (photos of Trimotor hauling freight to mine operations in Andes). Popular Science Monthly, March 1935.
  17. ^ "Those Fabulous Fords." Popular Mechanics,June 1953.
  18. ^ AAHS Journal: 41. Spring 2004. {{cite journal}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  19. ^ a b c d e f Andrade 1979, p. 95.
  20. ^ Andrade 1979, p. 96.
  21. ^ a b c Andrade 1979, p. 197.
  22. ^ a b c d e Andrade 1979, p. 218.
  23. ^ Tidd, Claude. "Yukon Archives Image CF-AZB". tc.gov.yk.ca. Retrieved July 26, 2017.
  24. ^ Best 2007, pp. 72–73
  25. ^ "Ford Trimotor Videos." 2011-04-27 at the Wayback Machine Fly Dominican Republic. Retrieved: July 14, 2010.
  26. ^ March 1998, p. 250.
  27. ^ a b Larkins, William T. (1958). The Ford Story: A Pictorial History of the Ford Tri-Motor, 1927-1957. Wichita, Kansas: Robert R. Longo Company. p. 133. hdl:2027/mdp.39015002911553. Retrieved April 8, 2019.
  28. ^ Ranter, Harro. "ASN Aircraft accident Ford 4-AT-B Tri-Motor NC7683 Newark Airport, NJ (EWR)".
  29. ^ Ranter, Harro. "ASN Aircraft accident Ford 5-AT-B Tri-Motor NC9636 San Diego Airport, CA (SAN)". Retrieved April 8, 2019.
  30. ^ a b c Larkins, William T. (February 2, 1958). The Ford story; a pictorial history of the Ford Tri-motor, 1927-1957. R. R. Longo Co. – via HathiTrust.
  31. ^ Ranter, Harro. "ASN Aircraft accident Ford 5-AT-B Tri-Motor NC9649 Gallup, NM". Retrieved April 8, 2019.
  32. ^ Ranter, Harro. "ASN Aircraft accident Ford 5-AT-C Tri-Motor NC9689 Oceanside, CA". Retrieved April 8, 2019.
  33. ^ Accident description for NC431H at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on August 14, 2023..
  34. ^ Ranter, Harro. "ASN Aircraft accident Ford 5-AT-B Tri-Motor F-31 Medellín-Enrique Olaya Herrera Airport (EOH)".
  35. ^ a b Wiggins, Arthur B. . Archived from the original on November 16, 2018. Retrieved October 2, 2006.. trimotors.awiggins.com, 2011. Retrieved: April 4, 2019.
  36. ^ Herrick, Greg. . Archived from the original on March 25, 2018. Retrieved April 4, 2019.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link). fordtri-motor.com, Yellowstone Aviation, Inc (Jackson, Wyoming), 2004. Retrieved: April 4, 2019.
  37. ^ "Ford Trimotor." Golden Wings Museum. Retrieved: July 14, 2010.
  38. ^ Wiggins, Arthur Brenton. . Archived from the original on November 16, 2018. Retrieved October 2, 2006.. The Ford Tri-motors!, August 12, 2011. Retrieved: April 4, 2019.
  39. ^ "Aircraft N1077 Profile." "Airport-Data.com", 2012. Retrieved: April 9, 2012.
  40. ^ "Amelia Earhart's aircraft wrangler - Australian Flying". www.australianflying.com.au.
  41. ^ "Aircraft Inquiry". registry.faa.gov. Retrieved June 19, 2022.
  42. ^ "The Mighty Tri-Motor Joins the Air Adventures Pedigree" (PDF). Approaches. Spring 2020. Retrieved June 19, 2022.
  43. ^ Wiggins, Arthur Brenton. . Archived from the original on November 16, 2018. Retrieved October 2, 2006.. The Ford Tri-motors!, August 12, 2011. Retrieved: April 4, 2019.
  44. ^ "Aircraft N9612 Profile." "Airport-Data.com", 2012. Retrieved: April 9, 2012.
  45. ^ Jones, William. "Ford 4AT Tri-Motor".
  46. ^ "Ford Tri-Motor Tour" July 13, 2017, at the Wayback Machine Experimental Aircraft Association. Retrieved: July 26, 2017.
  47. ^ Wiggins, Arthur Brenton. . Archived from the original on November 16, 2018. Retrieved October 2, 2006.. The Ford Tri-motors!, August 12, 2011. Retrieved: April 4, 2019.
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Bibliography edit

  • Andrade, John. U.S. Military Aircraft Designations and Serials since 1909. Hinckley, Leicestershire, UK: Midland Counties Publications, 1979. ISBN 0-904597-22-9.
  • Barth, Jack E. "Talkback". Air Enthusiast, No. 10, July–September 1979, p. 79. ISSN 0143-5450
  • Best, Martin S. (Summer 2007). "The Development of Commercial Aviation in China: Part 2 : China National Aviation Corporation (pre-WWII)". Air-Britain Archive. pp. 51–80. ISSN 0262-4923.
  • Head, Jeanine M. and William S. Pretzer. Henry Ford: A Pictorial Biography. Dearborn, Michigan: Henry Ford Museum & Greenfield Village, 1990. No ISBN.
  • Hoy, Bruce D. (April–July 1980). "Talkback". Air Enthusiast. No. 12. pp. 49–50. ISSN 0143-5450.
  • Larkins, William T. The Ford Tri-Motor, 1926–1992. Atglen, Pennsylvania: Schiffer Publishing, 1992. ISBN 0-88740-416-2.
  • Larkins, William T. (April–July 1980). "Talkback". Air Enthusiast. No. 12. p. 50. ISSN 0143-5450.
  • March, Daniel L. British Warplanes of World War II. London: Aerospace Publishing, 1998. ISBN 1 874023-92-1.
  • O'Callaghan, Timothy J. The Aviation Legacy of Henry & Edsel Ford. Ann Arbor, Michigan: Proctor Publications, 2002. ISBN 1-928623-01-8.
  • O'Leary, Michael. "When Fords Ruled the Sky (Part Two)". Air Classics, Volume 42, No. 5, May 2006.
  • Winchester, Jim, ed. "Ford Trimotor". Civil Aircraft (The Aviation Factfile). London: Grange Books plc, 2004. ISBN 1-84013-642-1.
  • Wynne, H. Hugh. The Motion Picture Stunt Pilots and Hollywood's Classic Aviation Movies. Missoula, Montana: Pictorial Histories Publishing Co., 1987. ISBN 0-933126-85-9.

Further reading edit

  • Lee, John G. (Summer 2014). "Early Days of the Ford Trimotor: Recollections of a Participant". AAHS Journal. 59 (52). American Aviation Historical Society: 128–134.
  • Towle, Tom (Summer 2014). "Designing the Ford Trimotor". AAHS Journal. 59 (52). American Aviation Historical Society: 122–127.
  • Weiss, David A. The Saga of the Tin Goose: The Story of the Ford Trimotor. Brooklyn, New York: Cumberland Enterprises, Incorporated, 1996. ISBN 0-9634299-2-2.
  • Litwak, Jerry: 'Skinning a Tin Goose ... the hard way'. Pages 251 and 252 of 'Air International' magazine, May, 1978 describe the rebuilding of Scenic Airway's Tin Goose 5AT, owned by John Seibold, after it groundlooped in Nevada on February 6, 1977. Per the article, it was supposedly ready to fly again by late 1978.

External links edit

  • Ford Trimotor "a tribute to the Ford Tri-Motor", and contains facts, pictures, bibliography and more.
  • EAA's Ford Trimotor 4AT-E virtual tour detailing the entire aircraft[permanent dead link]
  • "The Tin Goose Lives up to Her Name" (pilot report), Budd Davisson, June 1986, Air Progress, Vol.45, No. 5, transcribed at Airbum.com

ford, trimotor, also, called, motor, nicknamed, goose, american, three, engined, transport, aircraft, production, started, 1925, companies, henry, ford, ended, june, 1933, after, been, made, designed, civil, aviation, market, also, service, with, military, uni. The Ford Trimotor also called the Tri Motor and nicknamed the Tin Goose is an American three engined transport aircraft Production started in 1925 by the companies of Henry Ford and ended on June 7 1933 after 199 had been made 1 It was designed for the civil aviation market but also saw service with military units Trimotor Experimental Aircraft Association EAA Ford 4 AT E Trimotor 2014 Role Transport aircraft Manufacturer Stout Metal Airplane Division of the Ford Motor Company Designer William Bushnell Stout First flight June 11 1926 Introduction 1926 Status Limited excursion service Primary users about 100 airlinesUnited States Army Air Corps United States Navy Royal Canadian Air Force Number built 199 Variants Stout Bushmaster 2000 Contents 1 Design and development 2 Operational history 3 Variants 3 1 Ford designations 3 2 United States military designations 3 2 1 United States Army Air Corps 3 2 2 US Navy and US Marines 4 Operators 4 1 Civil operators 4 2 Military operators 5 Accidents and incidents 6 Surviving aircraft 6 1 Airworthy 6 2 On static display 6 3 Under restoration 7 Specifications Ford 4 AT E Trimotor 8 Notable appearances in media 9 See also 10 References 10 1 Notes 10 2 Citations 10 3 Bibliography 11 Further reading 12 External linksDesign and development edit nbsp Ford Trimotor interior In the early 1920s Henry Ford along with a group of 19 others including his son Edsel invested in the Stout Metal Airplane Company Stout a bold and imaginative salesman sent a mimeographed form letter to leading manufacturers blithely asking for 1 000 and adding For your one thousand dollars you will get one definite promise You will never get your money back clarify Stout raised 20 000 including 1 000 each from Edsel and Henry Ford 2 In 1925 Ford bought Stout and its aircraft designs The single engined Stout monoplane was turned into a trimotor the Stout 3 AT with three Curtiss Wright air cooled radial engines After a prototype was built and test flown with poor results the 4 AT and 5 AT emerged The Ford Trimotor using all metal construction was not a revolutionary concept but it was certainly more advanced than the standard construction techniques of the 1920s The aircraft resembled the Fokker F VII Trimotor except for being all metal which Henry Ford claimed made it the safest airliner around 3 Its fuselage and wings followed a design pioneered by Junkers 4 during World War I with the Junkers J I and used postwar in a series of airliners starting with the Junkers F 13 low wing monoplane of 1920 of which a number were exported to the US the Junkers K 16 high wing airliner of 1921 and the Junkers G 24 trimotor of 1924 All of these were constructed of aluminum alloy which was corrugated for added stiffness although the resulting drag reduced its overall performance 5 So similar were the designs that Junkers sued and won when Ford attempted to export an aircraft to Europe 6 In 1930 Ford countersued in Prague and despite the possibility of anti German sentiment was decisively defeated a second time with the court finding that Ford had infringed upon Junkers patents 6 Although designed primarily for passenger use the Trimotor could be easily adapted for hauling cargo since its seats in the fuselage could be removed To increase cargo capacity one unusual feature was the provision of drop down cargo holds below the lower inner wing sections of the 5 AT version 3 7 nbsp Corrugated wing of a 1929 Ford 4 AT E Trimotor One 4 AT with Wright J 4 200 hp engines was built for the U S Army Air Corps as the C 3 and seven with Wright R 790 3 235 hp as C 3As The latter were upgraded to Wright R 975 1 J6 9 radials at 300 hp and redesignated C 9 Five 5 ATs were built as C 4s or C 4As The original commercial production 4 AT had three air cooled Wright radial engines It carried a crew of three a pilot a copilot and a stewardess as well as eight or nine passengers N 1 3 The later 5 AT had more powerful Pratt amp Whitney engines All models had an aluminum corrugated sheet metal body and wings Unlike many aircraft of this era extending through World War II its control surfaces ailerons elevators and rudders were not fabric covered but were also made of corrugated metal As was common for the time its rudder and elevators were actuated by metal cables that were strung along the external surface of the aircraft Engine gauges were also mounted externally on the engines to be read by the pilot while looking through the aircraft windshield 3 Another interesting feature was the use of the hand operated Johnny brake 8 Like Ford cars and tractors these Ford aircraft were well designed relatively inexpensive and reliable for the era citation needed The combination of a metal structure and simple systems led to their reputation for ruggedness Rudimentary service could be accomplished in the field with ground crews able to work on engines using scaffolding and platforms 5 To fly into otherwise inaccessible sites the Ford Trimotor could be fitted with skis or floats 5 nbsp Externally mounted control wires of a Ford Trimotor The rapid development of aircraft at this time the vastly superior Boeing 247 first flew at start of 1933 along with the death of his personal pilot Harry J Brooks on a test flight led to Henry Ford s losing interest in aviation While Ford did not make a profit on its aircraft business Henry Ford s reputation lent credibility to the infant aviation and airline industries and Ford helped introduce many aspects of the modern aviation infrastructure including paved runways passenger terminals hangars airmail and radio navigation 1 N 2 In the late 1920s the Ford Aircraft Division was reputedly the largest manufacturer of commercial airplanes in the world 9 Alongside the Ford Trimotor a new single seat commuter aircraft the Ford Flivver or Sky Flivver had been designed and flown in prototype form but never entered series production 9 The Trimotor was not to be Ford s last venture in aircraft production During World War II the largest aircraft manufacturing plant in the world was built at the Willow Run Michigan plant where Ford produced thousands of B 24 Liberator bombers under license from Consolidated Aircraft 10 William Stout left the Metal Airplane division of the Ford Motor Company in 1930 He continued to operate the Stout Engineering Laboratory producing various aircraft In 1954 Stout purchased the rights to the Ford Trimotor in an attempt to produce new examples A new company formed from this effort brought back two modern examples of the trimotor aircraft renamed the Stout Bushmaster 2000 but even with improvements that had been incorporated performance was judged inferior to modern designs Operational history edit nbsp Restored 1929 Ford 4 AT E Trimotor NC8407 owned by the Experimental Aircraft Association EAA and painted in the colors of Eastern Air Transport Production ran from 1926 and 1933 and 199 were built including 79 4 ATs and 117 5 ATs plus some experimental craft Well over 100 airlines of the world flew the Ford Trimotor 1 From mid 1927 the type was also flown on executive transportation duties by several commercial nonairline operators including oil and manufacturing companies The impact of the Ford Trimotor on commercial aviation was immediate as the design represented a quantum leap over other airliners 11 Within a few months of its introduction Transcontinental Air Transport was created to provide coast to coast operation capitalizing on the Trimotor s ability to provide reliable and for the time comfortable passenger service While advertised as a transcontinental service the airline had to rely on rail connections with a deluxe Pullman train that would be based in New York being the first part of the journey Passengers then met a Trimotor in Port Columbus Ohio that would begin a hop across the continent ending at Waynoka Oklahoma where another train would take the passengers to Clovis New Mexico where the final journey would begin again on a Trimotor to end up at the Grand Central Air Terminal in Glendale a few miles northeast of Los Angeles 11 This demanding trip would be available for only a year before Transcontinental was merged into a combine with Western Air Service Ford Trimotors were also used extensively by Pan American Airways for its first international scheduled flights from Key West to Havana Cuba in 1927 Eventually Pan American extended service from North America and Cuba into Central and South America in the late 1920s and early 1930s 12 One of Latin America s earliest airlines Cubana de Aviacion was the first to use the Ford Trimotor in Latin America starting in 1930 for its domestic services The heyday for Ford s transport was relatively brief lasting only until 1933 when more modern airliners began to appear Rather than completely disappearing the Trimotors gained an enviable reputation for durability with Ford ads in 1929 proclaiming No Ford plane has yet worn out in service 12 First being relegated to second and third tier airlines the Trimotors continued to fly into the 1960s with numerous examples being converted into cargo transports to further lengthen their careers and when World War II began the commercial versions were soon modified for military applications nbsp On display in The Smithsonian s National Air and Space Museum in Washington D C Some of the significant flights made by the Ford Trimotor in this period greatly enhanced the reputation of the type for strength and reliability One example was Ford 4 AT Trimotor serial number 10 built in 1927 It flew in the United States and Mexico under registration number C 1077 and for several years in Canada under registration G CARC It had many notable accomplishments it was flown by Charles Lindbergh and Amelia Earhart among many others It made the first commercial flight from the United States to Mexico City as well as the first commercial flight over the Canadian Rockies After damage on landing in 1936 it was grounded and remained for decades at Carcross Yukon In 1956 the wreck was salvaged and preserved and in the mid 1980s Greg Herrick took over C 1077 and began restoring it As of 2006 C 1077 is in flying condition again restored to its December 1927 appearance 1 On November 27 and 28 1929 Commander Richard E Byrd navigator chief pilot Bernt Balchen and two other crewmen the copilot and the photographer made the first flight above the geographic South Pole in a Ford Trimotor that Byrd named the Floyd Bennett This was one of three aircraft taken on this polar expedition with the other two being named The Stars and Stripes and The Virginian replacing the Fokker Trimotors that Byrd previously used 5 A Ford Trimotor was used for the flight of Elm Farm Ollie the first cow to fly in an aircraft and to be milked mid flight 13 Franklin Roosevelt flew aboard a Ford Trimotor in 1932 during his presidential campaign in one of the first uses of an aircraft in an election replacing the traditional whistle stop train trips 14 nbsp The cockpit of NC 8407 A Ford Trimotor was used in a search for the lost flyers of the Sigizmund Levanevsky trans polar flight in 1937 Movie stunt flyer Jimmie Mattern flew a specially modified Lockheed Electra along with fellow movie flyer Garland Lincoln flying a stripped down Trimotor donated by the president of Superior Oil Company With 1 800 gallons of avgas and 450 gallons of oil in the modified cabin the Trimotor was intended to act as a tanker for the expedition The Electra was able to transfer fuel in the air from the Trimotor through a hose cast out the 4 AT s door With the first aerial refueling test successful the pair of pilots set out for Fairbanks landing first at Burwash Landing Yukon Territory Canada on August 15 1937 but the Trimotor ran out of fuel and crashed in inclement weather the following day The Trimotor was abandoned on the tundra 15 One of the major uses of the Trimotor after it was superseded as a passenger aircraft by more modern aircraft like the Boeing 247 1933 or the Douglas DC 2 1934 then DC 3 was the carrying of heavy freight to mining operations in jungles and mountains The Trimotor was employed for decades in this role 16 In 1942 during the Battle of Bataan a Trimotor was used in evacuations The aircraft would haul 24 people nearly 500 miles a trip twice daily The aircraft was eventually strafed and destroyed by Japanese aircraft 17 nbsp Former Royal Australian Air Force 33 Squadron Ford 5 AT C A45 1 displayed at the Papua New Guinea National Museum and Art Gallery Port Moresby In postwar years the Ford Trimotors continued in limited service with small regional air carriers Scenic Airways Ford Trimotor N414H was used for 65 years as a sightseeing aircraft flying over the Grand Canyon 3 Variants editFord designations edit 2 AT Pullman Stout s monoplane with a single 400 hp 300 kW Liberty L 12 V 12 engine developed into 3 AT 11 Built 3 AT Stout s tri motor prototype with three 200 hp 150 kW Wright J 4 Whirlwind radial engines Outboard engines on wings and nose engine mounted very low One built 4 AT Prototype with three 200 hp 150 kW J 4 Whirlwinds with outer engines below wings Two pilots in open cockpit and eight passengers given half round windows One built 4 AT A Production enclosed cockpit version with rectangular windows with top corners rounded 14 built 4 AT B 4 AT Bs with three 220 hp 160 kW Wright J 5 Whirlwind radials Carried 12 passengers 39 built 4 AT C 4 AT B with nose engine replaced by a 400 hp 300 kW Pratt amp Whitney R 1340 Wasp radial One built 4 AT D 4 AT Bs with lengthened 78 ft 0 in 23 77 m wings and fitted with various engines and other minor modifications One built and two modified 4 AT E 4 AT Bs with three 300 hp 220 kW Wright J 6 9 Whirlwind nine cylinder radials 24 built with rectangular windows as used on 5 AT A 4 AT F 4 AT E but stressed for higher loads One built 5 AT A 4 AT E with longer 77 ft 10 in 23 72 m wing and fuselage with an extra window on each side powered by three 420 hp 310 kW Wasps Carried 13 passengers Three built nbsp TAT Ford 5 AT B flown by Lindbergh 5 AT B 5 AT A powered by 420 hp 310 kW Wasp C 1 or SC 1 radials Carried 15 passengers 41 built 5 AT C Improved version with engine cowlings and wheel pants similar to the Ford 5 AT A Carried 17 passengers 51 built 5 AT CS 5 AT C floatplane with twin Edo floats One built 5 AT D Wings 8 in 20 cm higher for taller cabin and weights increased Powered by three 450 hp 340 kW Wasp SC radials 20 built 5 AT DS 5 AT D floatplane with Edo floats One built 5 AT E Version with outboard engines moved to wing leading edges One 5 AT C modified for tests but converted back 6 AT A Economy 5 AT A with reduced power load and performance Three 300 hp 220 kW Wright J 6 9 Whirlwind radials Three built 6 AT AS 6 AT A floatplane with Edo floats One modified 7 AT A 6 AT A with 420 hp 310 kW Pratt amp Whitney Wasp radial in the nose 8 AT 5 AT C converted to single engine freighter Six different engines ranging from 575 to 700 hp 429 to 522 kW installed One built 18 9 AT 4 AT B with three 300 hp 220 kW Pratt amp Whitney R 985 Wasp Junior radial engines One built 10 AT Project for larger aircraft with two engines above fuselage and two on wings None built but developed into 12 AT and built as 14 A as a trimotor 11 AT 4 AT E with three 225 hp 168 kW Packard DR 980 Diesel radial engines One built 12 AT Project development of 10 AT not built 13 A 5 AT D with two 300 hp 220 kW Wright J 6 9 Whirlwind radials and a 575 hp 429 kW Wright Cyclone radial in the nose 1 built nbsp Ford 14 A photo from L Aerophile May 1932 14 A Similar to 10 AT and 12 AT 1 built but not flown was to have carried 32 passengers citation needed United States military designations edit United States Army Air Corps edit XC 3 One 4 AT A evaluated by the USAAC 19 C 3 4 AT A redesignated from XC 3 following evaluation 19 C 3A 4 AT E with three 235 hp 175 kW Wright R 790 3 Whirlwind radials Seven built all converted to C 9 standard 19 C 4 One 4 AT B for evaluation 19 nbsp Ford C 4A C 4A 5 AT D with three 450 hp 340 kW Pratt amp Whitney R 1340 11 Wasp radials Four built 19 C 4B Single C 4A re engined with three 450 hp 340 kW R 1340 7 Wasps 19 C 9 Redesignation of C 3As fitted with 300 hp 220 kW Wright R 975 1 Whirlwind radials 20 XB 906 5 AT D modified into bomber with three 500 hp 370 kW Wasps for United States Army Air Corps One built US Navy and US Marines edit XJR 1 One 4 AT A evaluated by the United States Navy 21 JR 2 U S Marine Corps 4 AT E transport with three Wright J 6 9 engines Two built redesignated RR 2 in 1931 21 JR 3 5 AT C for U S Navy one and U S Marine Corps two Three built 21 nbsp Ford RR 1 at Langley Virginia 1934 RR 1 XJR 1 redesignated in 1931 22 RR 2 JR 2 redesignated in 1931 22 RR 3 JR 3 redesignated in 1931 22 RR 4 Single 5 AT C for Navy 22 RR 5 4 AT Ds one each for the U S Navy and U S Marines 22 Operators editCivil operators edit nbsp Grand Canyon Airlines Ford Trimotor with wing baggage compartment open nbsp Colombia SACO SCADTA nbsp Canada BYN Co British Yukon Navigation Company CF AZB flew in the Yukon from April 1936 until damaged in August 1940 23 nbsp Republic of China China National Aviation Corporation CNAC operated at least three 5 ATs 24 nbsp Cuba Cubana nbsp Czechoslovakia Czechoslovak Airlines nbsp Dominican Republic Dominicana de Aviacion Dominican Republic airline flew Ford Trimotors in the early 1930s 25 nbsp Mexico Mexicana nbsp Spain First CLASSA then LAPE after Iberia nbsp USA American Airways Eastern Air Transport Grand Canyon Airlines Island Airlines Bass Islands Ohio Maddux Air Lines Northwest Airways Pan American Airways Southwest Air Fast Express S A F E way Star Air Service Texaco Transcontinental Air Transport Transcontinental amp Western Air TWA United Air Lines Wien Air Alaska nbsp Venezuela AVENSA Military operators edit nbsp Royal Canadian Air Force Ford 6 AT A G CYWZ nbsp Australia Royal Australian Air Force No 24 Squadron RAAF nbsp Canada Royal Canadian Air Force operated a single 6 AT A 6 AT AS nbsp Colombia Colombian Air Force nbsp Spain Spanish Republican Air Force nbsp United Kingdom Royal Air Force No 271 Squadron RAF operated a single 5 AT D during 1940 26 nbsp USA United States Army Air Corps United States Marine Corps United States NavyAccidents and incidents editOn March 17 1929 a Colonial Western Airways 4 AT B Tri Motor NC7683 suffered a double engine failure during its initial climb after takeoff from Newark Airport in Newark New Jersey It failed to gain height and crashed into a railroad freight car loaded with sand killing 14 of the 15 people on board the aircraft At the time it was the deadliest airplane accident in American history 27 28 On April 21 1929 a Maddux Air Lines 5 AT B Tri Motor NC9636 collided with a United States Army Air Service USAAS Boeing PW 9D fighter 28 037 over San Diego all six on board both aircraft died The pilot of the Boeing PW 9D was performing stunts and then attempted to pass in front of the airliner but misjudged the speed of the Maddux aircraft and his aircraft struck the cockpit of the Ford Tri Motor 27 29 On September 3 1929 a Transcontinental Air Transport 5 AT B Tri Motor NC9649 named City of San Francisco crashed into Mount Taylor near Grants New Mexico in a thunderstorm all eight people on board died 30 31 On January 19 1930 a Maddux Air Lines 5 AT C Tri Motor NC9689 operating as Flight 7 crashed near Oceanside California due to adverse weather conditions killing all 16 on board 30 32 On January 24 1933 a Pacific Air Transport Ford Trimotor on a cargo flight crashed on takeoff killing 2 out of the 3 occupants on board 33 On June 24 1935 a Tri Motor 5 AT B of SACO Servicio Aereo Colombiano registered F 31 collided with a Tri Motor of SCADTA Sociedad Colombo Alemana de Transportes Aereos registered C 31 at Olaya Herrera Airfield near Medellin Colombia of the 20 on board both aircraft only three passengers survived Among the dead was the tango singer Carlos Gardel 30 34 Surviving aircraft editAs of 2011 there are 18 Ford Trimotors in existence eight of which have current FAA airworthiness certificates 35 N 3 Airworthy edit nbsp Oldest flying Ford a 1927 4 AT A Serial No 10 NC1077 nbsp Ford 5 AT C NC8419 at the Air Zoo in Michigan C N 10 tail number NC1077 4 AT B September 1927 NC1077 G CARC Niagara Currently owned by Greg Herrick s Yellowstone Aviation Oldest flying Trimotor C N Construction Number 10 36 It is based at the Golden Wings Museum 37 near Minneapolis Minnesota US 38 39 This aircraft featured in the 2009 film Amelia a biopic of aviator Amelia Earhart 40 C N 42 tail number NC9610 Formerly NC7684 4 AT B September 1928 Currently owned by Yankee Air Force based in Belleville Michigan US 41 42 C N 55 tail number NC9612 4 AT E 1929 The City of Richmond Originally owned by Mamer Flying Service Spokane WA Currently owned by Scott Glover Mid America Flight Museum It is based in Mt Pleasant Texas US 43 44 45 C N 69 tail number NC8407 4 AT E 1929 Originally owned by Eastern Air Transport Currently owned by The Experimental Aircraft Association is based at the EAA AirVenture Museum in Oshkosh Wisconsin US It tours the United States performing at airshows and other aviation events 46 47 48 C N 8 tail number NC9645 5 AT B 1928 City of Wichita City of Port Clinton Currently owned by Liberty Aviation Museum It is dressed in Transcontinental Air Transport livery It is based at the Erie Ottawa International Airport in Port Clinton Ohio US 49 It was previously owned by Evergreen Vintage Aircraft Inc and previously based at the Evergreen Aviation Museum McMinnville Oregon US 50 51 C N 34 tail number N9651 5 AT B 1929 The City of Philadelphia Originally owned by Trans Continental Air Transport Currently owned by Kermit Weeks It is based at Fantasy of Flight in Polk City Florida US This aircraft has made many film appearances including Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom 52 53 54 C N 58 tail number NC8419 5 AT C 1929 Originally owned by Northwest Airlines Currently owned by Kalamazoo Aviation History Museum Based at The Air Zoo in Kalamazoo Michigan US The airplane combined several 5 AT airframes one of which served with five carriers before being used by the United States Forest Service between 1951 and 1959 The original crashed and burned on August 4 1959 while landing at a remote strip in the Nez Perce National Forest killing two smokejumpers 55 56 57 58 C N 74 tail number N414H 5 AT C 1928 Originally owned by Ford Motor Co Previously owned by Sopwith Ltd It was based at Valle Airport in Valle Arizona US It was used in 2008 and 2009 for flight instruction and type ratings 59 60 61 It is now owned by and based at the Western Antique Aeroplane amp Automobile Museum WAAAM in Hood River Oregon US 62 On static display edit C N 15 tail number NX4542 4 AT B 1928 Richard E Byrd s South Pole aircraft Originally owned by Ford Motor Company Currently owned by Henry Ford Museum It is on display at The Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn Michigan USA 63 C N 46 tail number NC7861 4 AT B Unknown Originally owned by Union Electric St Louis Currently owned by National Museum of Naval Aviation Pensacola Florida USA 63 Displayed as Navy RR 5 serial A 9206 64 C N 11 tail number NC9637 5 AT B 1929 Originally owned by Pan Am Currently owned by the San Diego Air amp Space Museum in San Diego California USA 65 C N 39 tail number NC9683 5 AT B 1929 Originally owned by American Airlines Currently owned by The Smithsonian s National Air and Space Museum 66 in Washington D C 35 67 C N 60 tail number none ex RAAF 5 AT C 1929 Originally owned by Ford Motor Company in England Currently owned by Papua New Guinea National Museum and Art Gallery Possible rebuild Under restoration edit C N 38 tail number N7584 4 AT B January 1928 Originally owned by Robertson Aircraft St Louis Currently owned by Kermit Weeks It was badly damaged in Florida by Hurricane Andrew in the fall of 1992 Currently Located Vicksburg Michigan USA 68 C N 58 tail number NC9642 4 AT E January 1929 Originally owned by Mohawk Airways NY Currently owned by Maurice Hovius Hov aire Inc Possible rebuild Sale reported Currently Located Vicksburg Michigan USA 69 C N 62 tail number NC8400 4 AT E January 1929 Originally owned by Mohawk Airways NY Currently owned by Maurice Hovius Hov aire Inc Possible rebuild Currently Located Vicksburg Michigan USA 70 C N 65 tail number NC8403 4 AT E May 1929 The Ptarmigan II Originally owned by Mamer Flying Service Currently owned by Alaska Aviation Heritage Museum Possible restoration As of February 10 2005 currently Located at Golden Wings Museum near Minneapolis Minnesota USA 71 C N 13 tail number NC9667 5 AT B 1929 The AN AAR Originally owned by Southwest Air Fast Express S A F E way Currently owned by Maurice Hovius Hov aire Inc This is a restoration project undertaken by the Tin Goose Chapter EAA 1247 in Port Clinton Ohio USA 72 73 From 1954 onwards efforts were made to modernize the Trimotor as the Stout Bushmaster 2000 8 Saddled with financial management and marketing problems only two examples were completed with a third fuselage started but never completed 74 Specifications Ford 4 AT E Trimotor edit source source Short recording alongside EAA s Ford TriMotor while in Miami Fl USA Data from Flight International 14 November 1930 75 General characteristicsCrew 3 pilot co pilot flight attendant Capacity 11 passengers Length 49 ft 10 in 15 19 m Wingspan 74 ft 0 in 22 56 m Height 11 ft 9 in 3 58 m Cabin length 16 ft 3 in 5 m Cabin width average 4 ft 6 in 1 m Cabin height average 6 ft 0 in 2 m Cabin volume 461 cu ft 13 m3 Airfoil root Gottingen 386 tip Gottingen 386 76 Empty weight 6 500 lb 2 948 kg Gross weight 10 130 lb 4 595 kg Fuel capacity 231 US gal 192 imp gal 874 L Oil capacity 24 US gal 20 imp gal 91 L Powerplant 3 Wright J 6 9 Whirlwind 9 cylinder air cooled radial piston engines 300 hp 220 kW each for take off Propellers 2 bladed fixed pitch propellers Performance Maximum speed 132 mph 212 km h 115 kn Cruise speed 107 mph 172 km h 93 kn at 1 700 rpm Stall speed 57 mph 92 km h 50 kn Range 570 mi 920 km 500 nmi Service ceiling 16 500 ft 5 000 m Absolute ceiling 18 600 ft 5 669 m Absolute ceiling on 2 engines 7 100 ft 2 164 m Rate of climb 920 ft min 4 7 m s Time to altitude 7 200 ft 2 195 m in 10 minutesNotable appearances in media editMain article Aircraft in fiction Ford TrimotorSee also editRelated development Stout Bushmaster 2000 Aircraft of comparable role configuration and era Fokker F VII Junkers G 24 Junkers G 31 Related lists List of aircraft of World War II List of civil aircraft List of military aircraft of the United States List of United States Navy aircraft designations pre 1962 References editNotes edit Up to 12 passengers could be accommodated in special configurations Note The 28 page booklet The Amazing Story of America s Oldest Flying Airliner describes the history of the Ford Trimotor 4 AT 10 C 1077 also known as G CARC Niagara It also describes the restoration process and some general history of Ford s Trimotor as well as his aviation enterprises Note The Ford Tri Motor List is an enthusiast s register of existing Ford Trimotors Bushmasters and Stinson Trimotors Citations edit a b c d Herrick Greg A The Amazing Story of America s Oldest Flying Airliner PDF Archived from the original on June 28 2017 Retrieved April 4 2019 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link fordtri motor com Yellowstone Aviation Inc Jackson Wyoming 2004 Retrieved April 4 2019 Ford Trimotor Archived April 23 2006 at the Wayback Machine Smithsonian Retrieved July 14 2010 a b c d e Winchester 2004 p 151 Larkins 1992 p 29 a b c d Winchester 2004 p 150 a b Larkins 1992 pp 154 156 Plane Carries Mail In Wing To Increase Load photo of under wing cargo carriers Popular Mechanics February 1931 a b Return of the Tin Goose Archived 2011 05 29 at the Wayback Machine Time January 6 1967 Retrieved July 29 2008 a b Head and Pretzer 1990 p 53 Head and Pretzer 1990 p 57 a b O Leary 2006 p 54 a b O Leary 2006 p 55 C B Harding 2000 The Guernsey Breed An Illustrated Chronicle Hillsboro Press ISBN 978 1 57736 177 0 Larkins 1992 p 170 Wynne 1987 p 53 Jardine T F Airplanes Help Mine Gold photos of Trimotor hauling freight to mine operations in Andes Popular Science Monthly March 1935 Those Fabulous Fords Popular Mechanics June 1953 AAHS Journal 41 Spring 2004 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Missing or empty title help a b c d e f Andrade 1979 p 95 Andrade 1979 p 96 a b c Andrade 1979 p 197 a b c d e Andrade 1979 p 218 Tidd Claude Yukon Archives Image CF AZB tc gov yk ca Retrieved July 26 2017 Best 2007 pp 72 73 Ford Trimotor Videos Archived 2011 04 27 at the Wayback Machine Fly Dominican Republic Retrieved July 14 2010 March 1998 p 250 a b Larkins William T 1958 The Ford Story A Pictorial History of the Ford Tri Motor 1927 1957 Wichita Kansas Robert R Longo Company p 133 hdl 2027 mdp 39015002911553 Retrieved April 8 2019 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Ford 4 AT B Tri Motor NC7683 Newark Airport NJ EWR Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Ford 5 AT B Tri Motor NC9636 San Diego Airport CA SAN Retrieved April 8 2019 a b c Larkins William T February 2 1958 The Ford story a pictorial history of the Ford Tri motor 1927 1957 R R Longo Co via HathiTrust Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Ford 5 AT B Tri Motor NC9649 Gallup NM Retrieved April 8 2019 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Ford 5 AT C Tri Motor NC9689 Oceanside CA Retrieved April 8 2019 Accident description for NC431H at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on August 14 2023 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Ford 5 AT B Tri Motor F 31 Medellin Enrique Olaya Herrera Airport EOH a b Wiggins Arthur B Ford Tri Motor List Archived from the original on November 16 2018 Retrieved October 2 2006 trimotors awiggins com 2011 Retrieved April 4 2019 Herrick Greg Ford Tri motor 4 AT 10 C 1077 a k a G CARC Niagara Archived from the original on March 25 2018 Retrieved April 4 2019 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link fordtri motor com Yellowstone Aviation Inc Jackson Wyoming 2004 Retrieved April 4 2019 Ford Trimotor Golden Wings Museum Retrieved July 14 2010 Wiggins Arthur Brenton N1077 Archived from the original on November 16 2018 Retrieved October 2 2006 The Ford Tri motors August 12 2011 Retrieved April 4 2019 Aircraft N1077 Profile Airport Data com 2012 Retrieved April 9 2012 Amelia Earhart s aircraft wrangler Australian Flying www australianflying com au Aircraft Inquiry registry faa gov Retrieved June 19 2022 The Mighty Tri Motor Joins the Air Adventures Pedigree PDF Approaches Spring 2020 Retrieved June 19 2022 Wiggins Arthur Brenton N9612 Archived from the original on November 16 2018 Retrieved October 2 2006 The Ford Tri motors August 12 2011 Retrieved April 4 2019 Aircraft N9612 Profile Airport Data com 2012 Retrieved April 9 2012 Jones William Ford 4AT Tri Motor Ford Tri Motor Tour Archived July 13 2017 at the Wayback Machine Experimental Aircraft Association Retrieved July 26 2017 Wiggins Arthur Brenton N8407 Archived from the original on November 16 2018 Retrieved October 2 2006 The Ford Tri motors August 12 2011 Retrieved April 4 2019 Aircraft N8407 Profile Airport Data com 2012 Retrieved April 9 2012 Liberty Aviation Museum www libertyaviationmuseum org Wiggins Arthur Brenton N9645 Archived from the original on November 16 2018 Retrieved October 2 2006 The Ford Tri motors August 12 2011 Aircraft N9645 Profile Airport Data com 2012 1929 Ford 5AT Tri Motor fantasyofflight com Retrieved July 26 2017 N9651 Archived from the original on November 16 2018 Retrieved October 2 2006 The Ford Tri motors August 12 2011 Retrieved April 4 2019 Aircraft N9651 Profile Airport Data com 2012 Retrieved April 9 2012 Ford Trimotor Kalamazoo Air Zoo Retrieved July 14 2010 Wiggins Arthur Brenton N8419 Archived from the original on November 16 2018 Retrieved October 2 2006 The Ford Tri motors August 12 2011 Retrieved April 4 2019 Aircraft N8419 Profile Airport Data com 2012 Retrieved April 9 2012 National Smokejumpers Association 1997 Missed Flight Ralph Johnston RDD 63 PDF The Statis Line 4 2 April Retrieved September 6 2013 Time machines do exist ValleAirport Com Grand Canyon Valle Airport 40G 2008 2009 Retrieved March 15 2009 Wiggins Arthur Brenton N414H Archived from the original on November 16 2018 Retrieved October 2 2006 The Ford Tri motors August 12 2011 Retrieved April 4 2019 Aircraft N414H Profile Airport Data com 2012 Retrieved April 9 2012 Ford Trimotor joins WAAAM collection Columbia Gorge News February 16 2022 a b Wiggins Arthur Brenton NX4542 Archived from the original on November 16 2018 Retrieved October 2 2006 The Ford Tri motors August 12 2011 Retrieved April 4 2019 Ford 4 AT E Tri Motor Airliners net Retrieved April 9 2020 Ford Trimotor 5 AT San Diego Air amp Space Museum Retrieved July 26 2017 Ford 5 AT Tri Motor America by Air National Air and Space Museum Retrieved July 26 2017 Wiggins Arthur Brenton N9683 Archived from the original on November 16 2018 Retrieved October 2 2006 The Ford Tri motors August 12 2011 Retrieved April 4 2019 Wiggins Arthur Brenton N7584 Archived from the original on November 16 2018 Retrieved October 2 2006 The Ford Tri motors August 12 2011 Retrieved April 4 2019 Wiggins Arthur Brenton N9642 Archived from the original on November 16 2018 Retrieved October 2 2006 The Ford Tri motors August 12 2011 Retrieved April 4 2019 Wiggins Arthur Brenton N8400 Archived from the original on November 16 2018 Retrieved October 2 2006 The Ford Tri motors August 12 2011 Retrieved April 4 2019 Wiggins Arthur Brenton N8403 Archived from the original on November 16 2018 Retrieved October 2 2006 The Ford Tri motors August 12 2011 Retrieved April 4 2019 Wiggins Arthur Brenton N9667 Archived from the original on November 16 2018 Retrieved October 2 2006 The Ford Tri motors August 12 2011 Retrieved April 4 2019 EAA Tin Goose Chapter 1247 Archived 2010 07 27 at the Wayback Machine tingoose org Retrieved April 9 2012 O Callaghan 2002 p 124 Ford Three Engined Monoplanes Two Types Described Flight XXII No 46 1142 1233 1237 November 14 1930 Archived from the original pdf on April 17 2018 Lednicer David The Incomplete Guide to Airfoil Usage m selig ae illinois edu Retrieved April 16 2019 Bibliography edit Andrade John U S Military Aircraft Designations and Serials since 1909 Hinckley Leicestershire UK Midland Counties Publications 1979 ISBN 0 904597 22 9 Barth Jack E Talkback Air Enthusiast No 10 July September 1979 p 79 ISSN 0143 5450 Best Martin S Summer 2007 The Development of Commercial Aviation in China Part 2 China National Aviation Corporation pre WWII Air Britain Archive pp 51 80 ISSN 0262 4923 Head Jeanine M and William S Pretzer Henry Ford A Pictorial Biography Dearborn Michigan Henry Ford Museum amp Greenfield Village 1990 No ISBN Hoy Bruce D April July 1980 Talkback Air Enthusiast No 12 pp 49 50 ISSN 0143 5450 Larkins William T The Ford Tri Motor 1926 1992 Atglen Pennsylvania Schiffer Publishing 1992 ISBN 0 88740 416 2 Larkins William T April July 1980 Talkback Air Enthusiast No 12 p 50 ISSN 0143 5450 March Daniel L British Warplanes of World War II London Aerospace Publishing 1998 ISBN 1 874023 92 1 O Callaghan Timothy J The Aviation Legacy of Henry amp Edsel Ford Ann Arbor Michigan Proctor Publications 2002 ISBN 1 928623 01 8 O Leary Michael When Fords Ruled the Sky Part Two Air Classics Volume 42 No 5 May 2006 Winchester Jim ed Ford Trimotor Civil Aircraft The Aviation Factfile London Grange Books plc 2004 ISBN 1 84013 642 1 Wynne H Hugh The Motion Picture Stunt Pilots and Hollywood s Classic Aviation Movies Missoula Montana Pictorial Histories Publishing Co 1987 ISBN 0 933126 85 9 Further reading editLee John G Summer 2014 Early Days of the Ford Trimotor Recollections of a Participant AAHS Journal 59 52 American Aviation Historical Society 128 134 Towle Tom Summer 2014 Designing the Ford Trimotor AAHS Journal 59 52 American Aviation Historical Society 122 127 Weiss David A The Saga of the Tin Goose The Story of the Ford Trimotor Brooklyn New York Cumberland Enterprises Incorporated 1996 ISBN 0 9634299 2 2 Litwak Jerry Skinning a Tin Goose the hard way Pages 251 and 252 of Air International magazine May 1978 describe the rebuilding of Scenic Airway s Tin Goose 5AT owned by John Seibold after it groundlooped in Nevada on February 6 1977 Per the article it was supposedly ready to fly again by late 1978 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ford Trimotor Ford Trimotor a tribute to the Ford Tri Motor and contains facts pictures bibliography and more EAA s Ford Trimotor 4AT E virtual tour detailing the entire aircraft permanent dead link The Tin Goose Lives up to Her Name pilot report Budd Davisson June 1986 Air Progress Vol 45 No 5 transcribed at Airbum com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ford Trimotor amp oldid 1226023520, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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