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North American NA-16

The North American Aviation NA-16 was the first trainer aircraft built by North American Aviation, and was the beginning of a line of closely related North American trainer aircraft that would eventually number more than 17,000 examples, notably the T-6 Texan family.

NA-16/BT-9/NJ-1
Harvard I/NA-57/Sk 14
NA-16-2A/NA-42 "FAH-21" displayed outside at the Honduras Air Museum at Toncontín
Role Trainer
Manufacturer North American Aviation
First flight 1 April 1935
Status retired
Primary users United States Army Air Corps
Royal Australian Air Force
Swedish Air Force
French Air Force
Produced 1935 to 1939
Number built 1,935
Variants North American BT-9
CAC Wirraway
Developed into North American T-6 Texan
North American P-64

Design and development

 
First NA-16 with initial canopy and still in civilian registration

On 10 December 1934, James Howard "Dutch" Kindelberger, John L. "Lee" Atwood, and H.R. Raynor sketched out the specifications for the NA-16. A key characteristic for the advanced trainer was a closed canopy.[1]

The NA-16 is a family of related single-engine, low-wing monoplanes with tandem seating.[2] Variants could have an open cockpit (the prototype and the NA-22) or be under a glass greenhouse that covered both cockpits.[3] On some variants, the rear of the canopy could be opened for a gunner to fire to the rear.[4] A variety of air-cooled radial engines, including the Wright Whirlwind, Pratt & Whitney Wasp and Pratt & Whitney Wasp Junior of varying horsepowers, could be installed depending on customer preferences.[5] The fuselage was built up from steel tubes and normally fabric covered; however, later versions were provided with aluminum monocoque structures.[6]

During the development of the design, a six-inch stretch was made by moving the rudder post aft.[7] Many versions had a fixed landing gear, but later versions could have retractable gear, mounted in a widened wing center section (which could have either integral fuel tanks or not).[8] Most had a straight trailing edge on the outer wing while again, some had the wing trailing edge swept forward slightly in an attempt to fix a problem with stalls and spins.[9] Several different rudders were used, with early examples having a round outline, intermediate examples having a square bottom on the rudder (Harvard I) and late examples using the triangular rudder of the AT-6 series, due to a loss of control at high angles of attack with the early types.[10] Horizontal and vertical tails were initially covered in corrugated aluminum, but later examples were smooth-skinned, and the horizontal stabilizer was increased in chord near its tips on later versions.[11]

The NA-16 flew for the first time on 1 April 1935, by Eddie Allen. An enclosed cockpit version of the NA-16 was submitted to the United States Army Air Corps for performance tests as a basic trainer on 27 May 1935.[12] The Army accepted the trainer for production but with some detail changes, including a larger engine and faired landing gear modifications. The modified NA-16 was redesignated by North American as the NA-18, with production examples entering Air Corps service as the North American BT-9 (NA-19). The U.S. Army Air Corps ordered 42 BT-9s, equipped with the Wright R-975 Whirlwind engine, and 40 BT-9As, which could be armed with .30 cal. Browning M-1 machine guns. In 1936, an order was placed for 117 BT-9Bs, without armament. A total of 67 BT-9Cs (NA-29) were built, using the same R-975-7 engine.[1]: 20–21, 29–31, 33, 36, 214  Similar aircraft continued to be sold outside the U.S. under the NA-16 designation.[13]

By the time of the U.S. entry into WWII, the NAF had built 1631 N-16 series aircraft. Of that total, 1043 were for foreign countries, while the remainder were for the U.S. Army Air Corps and Navy.[1]: 73 

Foreign developments

Australia

The Commonwealth Aircraft Corporation produced 755 units of a modified version of the NA-16-2K (NA-33) known there as the Wirraway between 1939 and 1946.[14] The units built included 40 CA-1s (Wirraway I), 60 CA-3s, 32 CA-5s, 100 CA-7s, 200 CA-8s, 188 CA-9s, and 135 CA-16s. The CA-16s were called the Wirraway IIIs, while previous models were called Wirraway IIs.[1]: 53–56 

Argentina

Experience with the NA-16-4P and deteriorating political relations with the US led to the local development of the I.Ae. D.L. 21, which shared the NA-16 fuselage structure; however it proved too difficult to produce. As a result of this, an entirely new design (the I.Ae. D.L. 22) was built instead; it had similar configuration, but was structurally different and optimized to available materials.[15]

Japan

The NA-16-4RW and NA-16-4R inspired the development of the Kyushu K10W when the Imperial Japanese Navy instructed Kyushu to develop something similar.[16] The resulting aircraft owed little to the NA-16, however Allied Intelligence saw so few examples that the error was not corrected and some drawings show a modified NA-16.[16]

Variants

 
North American BT-9

Listing includes aircraft built specifically under NA-16 designation for export, and similar aircraft built for use by the United States armed forces.

NA-16
One for United States Army Air Corps (USAAC) (trials) developed into NA-18 and BT-9 series.
powered by Wright R-975 Whirlwind

When the North American NA-16 was first conceived, five different roles were intended for the design, designated NA-16-1 thru NA-16-5:[17]

NA-16-1
General purpose two-seat aircraft - which became the Harvard I[18]
NA-16-2
Two-seat fighter - produced under licence in Australia as the CAC Wirraway.[19]
NA-16-3
Two-seat light attack bomber. The first aircraft in this category was the retractable gear NA-26[20] which evolved into the NA-36 (BC-1). The fabric-covered fuselage was replaced by an all-metal monocoque to create the NA-44,[21] which provided the basis for a line of light attack bombers whose improvements would result in the AT-6.[22]
NA-16-4
Advanced trainer - became the BT-9 for the USAAC and which provided the bulk of early production. The improvement of the BT-9 with a longer metal skinned fuselage as on the NA-44 would create the NA-64 (Yale) and improved wings would result in the BT-14.
NA-16-5
Single-seat fighter - although this designation was never used, it became the NA-50 for Peru, and later the NA-68, which saw limited USAAF service as the P-64.[23]
BT-9 (NA-19)
42 built for USAAC - Minor changes from NA-18, new canopy
powered by Wright R-975 Whirlwind
BT-9A (NA-19A)
40 built for USAAC - Armed BT-9 with one cowl gun, one rear flexible gun and modified canopy.
powered by Wright R-975 Whirlwind
NA-16-2H (NA-20)
One built for trials, sold to Honduras (FAH)
powered by Wright R-975 Whirlwind
NA-22
One built for USAAC trials but rejected as severely underpowered. Open cockpits as per early NA-16 and Townend ring on engine.
powered by Wright R-760 Whirlwind
BT-9B (NA-23)
117 built for USAAC - Unarmed with fixed rear on canopy.
powered by Wright R-975 Whirlwind
BT-9D (NA-23)
One modified BT-9B for USAAC - BT-14 prototype with new outer wings, Harvard type canopy, lengthened fabric covered fuselage, triangular rudder and detail alterations.
powered by Pratt & Whitney R-985 Wasp Junior
NA-16-3 Basic Combat demonstrator (NA-26)
One armed demonstrator and the first variant with retractable undercarriage, eventually sold to RCAF who modified it with Yale and Harvard parts.
powered by Pratt & Whitney R-1340 Wasp
NA-16-2H (NA-27)
One armed demonstrator sold to Royal Netherlands Air Force - not the same as the previous NA-16-2H.
powered by Pratt & Whitney R-1340 Wasp
NJ-1 (NA-28)
40 built to US Navy specifications, up engined BT-9B as advanced trainer with fixed gear.
powered by Pratt & Whitney R-1340 Wasp
BT-9C (NA-29)
66 built for USAAC - BT-9A with minor changes.
powered by Wright R-975 Whirlwind
Y1BT-10 (NA-29)
One built for USAAC - BT-9 with larger engine, similar to USN NJ-1 but armed and detail differences in engine installation.
powered by Pratt & Whitney R-1340 Wasp
BT-10 (NA-30)
Cancelled production version of Y1BT-10 for USAAC
powered by Pratt & Whitney R-1340 Wasp
NA-16-4M (NA-31)
138 built for Sweden's Flygvapnet as Sk 14/Sk 14A. Sk 14N trialled nosewheel for SAAB 21.
powered by Wright R-975 Whirlwind (Sk 14) or Piaggio P VII C (Sk 14A)
NA-16-1A (NA-32)
One built for Royal Australian Air Force but rejected in favour of NA-16-2K, fixed landing gear, similar to Y1BT-10.
powered by Pratt & Whitney R-1340 Wasp
NA-16-2K (NA-33)
756 for Royal Australian Air Force in Australia with local improvements as CAC Wirraway
powered by Pratt & Whitney R-1340 Wasp
NA-16-4P (NA-34)
29 built for Argentina (Army Aviation) - 1st major export order (previous orders involved licence production).
powered by Wright R-975 Whirlwind
NA-16-4R (NA-37)
One built for Imperial Japanese Navy as a technology demonstrator KXA-1 with fixed u/c and three-blade prop.
powered by Pratt & Whitney R-985 Wasp Junior
NA-16-4 (NA-41)
35 built for China (RoCAF) - Fixed gear, fabric covered fuselage
powered by Wright R-975 Whirlwind
NA-16-2A (NA-42)
Two built for Honduras (FAH)
powered by Pratt & Whitney R-1340 Wasp
NA-16-1G (NA-43)
Intended for Brazil (Army) but order cancelled. Was to have been similar to BT-9C
powered by Wright R-975 Whirlwind
NA-44
Armed company demonstrator sold to Canada. Designation reused for AT-6s sold to Brazil (NA-72) and Chile (NA-74).
powered by Wright R-1820 Cyclone.
NA-16-1GV (NA-45)
Three built for Venezuela (FAV) similar to USAAC NA-36 BC-1 but with round rudder and bomb racks under wing center section.
powered by Pratt & Whitney R-1340 Wasp
NA-16-4 (NA-46)
12 built for Brazilian Navy
powered by Wright R-975 Whirlwind
NA-16-4RW (NA-47)
One built for Imperial Japanese Navy as a technology demonstrator KXA-2 similar to NA-16-4R but smaller engine.
powered by Wright R-975 Whirlwind
NA-16-3C (NA-48)
15 built for China (RoCAF) - Retractable undercarriage, fabric covered fuselage
powered by Pratt & Whitney R-1340 Wasp
NA-16-1E (NA-49/NA-61)
430 for Royal Air Force and Royal Canadian Air Force as the Harvard I with new canopy and square rudder. Also used by South Africa and Southern Rhodesia.
powered by Pratt & Whitney R-1340 Wasp
NA-16-4 (NA-56)
50 built for China (RoCAF) - Entirely new design with longer metal fuselage, triangular rudder and later T-6 style wing. Basically a BT-14 with the AT-6s R-1340 engine and canopy.
powered by Pratt & Whitney R-1340 Wasp
NA-57
230 improved NA-23s for France as NAA 57-P-2, most captured and used by Germany, some retained by Vichy France.
powered by Wright R-975 Whirlwind[24]
NA-16-3 (NA-71)
Three built for Venezuela (FAV)
powered by Pratt & Whitney R-1340 Wasp
I.Ae. D.L. 21
An Argentinian version incorporating the NA-16-1 fuselage with locally designed wings. Rejected in favour of the I.Ae. 22 DL, an original design from the Fabrica Militar de Aviones (FMA).

Operators

  Argentina
  Australia
  Brazil
  Republic of China
  France
  Germany
  Honduras
  Japan
  Netherlands
  South Africa
  Southern Rhodesia
  Sweden
  United Kingdom
  United States
  Venezuela

Surviving aircraft

Specifications (NA-16)

General characteristics

  • Crew: two
  • Length: 27 ft 7 in (8.41 m)
  • Wingspan: 42 ft (13 m)
  • Airfoil: root: NACA 2215; tip: NACA 2209[1]: 13 
  • Empty weight: 3,078 lb (1,396 kg)
  • Powerplant: 1 × Wright R-975 Whirlwind air cooled radial, 400 hp (300 kW)
  • Propellers: 2-bladed Hamilton Standard

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 170 mph (270 km/h, 150 kn)
  • Range: 700 mi (1,100 km, 610 nmi)

See also

Related development

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists

References

Notes

  1. ^ Some sources list the NA-16 as having been used by the Argentine Air Force however it was with its predecessor, the Army Aviation Service which was dissolved in 1945 when the Air Force was created.

Citations

  1. ^ a b c d e Hagedorn, Dan (2009). North American's T-6: a definitive history of the world's most famous trainer. North Branch, MN: Specialty Press. p. 11. ISBN 9781580071246.
  2. ^ Hagedorn 1997, p. 4.
  3. ^ a b Hagedorn 1997, pp. 20–21.
  4. ^ Hagedorn 1997, p. 21.
  5. ^ Hagedorn 1997, pp. 6–7.
  6. ^ Hagedorn 1997, p. 12.
  7. ^ Hagedorn 1997, p. 53.
  8. ^ Hagedorn 1997, p. 61.
  9. ^ Hagedorn 1997, pp. 14, 19.
  10. ^ Hagedorn 1997, p. 19.
  11. ^ Hagedorn 1997, pp. 14–15.
  12. ^ a b Hagedorn 1997, p. 8.
  13. ^ Hagedorn 1997, p. 15.
  14. ^ a b Francillon, René J (1970). The Royal Australian Air Force & Royal New Zealand Air Force in the Pacific. Aero Pictorials 3. California: Aero Publishers Inc, 1970. ISBN 978-0-8168-0308-8. Library of Congress Number 76-114412.
  15. ^ a b c von Rauch, Georg and David L. Veres. "Argentina's Wooden Warriors". Air Classics (Challenge Publications), Volume 19, March 1983, pp. 14–21.
  16. ^ a b c Starkings, Peter. "From American Acorn to Japanese Oak". Arawasi (Asahi Process, Tokyo), Issue 7, 2007, pp. 26–31. Retrieved: 8 September 2011.
  17. ^ Hagedorn 1997, p. 7.
  18. ^ Hagedorn 1997, p. 41.
  19. ^ Smith 2000, p. 96.
  20. ^ Hagedorn 1997, pp. 20–22.
  21. ^ Hagedorn 1997, pp. 37–38.
  22. ^ Hagedorn 1997, p. 46.
  23. ^ Hagedorn 1997, pp. 41–42, 51.
  24. ^ Parker, Dana T. Building Victory: Aircraft Manufacturing in the Los Angeles Area in World War II, p. 89, Cypress, CA, 2013. ISBN 978-0-9897906-0-4.
  25. ^ Airliners.net Picture of the North American NA-42 aircraft Accessdate:September 2014
  26. ^ Flickr - Sk 14, North American NA 16-4M, Swedish Air Force Museum, Flygvapenmuseum, Linköping Accessdate:Sept 2014
  27. ^ The Australian National Aviation Museum - CAC CA-1 Wirraway A20-10 Accessdate:Sept 2014
  28. ^ "Search aircraft model: CA-1/CA-3/CA-7/CA-8/CA-16." 10 January 2013 at the Wayback Machine CASA. Retrieved: 17 September 2013.
  29. ^ Hagedorn 1997, pp. 15–16.
  30. ^ Hagedorn 1997, pp. 22–23.
  31. ^ Hagedorn 1997, pp. 47–48.

Bibliography

  • Bellomo, Sergio (March 2000). "Les N.A.16-4P de l'Aviation de l'Armée Argentine" [The N.A.16-4Ps of Argentine Army Aviation]. Avions: Toute l'aéronautique et son histoire (in French) (84): 38–41. ISSN 1243-8650.
  • Fletcher, David C. and Doug MacPhail. Harvard! the North American Trainers in Canada. San Josef, British Columbia, Canada: DCF Flying Books, 1990. ISBN 0-9693825-0-2.
  • Hagedorn, Dan. North American NA-16/AT-6/SNJ (WarbirdTech Volume 11). North Branch, Minnesota: Speciality Press, 1997. ISBN 0-933424-76-0.
  • MacPhail, Doug and Mikael Östberg. Triple Crown BT-9: The ASJA/Saab Sk 14, A Pictorial Essay (in English/Swedish). San Josef, British Columbia, Canada: DCF Flying Books, 2003.
  • Smith, Peter Charles. North American T-6: SNJ, Harvard and Wirraway. Ramsbury, Marlborough, Wiltshire, UK: The Crowood Press Ltd., 2000. ISBN 1-86126-382-1.
  • Starkings, Peter. From American Acorn to Japanese Oak - The tale of an unsung Japanese training aircraft with roots extending across the Pacific Ocean. Arawasi International, Asahi Process, September–December 2007, Issue 7.
  • von Rauch, Georg and David L. Veres. Argentina's Wooden Warriors. Air Classics, Challenge Publications, March 1983, Volume 19 Issue 3, pp. 14–21.

Further reading

  • Hagedorn, Dan. Texans and Harvards in Latin America. Staplefield, West Sussex: Air-Britain, 2009. ISBN 978-0-85130-312-3.

External links

  Media related to North American NA-16 at Wikimedia Commons

north, american, north, american, aviation, first, trainer, aircraft, built, north, american, aviation, beginning, line, closely, related, north, american, trainer, aircraft, that, would, eventually, number, more, than, examples, notably, texan, family, harvar. The North American Aviation NA 16 was the first trainer aircraft built by North American Aviation and was the beginning of a line of closely related North American trainer aircraft that would eventually number more than 17 000 examples notably the T 6 Texan family NA 16 BT 9 NJ 1 Harvard I NA 57 Sk 14NA 16 2A NA 42 FAH 21 displayed outside at the Honduras Air Museum at ToncontinRole TrainerManufacturer North American AviationFirst flight 1 April 1935Status retiredPrimary users United States Army Air CorpsRoyal Australian Air ForceSwedish Air ForceFrench Air ForceProduced 1935 to 1939Number built 1 935Variants North American BT 9 CAC WirrawayDeveloped into North American T 6 Texan North American P 64 Contents 1 Design and development 1 1 Foreign developments 2 Variants 3 Operators 4 Surviving aircraft 5 Specifications NA 16 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Notes 7 2 Citations 7 3 Bibliography 8 Further reading 9 External linksDesign and development Edit First NA 16 with initial canopy and still in civilian registration On 10 December 1934 James Howard Dutch Kindelberger John L Lee Atwood and H R Raynor sketched out the specifications for the NA 16 A key characteristic for the advanced trainer was a closed canopy 1 The NA 16 is a family of related single engine low wing monoplanes with tandem seating 2 Variants could have an open cockpit the prototype and the NA 22 or be under a glass greenhouse that covered both cockpits 3 On some variants the rear of the canopy could be opened for a gunner to fire to the rear 4 A variety of air cooled radial engines including the Wright Whirlwind Pratt amp Whitney Wasp and Pratt amp Whitney Wasp Junior of varying horsepowers could be installed depending on customer preferences 5 The fuselage was built up from steel tubes and normally fabric covered however later versions were provided with aluminum monocoque structures 6 During the development of the design a six inch stretch was made by moving the rudder post aft 7 Many versions had a fixed landing gear but later versions could have retractable gear mounted in a widened wing center section which could have either integral fuel tanks or not 8 Most had a straight trailing edge on the outer wing while again some had the wing trailing edge swept forward slightly in an attempt to fix a problem with stalls and spins 9 Several different rudders were used with early examples having a round outline intermediate examples having a square bottom on the rudder Harvard I and late examples using the triangular rudder of the AT 6 series due to a loss of control at high angles of attack with the early types 10 Horizontal and vertical tails were initially covered in corrugated aluminum but later examples were smooth skinned and the horizontal stabilizer was increased in chord near its tips on later versions 11 The NA 16 flew for the first time on 1 April 1935 by Eddie Allen An enclosed cockpit version of the NA 16 was submitted to the United States Army Air Corps for performance tests as a basic trainer on 27 May 1935 12 The Army accepted the trainer for production but with some detail changes including a larger engine and faired landing gear modifications The modified NA 16 was redesignated by North American as the NA 18 with production examples entering Air Corps service as the North American BT 9 NA 19 The U S Army Air Corps ordered 42 BT 9s equipped with the Wright R 975 Whirlwind engine and 40 BT 9As which could be armed with 30 cal Browning M 1 machine guns In 1936 an order was placed for 117 BT 9Bs without armament A total of 67 BT 9Cs NA 29 were built using the same R 975 7 engine 1 20 21 29 31 33 36 214 Similar aircraft continued to be sold outside the U S under the NA 16 designation 13 By the time of the U S entry into WWII the NAF had built 1631 N 16 series aircraft Of that total 1043 were for foreign countries while the remainder were for the U S Army Air Corps and Navy 1 73 Foreign developments Edit AustraliaThe Commonwealth Aircraft Corporation produced 755 units of a modified version of the NA 16 2K NA 33 known there as the Wirraway between 1939 and 1946 14 The units built included 40 CA 1s Wirraway I 60 CA 3s 32 CA 5s 100 CA 7s 200 CA 8s 188 CA 9s and 135 CA 16s The CA 16s were called the Wirraway IIIs while previous models were called Wirraway IIs 1 53 56 ArgentinaExperience with the NA 16 4P and deteriorating political relations with the US led to the local development of the I Ae D L 21 which shared the NA 16 fuselage structure however it proved too difficult to produce As a result of this an entirely new design the I Ae D L 22 was built instead it had similar configuration but was structurally different and optimized to available materials 15 JapanThe NA 16 4RW and NA 16 4R inspired the development of the Kyushu K10W when the Imperial Japanese Navy instructed Kyushu to develop something similar 16 The resulting aircraft owed little to the NA 16 however Allied Intelligence saw so few examples that the error was not corrected and some drawings show a modified NA 16 16 Variants EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message North American BT 9 Listing includes aircraft built specifically under NA 16 designation for export and similar aircraft built for use by the United States armed forces NA 16 One for United States Army Air Corps USAAC trials developed into NA 18 and BT 9 series powered by Wright R 975 WhirlwindWhen the North American NA 16 was first conceived five different roles were intended for the design designated NA 16 1 thru NA 16 5 17 NA 16 1 General purpose two seat aircraft which became the Harvard I 18 NA 16 2 Two seat fighter produced under licence in Australia as the CAC Wirraway 19 NA 16 3 Two seat light attack bomber The first aircraft in this category was the retractable gear NA 26 20 which evolved into the NA 36 BC 1 The fabric covered fuselage was replaced by an all metal monocoque to create the NA 44 21 which provided the basis for a line of light attack bombers whose improvements would result in the AT 6 22 NA 16 4 Advanced trainer became the BT 9 for the USAAC and which provided the bulk of early production The improvement of the BT 9 with a longer metal skinned fuselage as on the NA 44 would create the NA 64 Yale and improved wings would result in the BT 14 NA 16 5 Single seat fighter although this designation was never used it became the NA 50 for Peru and later the NA 68 which saw limited USAAF service as the P 64 23 BT 9 NA 19 42 built for USAAC Minor changes from NA 18 new canopy powered by Wright R 975 WhirlwindBT 9A NA 19A 40 built for USAAC Armed BT 9 with one cowl gun one rear flexible gun and modified canopy powered by Wright R 975 WhirlwindNA 16 2H NA 20 One built for trials sold to Honduras FAH powered by Wright R 975 WhirlwindNA 22 One built for USAAC trials but rejected as severely underpowered Open cockpits as per early NA 16 and Townend ring on engine powered by Wright R 760 WhirlwindBT 9B NA 23 117 built for USAAC Unarmed with fixed rear on canopy powered by Wright R 975 WhirlwindBT 9D NA 23 One modified BT 9B for USAAC BT 14 prototype with new outer wings Harvard type canopy lengthened fabric covered fuselage triangular rudder and detail alterations powered by Pratt amp Whitney R 985 Wasp JuniorNA 16 3 Basic Combat demonstrator NA 26 One armed demonstrator and the first variant with retractable undercarriage eventually sold to RCAF who modified it with Yale and Harvard parts powered by Pratt amp Whitney R 1340 WaspNA 16 2H NA 27 One armed demonstrator sold to Royal Netherlands Air Force not the same as the previous NA 16 2H powered by Pratt amp Whitney R 1340 WaspNJ 1 NA 28 40 built to US Navy specifications up engined BT 9B as advanced trainer with fixed gear powered by Pratt amp Whitney R 1340 WaspBT 9C NA 29 66 built for USAAC BT 9A with minor changes powered by Wright R 975 WhirlwindY1BT 10 NA 29 One built for USAAC BT 9 with larger engine similar to USN NJ 1 but armed and detail differences in engine installation powered by Pratt amp Whitney R 1340 WaspBT 10 NA 30 Cancelled production version of Y1BT 10 for USAAC powered by Pratt amp Whitney R 1340 WaspNA 16 4M NA 31 138 built for Sweden s Flygvapnet as Sk 14 Sk 14A Sk 14N trialled nosewheel for SAAB 21 powered by Wright R 975 Whirlwind Sk 14 or Piaggio P VII C Sk 14A NA 16 1A NA 32 One built for Royal Australian Air Force but rejected in favour of NA 16 2K fixed landing gear similar to Y1BT 10 powered by Pratt amp Whitney R 1340 WaspNA 16 2K NA 33 756 for Royal Australian Air Force in Australia with local improvements as CAC Wirraway powered by Pratt amp Whitney R 1340 WaspNA 16 4P NA 34 29 built for Argentina Army Aviation 1st major export order previous orders involved licence production powered by Wright R 975 WhirlwindNA 16 4R NA 37 One built for Imperial Japanese Navy as a technology demonstrator KXA 1 with fixed u c and three blade prop powered by Pratt amp Whitney R 985 Wasp JuniorNA 16 4 NA 41 35 built for China RoCAF Fixed gear fabric covered fuselage powered by Wright R 975 WhirlwindNA 16 2A NA 42 Two built for Honduras FAH powered by Pratt amp Whitney R 1340 WaspNA 16 1G NA 43 Intended for Brazil Army but order cancelled Was to have been similar to BT 9C powered by Wright R 975 WhirlwindNA 44 Armed company demonstrator sold to Canada Designation reused for AT 6s sold to Brazil NA 72 and Chile NA 74 powered by Wright R 1820 Cyclone NA 16 1GV NA 45 Three built for Venezuela FAV similar to USAAC NA 36 BC 1 but with round rudder and bomb racks under wing center section powered by Pratt amp Whitney R 1340 WaspNA 16 4 NA 46 12 built for Brazilian Navy powered by Wright R 975 WhirlwindNA 16 4RW NA 47 One built for Imperial Japanese Navy as a technology demonstrator KXA 2 similar to NA 16 4R but smaller engine powered by Wright R 975 WhirlwindNA 16 3C NA 48 15 built for China RoCAF Retractable undercarriage fabric covered fuselage powered by Pratt amp Whitney R 1340 WaspNA 16 1E NA 49 NA 61 430 for Royal Air Force and Royal Canadian Air Force as the Harvard I with new canopy and square rudder Also used by South Africa and Southern Rhodesia powered by Pratt amp Whitney R 1340 WaspNA 16 4 NA 56 50 built for China RoCAF Entirely new design with longer metal fuselage triangular rudder and later T 6 style wing Basically a BT 14 with the AT 6s R 1340 engine and canopy powered by Pratt amp Whitney R 1340 WaspNA 57 230 improved NA 23s for France as NAA 57 P 2 most captured and used by Germany some retained by Vichy France powered by Wright R 975 Whirlwind 24 NA 16 3 NA 71 Three built for Venezuela FAV powered by Pratt amp Whitney R 1340 WaspI Ae D L 21 An Argentinian version incorporating the NA 16 1 fuselage with locally designed wings Rejected in favour of the I Ae 22 DL an original design from the Fabrica Militar de Aviones FMA Operators EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message ArgentinaArmy Aviation Service n 1 AustraliaRoyal Australian Air Force RAAF samples for licence production BrazilBrazilian Navy Marinha do Brasil Republic of ChinaRepublic of China Air Force RoCAF FranceFrench Air Force Armee de l Air French Naval Aviation Aeronavale Vichy French Air Force GermanyLuftwaffe HondurasHonduran Air Force Fuerza Aerea Hondurena FAH JapanImperial Japanese Navy Air Service IJNAS 2 examples for evaluation only NetherlandsRoyal Netherlands Air Force Koninklijke Luchtmacht KLu South AfricaSouth African Air Force SAAF Southern RhodesiaSouthern Rhodesian Air Force SRAF SwedenSwedish Air Force Flygvapnet United KingdomRoyal Air Force RAF United StatesUnited States Army Air Corps USAAC United States Army Air Forces USAAF United States Navy USN VenezuelaVenezuelan Air Force Fuerza Aerea Venezolana FAV Surviving aircraft EditThe only intact surviving example of an American built NA 16 is the NA 16 2A NA 20 FAH 21 displayed at the Honduran Aviation Museum at Toncontin 25 A Swedish NA 16 4M locally designated as Sk 14 was built from an ex RAAF CAC Wirraway s n A20 223 with additional parts from an ex RCAF North American NA 64 Yale and is on display at the Swedish Air Force Museum 26 The CAC Wirraway originally NA 16 2K was first modified to British standards and equipment then later models diverged further from the NA 16 in minor details such as the fitting of dive brakes etc The sole surviving CA 1 Wirraway is A20 10 the 8th production Wirraway effectively a licence built NA 16 2K and held at the Australian National Aviation Museum 27 Ten Wirraways are on the Australian civil aircraft register 28 Further examples in Australia unless noted are at Temora Aviation Museum Australian National Aviation Museum Aviation Heritage Museum Museum of Victoria Queensland Air Museum RAAF Museum Stored and the Fantasy of Flight Florida stored Specifications NA 16 EditGeneral characteristics Crew two Length 27 ft 7 in 8 41 m Wingspan 42 ft 13 m Airfoil root NACA 2215 tip NACA 2209 1 13 Empty weight 3 078 lb 1 396 kg Powerplant 1 Wright R 975 Whirlwind air cooled radial 400 hp 300 kW Propellers 2 bladed Hamilton StandardPerformance Maximum speed 170 mph 270 km h 150 kn Range 700 mi 1 100 km 610 nmi See also EditRelated development North American BT 9 29 North American BC 1 3 North American A 27 30 North American T 6 Texan 12 North American P 64 31 CAC Wirraway 14 I Ae 21 DL 15 Aircraft of comparable role configuration and era CAC Wackett Curtiss Wright CW 22 SNC Fleet Fort FMA I Ae 22 DL 15 Kyushu K10W1 16 Miles Martinet Miles Master VL Pyry Vultee BT 13 ValiantRelated lists List of military aircraft of the United States List of United States Navy aircraft designations pre 1962 List of aircraft of the Royal Air Force List of aircraft of Canada s air forces List of aircraft of World War II North American T 6 Texan variantsReferences EditNotes Edit Some sources list the NA 16 as having been used by the Argentine Air Force however it was with its predecessor the Army Aviation Service which was dissolved in 1945 when the Air Force was created Citations Edit a b c d e Hagedorn Dan 2009 North American s T 6 a definitive history of the world s most famous trainer North Branch MN Specialty Press p 11 ISBN 9781580071246 Hagedorn 1997 p 4 a b Hagedorn 1997 pp 20 21 Hagedorn 1997 p 21 Hagedorn 1997 pp 6 7 Hagedorn 1997 p 12 Hagedorn 1997 p 53 Hagedorn 1997 p 61 Hagedorn 1997 pp 14 19 Hagedorn 1997 p 19 Hagedorn 1997 pp 14 15 a b Hagedorn 1997 p 8 Hagedorn 1997 p 15 a b Francillon Rene J 1970 The Royal Australian Air Force amp Royal New Zealand Air Force in the Pacific Aero Pictorials 3 California Aero Publishers Inc 1970 ISBN 978 0 8168 0308 8 Library of Congress Number 76 114412 a b c von Rauch Georg and David L Veres Argentina s Wooden Warriors Air Classics Challenge Publications Volume 19 March 1983 pp 14 21 a b c Starkings Peter From American Acorn to Japanese Oak Arawasi Asahi Process Tokyo Issue 7 2007 pp 26 31 Retrieved 8 September 2011 Hagedorn 1997 p 7 Hagedorn 1997 p 41 Smith 2000 p 96 Hagedorn 1997 pp 20 22 Hagedorn 1997 pp 37 38 Hagedorn 1997 p 46 Hagedorn 1997 pp 41 42 51 Parker Dana T Building Victory Aircraft Manufacturing in the Los Angeles Area in World War II p 89 Cypress CA 2013 ISBN 978 0 9897906 0 4 Airliners net Picture of the North American NA 42 aircraft Accessdate September 2014 Flickr Sk 14 North American NA 16 4M Swedish Air Force Museum Flygvapenmuseum Linkoping Accessdate Sept 2014 The Australian National Aviation Museum CAC CA 1 Wirraway A20 10 Accessdate Sept 2014 Search aircraft model CA 1 CA 3 CA 7 CA 8 CA 16 Archived 10 January 2013 at the Wayback Machine CASA Retrieved 17 September 2013 Hagedorn 1997 pp 15 16 Hagedorn 1997 pp 22 23 Hagedorn 1997 pp 47 48 Bibliography Edit Bellomo Sergio March 2000 Les N A 16 4P de l Aviation de l Armee Argentine The N A 16 4Ps of Argentine Army Aviation Avions Toute l aeronautique et son histoire in French 84 38 41 ISSN 1243 8650 Fletcher David C and Doug MacPhail Harvard the North American Trainers in Canada San Josef British Columbia Canada DCF Flying Books 1990 ISBN 0 9693825 0 2 Hagedorn Dan North American NA 16 AT 6 SNJ WarbirdTech Volume 11 North Branch Minnesota Speciality Press 1997 ISBN 0 933424 76 0 MacPhail Doug and Mikael Ostberg Triple Crown BT 9 The ASJA Saab Sk 14 A Pictorial Essay in English Swedish San Josef British Columbia Canada DCF Flying Books 2003 Smith Peter Charles North American T 6 SNJ Harvard and Wirraway Ramsbury Marlborough Wiltshire UK The Crowood Press Ltd 2000 ISBN 1 86126 382 1 Starkings Peter From American Acorn to Japanese Oak The tale of an unsung Japanese training aircraft with roots extending across the Pacific Ocean Arawasi International Asahi Process September December 2007 Issue 7 von Rauch Georg and David L Veres Argentina s Wooden Warriors Air Classics Challenge Publications March 1983 Volume 19 Issue 3 pp 14 21 Further reading EditHagedorn Dan Texans and Harvards in Latin America Staplefield West Sussex Air Britain 2009 ISBN 978 0 85130 312 3 External links Edit Media related to North American NA 16 at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title North American NA 16 amp oldid 1125500496, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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