| XP-31 Swift | |
|---|---|
Curtiss XP-31 with Vee engine | |
| General information | |
| Type | Experimental monoplane fighter |
| Manufacturer | Curtiss |
| Primary user | United States Army Air Corps |
| Number built | 1 |
| History | |
| Introduction date | 1933 |
| First flight | July 1932[1] |
TheCurtiss XP-31 Swift (Wright Field Project NumberXP-934) was a 1930sAmericanexperimentalmonoplanefighter built byCurtiss for theUnited States Army Air Corps.
The XP-31 featured the first enclosed cockpit on a U.S. pursuit aircraft and was also the last pursuit aircraft to have fixed landing gear and externally braced wings. Despite its innovations, the XP-31 did not offer any advantages compared to its rival theBoeing P-26 Peashooter and was not ordered into series production.
Curtiss offered the XP-31 (given the Wright Field Project Number XP-934) in a 1932 competition with the P-26. It was a low-wing monoplane with fixed landing gear, first flown in July. It was the AAC's first single-seat closed-cockpit fighter, and the last with fixed gear and wing struts. Despite its small size, it was badly overweight, and carried 125 gallons (104 imp gal, 474 L) of fuel. Although Curtiss considered the design significant in that it introduced various new technologies, compared to its contemporaries the XP-31 was already outmoded, and, more importantly, testing showed that it fell below performance expectations.[2]


Powered by a 700 hp (520 kW)R-1750 Cyclone radial, its performance was dismal, despite retractableleading edge slots and large trailing-edgeflaps, so a 600 hp (450 kW)CurtissV-1570 Conqueror was substituted. In this form, the Curtiss XP-31 Swift (s/n 33-178) was delivered on 1 March 1933, having already lost to the P-26. The sole example was scrapped in 1935.[2]
Data fromU.S. Fighters: Army-Air Force 1925 to 1980s[3] andFighters of the United States Air Force[2]
General characteristics
Performance
Armament
Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era
Related lists
Media related toCurtiss XP-31 at Wikimedia Commons