| C-1 | |
|---|---|
| General information | |
| Type | Transport |
| National origin | United States |
| Manufacturer | Douglas Aircraft Company |
| Primary user | United States Army Air Service |
| Number built | 26 |
| History | |
| Introduction date | 1925 |
| First flight | 2 May 1925 |
TheDouglas C-1 was a cargo/transport aircraft produced by theDouglas Aircraft Corporation for theUnited States Army Air Service starting in 1925.
Douglas received an order for nine single-engined transport aircraft in 1925, the first aircraft flying from Douglas'sSanta Monica, California factory on 2 May 1925.[1] The C-1 was the first aircraft assigned in the new C- category. The aircraft design was based on several earlier and similar designs developed by Douglas in the early 1920s (including theDouglas World Cruisers used in the first round-the-world flight in 1924). The C-1 featured an enclosed passenger compartment capable of carrying six passengers or about 2,500 lb (1,100 kg) of cargo. A trap door was placed in the lower fuselage to allow large and/or heavy cargo (particularly aircraft engines) to be lifted directly into the cargo compartment. An auxiliary door for passengers and light cargo was included on the right side of the center fuselage.
The C-1biplane was powered by theLiberty L-12 engine and carried a crew of two in an open cockpit. A C-1 was flown in the 1926Ford National Reliability Air Tour.[2]
Seventeen additional aircraft were ordered in 1926 and 1927 for theUnited States Army Air Corps as C-1Cs and were slightly larger than the original C-1s.
Several C-1s were used in test programs—as an engine testbed, as a prototype air ambulance and as refueling aircraft for early air-to-air refueling experiments. Two of these aircraft were used as "tankers" in the 1929 record endurance flight of theFokker C-2Question Mark.
Data from McDonnell Douglas aircraft since 1920 : Volume I[3]
General characteristics
Performance