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Travel Air

This article is about the aircraft manufacturer from 1925-1931. For the 1950s-1960s twin-engine aircraft, seeBeechcraft Travel Air.

TheTravel Air Manufacturing Company was an aircraft manufacturer established inWichita, Kansas, United States in January 1925 byClyde Cessna,Walter Beech, andLloyd Stearman.

Travel Air Manufacturing Company
IndustryAerospace
Founded1925 (1925)
Founders
FateMerged withCurtiss-Wright Corporation
SuccessorCurtiss-Wright Corporation
Key people
Herbert Rawdon
ProductsAircraft
1928 D-4-D at theHiller Aviation Museum

An early leader in single-engine, light-aircraft manufacturing, from 1925 to 1931, Travel Air was the largest-volume aircraft manufacturer in the United States in 1928 -- the principal contributor to Wichita becoming named the "Air Capital City" by theAeronautical Chamber of Commerce.[1][2]

Travel Air produced the trend-settingTravel AirMystery Ship racer, which forced radical changes in U.S. military aircraft. Travel Air also developed early small airliners, includingDelta Airlines' first, and the first civilian plane to reachHawaii by air.[1][3]

With Walter Beech as its last President, the company was acquired byCurtiss-Wright Corporation, and moved toSt. Louis, Missouri, before production ceased in theGreat Depression. However, Beech returned to Wichita in 1932, acquired the abandoned Travel Air factory, and resumed production under his own name, with theBeech Aircraft Corporation — producing what would have been the 17th Travel Air model, but as theBeech Model 17 "Staggerwing."[1]

History

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Early biplanes

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Travel Air 2000 c/n 669. Built 1928. Now displayed inYanks Air Museum, inChino, California, USA

The company initially built a series of sporting and training open-cockpit biplanes, including the Model A, Model B, Model BH, and Model BW (These were subsequentlyrenumbered.) Other types included the 5000 and 6000 high wing cabin monoplanes and the CW / 7000 mailplane.

The A differed in some minor details such as lacking the overhangingFokker styleailerons that gave the rest of the series the nicknameWichita Fokker (not present on all of the later models though), while the B, BH and BW differed only in the engine installed – the A and B had aCurtiss OX-5, the BH had aHispano-Suiza V-8, the BW had a Wright radial (of various types)

 
Travel Air 4000 with2003 National Air Tour logo, in which it participated

though other radials would be installed later (especially after it became the 4000).

Aside from the Wichita Fokkers seen in such movies asHoward Hughes'Hell's Angels, likely the most famous[citation needed] of the open cockpit biplanes was N434N, a D4D (the ultimate derivative of the BW) painted inPepsi colors for airshow and skywriting use which survives in the National Air & Space Museum's Udvar-Hazy annex. A second, backup D4D, N434P, used by Pepsi in later years to supplement and fill-in for the original aircraft, is housed in theHiller Aviation Museum inSan Carlos, California.

Cabin monoplanes

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"Woolaroc" airplane, winner of the 1927 Dole Air Race, at the Woolaroc museum in Oklahoma.
August 2, 2008. Photo courtesy of Tyler Thompson

TheTravel Air 5000 was a Cessna design, ordered in small numbers forNational Air Transport. Two were custom-built long-range endurance aircraft similar in concept toCharles Lindbergh'sSpirit of St. Louis.Woolaroc, flown by Art Gobel won the disastrousDole Air Race fromOakland, California toHawaii in which the majority of contestants disappeared at sea or otherwise died attempting the crossing.[4]

Travel Air then produced theModel 6000, a five or six-seat high-wing cabin monoplane — intended for airline use, and for very wealthy private owners.[1]

 
Travel Air 6000 with2003 National Air Tour logo, in which it participated

A small fleet of Travel Air 6000s were the first airliners for Delta Air Service (eventually renamedDelta Airlines).[3] In 1928, National Air Transport operated the Type 6000 on their mail and passenger routes from Chicago to Dallas, Kansas City and New York.[5]

Two Travel Air 6000 were purchased by the Paraguayan government during theChaco War (1932–1935) for the Transport Squadron of its Air Arm. These planes belonged to TAT with the registrations NC624K (c/n 6B-2011) and NC9815 (c/n 6B-1029); They received the military serials T-2 and T-5 (later reserialled as T-9). The planes were intensively used during the conflict as air ambulances. They both survived the war and continued flying in the air arm. In 1945, they were transferred to the first Paraguayan airline,Líneas Aéreas de Transporte Nacional (LATN) and received the civil registrations ZP-SEC and ZP-SED. They were withdrawn from use in 1947.[citation needed]

Cabin biplanes

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The CH or 7000 — a single-engine, cabin biplane, with a pilot's open-cockpit above and behind the small, enclosed cabin for cargo or passengers — found little success, but ended up in Alaska as an early bushplane.[citation needed]

Racing monoplanes

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Travel Air was also responsible for a series of very successful racing aircraft, which due to the company being extremely secretive about them during development, were namedMystery Ships by the press. In 1929, at theNational Air Races inCleveland, the first Travel Air Model R Mystery Ship became the first American airplane to outrun the nation's top fighter aircraft, winning theThompson Trophy unlimited-class pylon race.

 
Travel Air Model 'R' racer NR-1313 (Texaco #13)

TheMystery Ships dominated the racing circuit for several years and had the distinction of being faster than anything the U.S. military had on strength.[6][7][8] It forced the U.S. military to face the need to give up biplane fighters and water-cooled engines.[citation needed]

Its renown led to one example being sold to the Italians which inspired the design of a racing aircraft and theBreda Ba.27 fighter.[citation needed]

Acquisition by Curtiss-Wright

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Travel Air merged with theCurtiss-Wright Corporation in August 1929.[9] Curtiss-Wright continued to manufacture some of the Travel Air designs though they were renumbered again so that the 4000 became the 4, the 6000 became the 6. Additional types that had been close to production number from 8 to 16 were built while under Curtiss-Wright management such as theCurtiss-Wright CW-12. which in various marks was sold to several South American countries.

Travel Air Founder (with Clyde Cessna and Lloyd Stearman) Walter Beech resigned from the Curtis-Wright Corporation in March 1932 to form Beech Aircraft Company in Wichita,Ks.

Powder Puff Derby

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In August 1929, the firstWomen's Air Derby was held. Of the 20 entrants in the Women's Air Derby, otherwise known as "the Powder Puff Derby", seven flew Travel Airs and it wasLouise Thaden who won the Santa Monica, Calif., to Cleveland race.Opal Kunz finished eighth. The other five Travel Airs were flown byPancho Barnes,Claire Fahy,Marvel Crosson,Mary von Mack, andBlanche Noyes.

One of the odd qualifications was that the aircraft would have to have horsepower “appropriate for a woman.” Opal Kunz was told her airplane was too fast for a woman to handle, and had to get another aircraft or stay out of the race. “…Though Opal Kunz owned and flew her own 300 horse power Travel Air, it was disallowed since it was deemed by the judges to be “too fast for a woman to fly.” WithUS$25,000.00 in prize money at stake, she bought a lower powered Travel Air to race with.”[10]

Aircraft

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Model1st flightNo. builtType
A/100019251Open cockpit biplane withCurtiss OX-5 engine
B/20001927~600Open cockpit biplane with OX-5 engine
BH/30001926~50Model 2000 with a Hispano-Suiza V-8 engine
BW/4000/4192699Model 2000 with aWright J-6-7 Whirlwind engine, many converted
5000192614Single engine cabin monoplane, includesWoolaroc
6000/619298+Cabin monoplane with single radial engine
CH/CW/700019262Single engine biplane with open cockpit but enclosed cabin
800019283Alternate designation for 4000-CAM (Caminez engine)
900019284 or 5Alternate designation for 4000-SH (Siemens engine)
10192912+Cabin monoplane scaled down from model 6000
1119292D-2000 powered by aWright J-6 engine for competition purposes
Type R Mystery Ship19295Monoplane racer
12193141Open cockpit biplane trainer built as Curtiss-Wright CW-12
1419319+Replacement for 4000, built as Curtiss-Wright CW-14
15193116+Improved model 6000 built as Curtiss-Wright CW-15
16193123Three seat CW-12, built as Curtiss-Wright CW-16

References

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Notes

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  1. ^abcdPhillips, Edward H.:Travel Air: Wings over the Prairie, Flying Books (1982),ISBN 0911139001
  2. ^sidebar: "...Aircraft Production Numbers..." in"Monocoupe: Speed for the Common Man," Winter 2011,AAHS Journal, Volume 56, No.4, American Aviation Historical Society, retrieved December 31, 2022
  3. ^ab"Travel Air S-6000-B 1929-1930," "Aircraft by Type,"History,Delta Flight Museum, retrieved December 31, 2022
  4. ^Ed Phillips (Spring 1985). "Woolaroc!".AAHS Journal.
  5. ^Davies, 1998, p. 73-74
  6. ^"The Scarlet Marvel (Part One)" November 9, 2020,King Air Magazine, retrieved December 31, 2022
  7. ^"The Scarlet Marvel (Part Two)" December 8, 2020,King Air Magazine, retrieved December 31, 2022
  8. ^The Mystery of the Mystery Ship, Part 7,The Legend of Pancho Barnes... official movie website, retrieved December 31, 2022
  9. ^"Travel Air to Merge with Curtiss-Wright".Lawrence Daily Journal-World. AP. 7 August 1929. p. 1. Retrieved16 April 2020.
  10. ^“Travel Air Speedwing.” Flight Journal. January–February 1998. No pagination given.

Bibliography

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  • Davies, R.E.G. (1998).Airlines of the United States since 1914. Smithsonian Institution Press.ISBN 1-888962-08-9.
  • Gunston, Bill (1993).World Encyclopedia of Aircraft Manufacturers. Annapolis: Naval Institute Press. p. 307.
  • Hagedorn, Dan; Antonio Luis Sapienza:Aircraft of the Chaco War, 1928-1935. Schiffer Publishing Co. Atglen, PA. 1996
  • Sapienza Fracchia, Antonio Luis:La Contribución Italiana en la Aviación Paraguaya. Author's edition. Asunción, 2007. 300pp.

External links

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Wikimedia Commons has media related toTravel Air.

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