Stinson Model O

Model O
Role Trainer
National origin United States of America
Manufacturer Stinson Aircraft Company
Designer Robert L. Hall
First flight May 1933
Primary user Honduran Air Force
Number built 9
Developed from Stinson Reliant

The Stinson Model O was an American single-engined military trainer aircraft of the 1930s designed built by the Stinson Aircraft Company. Based on the Stinson SR, the Model O was designed to meet a requirement of the Honduran Air Force, forming the initial equipment of that air arm.

Design and development

In 1933, New Zealander Lowell Yerex, who had flown reconnaissance flights in his Stinson Detroiter for forces loyal to Honduran President-elect Tiburcio Carías Andino in a civil war in December 1931, and subsequently founded the South American airline consortium TACA, was tasked with buying trainers and counter-insurgency aircraft for the Escuela Nacional de Aviación or National Aviation School, which was later to form the core of the Honduran Air Force. Following discussions between Yerex and the Stinson Aircraft Company, Robert Hall, designer of the Gee Bee Model Z racing aircraft, designed an aircraft to meet the Honduran requirement.[1][2]

Hall's design, the Model O, was a parasol wing monoplane which used the wings and tail surfaces of the Stinson SR Reliant four-seat private aircraft, combining them with a new fuselage seating the crew of two in tandem in open cockpits (the Model O was the first and only Stinson aircraft to have open cockpits). The aircraft was powered by a Lycoming R-680 radial engine, rated at 220 hp (160 kW) and capable of running on low-octane rating fuel. The aircraft could be armed with two fixed forward-firing machine guns, with a further machine gun flexibly mounted in the observer's cockpit, while a bomb rack could be mounted beneath the fuselage. Design and construction proceeded quickly, with the prototype first flying in May 1933.[3][4]

Operational history

Honduras purchased three Model Os, taking delivery in December 1933, when they formed the initial equipment of the Escuela Nacional de Aviación, with Honduran serial numbers 1–3.[1] Following the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in December 1941, Honduras's Model Os were used to carry out patrols along the coast of the still-neutral country. One of the Model Os went missing during such a patrol, but the other two were still in use at the end of the Second World War in 1945.[5]

A total of nine Model Os were built, with three being sold to China, one to Argentina and one to Brazil. With the Spanish Civil War raging, an attempt was made in 1938 by Republican Spain to purchase 100 Model Os, with President Franklin D. Roosevelt's brother-in-law Hall Roosevelt acting as negotiator for the Spanish, but the American arms embargo stopped the deal.[6] The prototype remained in the US as a civil aircraft, and was still in use in 1946.[6]

A replica Model O was constructed by Evergreen Aviation Services of Portland, Oregon, using the wings and tail of a Stinson SR-5 Reliant and a fuselage and wing center-section reconstructed from photographs. It first flew on March 24, 2010.[7][8]

Operators

 China
 Honduras

Specifications

Data from General Dynamics Aircraft and their Predecessors[6]

General characteristics

Performance


Notes

  1. 1 2 Hagedorn Air Enthusiast Thirty-one, p. 59.
  2. Wegg 1990, p. 130.
  3. Wegg 1990, pp. 130–131.
  4. "Stinson". Aircraft of North America 1903–2003. Aerofiles. Retrieved 1 December 2012.
  5. Hagedorn Air Enthusiast Thirty-one, pp. 62–63.
  6. 1 2 3 Wegg 1990, p. 131.
  7. Wood, Janice (April 5, 2010). "First Flight of Stinson Model O Replica". General Aviation News. Retrieved December 1, 2012.
  8. Davisson, Budd (June 2011). "The Paulson-Poling-Teal Stinson Model O" (PDF). Vintage Aircraft. EAA. 39 (6): 6–13.
  9. Andersson 2008, p. 40.

References

  • Andersson, Lennart (2008). A History of Chinese Aviation: Encyclopedia of Aircraft and Aviation in China until 1949. Taipei, Republic of China: AHS of ROC. ISBN 978-957-28533-3-7. 
  • Hagedorn, Daniel P. (July–November 1986). "From Caudillos to COIN". Air Enthusiast. No. Thirty-one. pp. 55–70. ISSN 0143-5450. 
  • Wegg, John (1990). General Dynamics Aircraft and their Predecessors. London: Putnam. ISBN 0-85177-833-X. 
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