A guide to the plane that changed commercial aviation: “A whopping
109 color photos shows kits in various stages of completion . . .
Enjoyed it.” —Historical Miniatures Gaming Society No airliner in
the history of commercial aviation has had a more profound effect than
the Douglas DC-3. Reliable and easy to maintain, it carried passengers
in greater comfort than ever before. Its origins stem from a design by
the Douglas Aircraft Company of Santa Monica, California. Known as the
Douglas Commercial One, or DC-1, this new aircraft was revolutionary
in concept. It was quickly developed into the DC-2, which led to
Douglas’ domination of the domestic air routes of the United States,
and of half the world. Experience with the DC-2 led to an improved
version, the Douglas Sleeper Transport (DST), first flown on December
17, 1935. This in turn evolved into a 21-seat variant, the DC-3,
featuring many improvements. The first American Airlines DC-3 entered
service in June 1936, and within three years of its introduction the
aircraft accounted for a staggering 95 percent of all US commercial
air traffic. From commencement of service to the attack on Pearl
Harbor, the DC-3 increased domestic revenue passenger miles more than
fivefold. Of the 322 aircraft operated by the country’s airlines in
December 1941, 260 were DC-3s. At the pre-war peak, 30 foreign
airlines operated the DC-3. On the eve of war, the DC-3’s scheduled
flights represented 90 percent of international air traffic. In
addition to over 600 civil examples of the DC-3, 10,048 military C-47
variants were built, as well as 4,937 produced under license in the
USSR as the Lisunov Li-2 and 487 built by Showa and Nakajima in Japan
as the L2D. After the war, thousands of surplus C-47s were converted
for civilian use. These aircraft became the standard equipment of
almost all the world’s airlines, remaining in frontline service for
many years. The ready availability of cheap, easily maintained
ex-military C-47s, large and fast by the standards of the day,
jump-started the worldwide postwar air transport industry. The full
remarkable story of the DC-3, and its ancestor the DC-2, is told in
these pages, providing a wealth of information for the modeler and the
enthusiast alike.
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The Airliner that Revolutionised Air Transport
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781526759993
Publisert
2021
Utgiver
Independent Publishers Group (Chicago Review Press)
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter