Emsco B-2 Challenger

B-2 Callenger
Role Six passenger seat transport
National origin US
Manufacturer Emsco Aircraft Co.
Designer Charles Rocheville
First flight June 1929
Number built 2
Developed from American Albatross B-1

The Emsco B-2 Challenger was a US three-engined, six passenger aircraft flown in 1929. Only two were built and they were quite soon converted into two different Emsco types, one with one engine and the other with two.


Design

The Emsco Corporation took its name from the initials of its founder E.M Smith.[1] In early 1929 Emsco bought out the Albatross Corporation and their aircraft, designed by Charles Rocheville.[2] One of these was the American Albatross B-1 of 1928, a high wing braced monoplane with a single engine producing 260 hp (190 kW) and with accommodation for six passengers.[3] The Emsco Challenger was a development of it[4] and was quite similar apart from having three engines totalling 510 hp (380 kW).[5][6] It was intended as the first of a range of similar Emsco aircraft, differing in having one or two engines.[6]

The Challenger's wing was built in two parts, both rectangular in plan out to semi-elliptical tips, which met on top of the fuselage and were mounted with 1.5° dihedral. They had wooden structures built around two box spars and were fabric covered. Parallel struts from beyond mid-span braced the spars to the lower fuselage longerons and the rear struts were also braced near their midpoints to the upper longerons; all struts were enclosed in wide, airfoil section fairings. Its inset ailerons were long and narrow.[1][6]

The fuselage of the Challenger was built around a rectangular cross-section chrome-molybdenum steel frame and given an oval cross-section by bulkheads. The cabin region was plywood skinned; aft, formers and stringers were fabric covered. One of the three 180 hp (130 kW), six-cylinder Curtiss Challenger radial engines was in the nose under a wide-chord fairing. The other two were mounted uncowled on the wing bracing struts, assisted by more struts between engine and upper fuselage and others between the struts. The pilots occupied an enclosed cockpit, placed high and just ahead of the wing leading edge, with side-by-side seating and dual control. A passageway connected the cockpit and the windowed, well furnished passenger cabin. Cabin and cockpit were accessed by a door on the port side, equipped with a built-in ladder, via a compartment containing a curtained-off lavatory and a luggage space.[1][6]

The empennage, like the fuselage, was steel framed and fabric covered. Both fin and tailplane, the latter mounted at mid-fuselage height, had straight, swept leading edges and carried balanced control surfaces with straight, unswept rear edges and round tips. The rudder was deep, extending to the keel, and worked within an elevator cut-out. The Challenger had a fixed tailwheel undercarriage. Its mainwheels were on faired, cranked axles hinged from the central fuselage underside, braced by drag struts hinged further aft; these members were enclosed in balsa and fabric airfoil fairings. Short, vertical oleo legs were attached to the bottom of the outer engine mountings. The wheels had independent Bendix brakes and were almost entirely enclosed in large dural tube, fabric covered fairings. A small tailwheel was mounted on a rubber-sprung pylon.[1][6]

Development

The Challenger was flown for the first time in June 1929 by Jack Reid at Long Beach, California. Immediately afterwards it toured the U.S. West Coast, combining test and publicity flights.[7]

Two were built and both were later modified into different types by changing engines. The first became an Emsco B-3A in 1930 with a single 420 hp (310 kW) Pratt & Whitney Wasp C and the second, with two 420 hp (310 kW) Wright J-5s, was the only Emsco B-5.[8]

Variants

Emsco B-2 Challenger
As described
Emsco B-3
Similar to the B-2 but with a greater span (60 ft 0 in (18.29 m)). Longer at 40 ft 9 in (12.42 m), it had an extra passenger seat and was powered by a single 420 hp (310 kW) Pratt & Whitney Wasp C nine-cylinder radial engine. Five were built. One went to Mexico and one to Rumania. Another B-3, initially named he City of Tacoma was used on an unsuccessful attempt to cross the North Pacific, flown by Harold Bromley and Harold Gatty in 1930. In August 1931, renamed the Clarissa Madge it made a successful crossing, The prototype was lost at the end of an attempt on the world duration record; it seems that its pilot, Jack Reid, fell asleep after setting a record time of 38 hr 40 min. Reid died in the crash.[8]
Emsco B-3A
One of the B-2s was converted to a single Pratt & Whitney Wasp C engine;[8] it retained the shorter span wing of the B-2 but had the longer fuselage of the B-3 and its extra seat. It achieved its Approved Type Certificate early in 1931.[9] Only the B-3A, not the B-3, appeared in contemporary advertisements.[10]
Emsco B-5
This was a twin engine, six passenger conversion of the other B-2[8] with 420 hp (310 kW) Wright J-6-9 nine-cylinder radial engines. It was making early test flights in March 1930.[11] The only B-5 was sold to the Compania Nacional de Aviacion in Guatemala in July 1933.[8]

Specifications (B-2)

Data from Aviation, October 12, 1929 p.746-8[6] Performance figures with full normal load.

General characteristics

Performance

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "Emsco "Challenger"". Les Ailes (466): 3. 22 May 1930.
  2. "New Emsco Concern Buys Albatross Firm". Aviation. 26 (14): 1107. April 6, 1929. (registration required (help)).
  3. McReynolds, Charles F. (December 8, 1928). "American Albatross B-I". Aviation. XXV (24): 1924–5, 1954. (registration required (help)).
  4. "Emsco Challenger nearing completion". Aviation. 26 (20): 1706. May 18, 1929. (registration required (help)).
  5. 1 2 "The "EMSCO" Challenger". Flight. XXII (2): 105. 10 January 1930.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "The EMSCO "Challenger" tri-engined monoplane". Aviation. 27 (15): 746–8. October 12, 1929. (registration required (help)).
  7. "Emsco "Challenger" On West Coast Tour". Aviation. 26 (26): 2282. June 29, 1929. (registration required (help)).
  8. 1 2 3 4 5 "Aerofiles". Retrieved 12 August 2016.
  9. "Two new Emsco models". Aviation. 30 (5): 311. May 1931. (registration required (help)).
  10. "EMSCO ad". Aviation. 28 (14): 105. April 5, 1930. (registration required (help)).
  11. "New Planes". Aviation. 28 (13): 654. March 29, 1930. (registration required (help)).
  12. Lednicer, David. "The Incomplete Guide to Airfoil Usage". Retrieved 21 August 2016.
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