Lincoln-Page PT

Lincoln-Page PT
Lincoln-Page PT-K
Role Primary Trainer
National origin United States
Manufacturer Lincoln-Page
Designer A.H. Saxon
First flight 1929
Number built 28+
Developed from Lincoln-Page LP-3

The Lincoln-Page PT was a trainer aircraft produced in the United States from 1929 to 1931.

Manufacture and operations

Lincoln-Page[1] were eager to take a share of the emerging trainer market. Using their Lincoln-Page LP-3 as a basis they set about designing the PT. The resultant aircraft was quite different from the LP-3, having tandem cockpits and a lengthened rear fuselage. The design bears a resemblance to the Swallow aircraft, partially from manager Victor Roos prior history with the company.[2] Structure was standard for its day:- welded steel tube warren girder fuselage with spruce spars and basswood ribs for the wings. With the ubiquitous Curtiss OX-5 the PT proved quite versatile and able to perform basic aerobatic manoeuvers without too much effort. It was awarded ATC no 181 in July 1929.

The aircraft was also offered with a Curtiss OXX-6 100 hp engine, but no evidence exists that any were produced. However, a later variant using a Kinner K-5 radial engine was named Lincoln PT-K.

Surviving aircraft

An example of the PT-K version is preserved at the EAA AirVenture Museum.[3] In August 2014 three other examples of the PT design were registered by the Federal Aviation Administration as owned by private pilot owners in the United States.

Variants

PT
Production variant with a Curtiss OX-5 engine.
PT-K
Production variant with a Kinner K-5 radial engine

Specifications

Data from Specifications of American Commercial Airplanes[4]

General characteristics

Performance

See also

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration and era

Notes

  1. Lincoln-Page became Lincoln, however most contemporaries carried on calling the firm Lincoln-Page.
  2. Sport Aviation. August 1988. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  3. airventuremuseum.org
  4. Aviation March 22, 1930, pp. 606, 608, 610.

References

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