- Northrop C-19 Alpha
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YC-19 Alpha Role Transport Manufacturer Northrop Designer John K. Northrop First flight 1930 as Northrop Alpha Primary user US Army Air Corps Number built 3[1] Variants Northrop Alpha The Northrop C-19 Alpha was a series of three aircraft purchased from Northrop by the US Army Air Corps in 1931. They were slightly modified versions of the civil Northrop Alpha Type 2.[1] The major difference between the C-19s and the Alphas was that the civilian version carried a pilot and six passengers while the Army version carried a pilot and four passengers. One aircraft, the last of the three purchased, crashed between Richmond and Petersburg, Virginia on Sunday, March 19, 1933, killing its pilot and two passengers.[citation needed] The other aircraft were used for several more years until being sent to training schools as subjects for maintenance and repair classes.
Contents
Design and development
The YC-19 aircraft were Northrop Alpha 4s supplied for evaluation to the USAAC. No production oders was given.[1]
Variants
- YC-19
- one aircraft, previously an Alpha 4, serial numbers 31-516[2]
- Y1C-19
- two aircraft, serial numbers 31-517 to 31-518,[2] Pratt & Whitney R-1340-11 engine[3]
Operators
- United States: US Army Air Corps
Specifications (YC-19)
Data from "Janes all the Worlds Aircraft" - 1931, page 303c
General characteristics
- Crew: one pilot
- Capacity: four passengers
- Length: 28 ft 5 in (8.66 m)
- Wingspan: 41 ft 10 in (12.75 m)
- Height: 9 ft 0 in (2.74 m)
- Max takeoff weight: 4,700 lb (2,136 kg)
- Powerplant: 1 × Pratt & Whitney R-1340-7 Wasp radial, 450 hp (336 kW)
Performance
- Maximum speed: 170 mph (272 km/h)
- Range: 650 miles (1,040 km)
- Service ceiling: 19,000 ft (5,792 m)
See also
- Related development
- Related lists
References
- ^ a b c "The Complete Encyclopedia of World Aircraft" Editors: Paul Eden & Soph Moeng, (Amber Books Ltd. Bradley's Close, 74-77 White Lion Street, London, NI 9PF, 2002, ISBN 0-7607-3432-1), 1152 pp.
- ^ a b "United States Military Aircraft Since 1909" by F. G. Swanborough & Peter M. Bowers (Putnam New York, ISBN 085177816X) 1964, 596 pp.
- ^ "U.S. Army Aircraft 1908-1946" by James C. Fahey, 1946, 64pp.
Northrop aircraft Manufacturer
designations'Greek' series'N' seriesNote: Northrop company designations include a wide variety of technologies. Only aircraft, aero engines, and missiles are linked here.
N-1 · N-2 · N-3 · N-4 · N-5 · N-6 · N-7 · N-8 · N-9 · N-10 · N-12 · N-14 · N-15 · N-16 · N-18 · N-19 · N-20 · N-21 · N-23 · N-24 · N-25 · N-26 · N-29 · N-31 · N-32 · N-34 · N-35 · N-36 · N-37 · N-38 · N-39 · N-40 · N-41 · N-46 · N-47 · N-48 · N-49 · N-50 · N-51 · N-52 · N-54 · N-55 · N-59 · N-60 · N-63 · N-65 · N-67 · N-68 · N-69 · N-71 · N-72 · N-73 · N-74 · N-77 · N-81 · N-82 · N-94 · N-96 · N-102 · N-103 · N-105 · N-110 · N-111 · N-112 · N-117 · N-124 · N-132 · N-133 · N-134 · N-135 · N-138 · N-141 · N-144 · N-149 · N-150 · N-151 · N-155 · N-156 · N-205 · N-267 · N-285 · N-300'P' seriesP530 · P600 · P610
By role AttackBombersDronesFightersReconnaissanceTrainersTransportsExperimentalNames Bantam · Black Bullet · Black Widow · Chukar · Nomad · Pioneer · Raider · Reporter · Scorpion · Snark · Talon · Tigershark
See also: TR-3 USAAS/USAAC/USAAF/USAF transport designations 1925–1962, 2005-2006 Main sequence
1925-1962C-1 • C-2 • C-3 • C-4 • C-5 • C-6 • C-7 • C-8 • C-9 • XC-10 • Y1C-11 • Y1C-12 • C-13 (Not assigned) • C-14 • C-15 • C-16 • Y1C-17 • C-18 • C-19 • C-20 • C-21 • Y1C-22 • Y1C-23 • Y1C-24 • Y1C-25 • C-26 • C-27 • C-28 • C-29 • YC-30 • C-31 • C-32 • C-33 • C-34 • XC-35 • C-36 • C-37 • C-38 • C-39 • C-40 • C-41/A • C-42 • UC-43 • C-44 • C-45 • C-46 • C-47 • C-48 • C-49 • C-50 • C-51 • C-52 • C-53 • C-54 • C-55 • C-56 • C-57 • C-58 • C-59 • C-60 • UC-61 • C-62 • C-63 • C-64 • C-65 • C-66 • UC-67 • C-68 • C-69 • UC-70/A/B/C/D • UC-71 • UC-72 • C-73 • C-74 • C-75 • C-76 • UC-77 • C-78 • C-79 • C-80 • UC-81 • C-82 • C-83 • C-84 • UC-85 • C-86 • C-87 • C-88 • C-89 • C-90 • C-91 • UC-92 • C-93 • UC-94 • UC-95 • UC-96 • KC-/C-97 • C-98 • XC-99 • UC-100 • UC-101 • C-102 • UC-103 • C-104 • C-105 • C-106 • C-107 • C-108 • C-109 • C-110 • C-111 • XC-112 • XC-113 • XC-114 • XC-115 • XC-116 • C-117 • C-118 • C-119 • XC-120 • C-121/F • YC-122 • C-123/A • C-124 • YC-125 • LC-126 • C-127 (I) • C-127 (II) • C-128 • YC-129 • C-130 • C-131 • C-132 • C-133 • YC-134 • KC-/C-135 • C-136 • C-137 • C-138 (Not assigned) • C-139 (Not assigned) • C-140 • C-141 • XC-142
Revived sequence
2005-2006C-143 • C-144
See also: Post-1962 list Lists relating to aviation General Aircraft (manufacturers) · Aircraft engines (manufacturers) · Airlines (defunct) · Airports · Civil authorities · Museums · Registration prefixes · Rotorcraft (manufacturers) · TimelineMilitary Accidents/incidents Records Categories:- United States military transport aircraft 1930–1939
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