- Bell Aircraft
The Bell Aircraft Corporation was an
aircraft manufacturer of theUnited States , a builder of several types offighter aircraft forWorld War II but most famous for theBell X-1 , the firstsupersonic aircraft, and for the development and production of many important civilian and militaryhelicopter s. Bell also developed the Reaction Control System for the Mercury Spacecraft and theBell Rocket Belt . The company was purchased in 1960 byTextron , and lives on today asBell Helicopter Textron .The company was founded by
Lawrence Dale Bell , an early employee and later general manager of theGlenn L. Martin Company , then a manager of theConsolidated Aircraft Corporation . When Consolidated moved toSan Diego in 1935, Bell stayed behind and formed the "Bell Aircraft Corporation" on10 July 1935 , headquartered inBuffalo, New York .Bell's first military contract followed in 1937 with the development of the ill-fated
YFM-1 Airacuda , an unconventional bomber destroyer powered by twoAllison -powered pusherpropeller s. Only 13 Airacudas would be produced, and they would serve in the USAAF for only three years.Bell would enjoy far greater success the following year with the development of the single engine P-39. Putting their previous experience with Allison engines to good use, the P-39 placed the engine in the center of the aircraft, with the propellor driven by a long shaft through which a cannon was also mounted that could fire directly out of the propellor's spinner. Lacking a supercharger or turbocharger, the P-39 performed poorly at higher altitudes compared to other fighters of the time, though many P-39s would find their way into the
Soviet Air Force under theLend Lease Act , where they proved themselves to be an excellent ground attack aircraft; this was also demonstrated by theCactus Air Force .A slightly larger and more powerful version of the P-39 would arrive shortly before the end of WWII. Called the
P-63 Kingcobra , it would address many of the P-39's shortcomings, though it arrived too late to make any contribution to the War effort. Although Bell would design several advanced fighter designs during and after WWII, none would become operational. TheP-59 Airacomet was the first US jet fighter to fly. The XP-77 was a small fighter using non-strategic materials; it was not successful. The XP-83 was a jet escort fighter similar in layout to the P-59 that was cancelled. TheBell XF-109 was a supersonic vertical takeoff supersonic fighter that was cancelled in 1961.As well as manufacturing their own products Bell was a major contributor to the
B-29 Superfortress program, with a factory atMarietta, Georgia producing 668 of the big four-engined bombers.Perhaps Bell Aircraft's most important contribution to the history of fixed wing aircraft development would be the X-1, the first aircraft to break the sound barrier. Bell would go on to produce a line of experimental aircraft throughout the 1950's, helping the Air Force explore the boundaries of aircraft design, and paving the way for the space race.
Helicopter development began in 1941, with the company's first, the
Bell Model 30 seeing its maiden flight in 1943. The division would become the only part which produced aircraft when it was purchased by Textron. It is now known today asBell Helicopter Textron . After a series of successful helicopter designs, theUH-1 Iroquois became the most famous helicopter of the Vietnam War, and Bell still designs and manufactures helicopters today.Lawrence Bell died in 1956, and for several years afterwards the company was in financial difficulty.
After the Textron purchase, the company was organized as a subsidiary Bell Aerospace Corporation with three divisions. See
Bell Helicopter Textron for further history. SeeHarvey Gaylord for biographical information on a key executive.Fixed-wing aircraft, in order of development:
*FM-1 Airacuda
*P-39 Airacobra
*P-63 Kingcobra
*P-59 Airacomet
* XP-77
* XP-83
* X-1
* X-2
* X-5
*Bell XF-109 See
Bell Helicopter for helicopters.References
*
Alain J. Pelletier , "Bell Aircraft Since 1935" (Annapolis, Maryland:Naval Institute Press , 1992)
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