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Curtiss R3C-2

Air and Space Museum

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  • Black biplane with pontoon floats instead of wheels. Bottom of lower cream colored wing adorned with roundels.
  • Black biplane with pontoon floats instead of wheels. Bottom of lower cream colored wing adorned with roundels.
  • Wooden open cockpit with multiple instruments for measuring water, oil, fuel, and airspeed.
  • Black biplane with pontoon floats instead of wheels, hanging from ceiling. Cream colored wings are adorned with roundels—a white star with a red center on a blue background. View of a white-painted "3" on the fuselage is partially obscured.
  • Black biplane with pontoon floats instead of wheels, hanging from ceiling. Cream colored wings are adorned with roundels—a white star with a red center on a blue background. View of a white-painted "3" on the fuselage is partially obscured.

    Object Details

    Manufacturer

    Curtiss Aeroplane and Motor Co.,Garden City, Long Island, N.Y.

    Physical Description

    Curtiss V-1400 Engine:
    Type: V-type, 12 cylinders, water-cooled
    Mfg. No. 9
    Power rating: 496 kw (665 hp)
    Bore and Stroke: 12.382 cm (4.875 in.) x 15.875 cm (6.25 in.)
    Displacement: 22.95 liters (1400 cu. in.)
    Curtiss-Reed Propeller:
    Design: EX-32995
    Two-Blades, Fixed-Pitch
    Serial No.: M-455
    Material: Duralumin
    Diameter: 237 cm (92 in.)
    Pitch: 284 cm (112 in.)
    Wingspan: 6.71 m (22 ft.) upper
    6.1 m (20 ft.) lower
    Length: 6.01 m (19 ft. 8 1/2 in.)
    Height: 2.46 m (8 ft. 1 in.)
    Weight: Empty: 975 kg (2150 lb.)
    Gross: 1152 kg (2539 l"

    Summary

    On Oct. 26, 1925, U.S. Army Lt. James H. Doolittle flew the Curtiss R3C-2 to victory in the Schneider Trophy Race with an average speed of 374 km/h (232.17 mph). The next day he flew the R3C-2 over a straight course at a world-record speed of 395 km/h (245.7 mph). In the Schneider Trophy Race of Nov. 13, 1926, this same airplane piloted by Lt. Christian F. Schilt, USMC, and piloted by an improved engine, won second place with an average speed of 372 km/h (231.4 mph).

    Long Description

    Early in the development of aviation a spirit of sporting and competition became a major aspect of its ever-growing appeal. Air races began to enjoy a worldwide popularity, and two of the most coveted prizes were the Pulitzer Trophy and the Schneider Cup.
    In 1912 a wealthy French aviation enthusiast, Jacques Schneider, established a trophy to be awarded annually to the winner of a race to be flown over water in seaplanes. The Pulitzer Trophy Race, on the other hand, was sponsored by an American newspaperman, Ralph Pulitzer, to promote high speed in landplanes.
    In 1925 the U.S. Army and Navy ordered from the Curtiss Aeroplane and Motor Company aircraft of basically the same design but with individual variations. These airplanes ran away with first place in both trophy races in that same year. One of them also established a straightaway speed record for seaplanes.
    This airplane was the R3C-1/R3C-2 (the -1 is the landplane and the -2 the seaplane version). The R3C-1, piloted by Lt. Cyrus Bettis, won the Pulitzer Trophy Race on October 12, 1925, at a speed of 248.9 mph. On October 25, fitted with streamlined single-step wooden floats and redesignated the R3C-2, it was piloted to victory by Army Lt. James H. Jimmy Doolittle in the Schneider Cup Race held at Bay Shore Park, Baltimore. The average speed was 232.57 mph. On the day after the Schneider Race, Doolittle flew the R3C-2 over a straight course at a world record speed of 245.7 mph.
    In the Schneider Cup Race of November 13, 1926, this same airplane, piloted by Lt. Christian F. Schilt, USMC, and powered by an improved engine, won second place with an average speed of 231.4 mph.
    The R3C-1 was similar in dimensions and plan to the R2C-1 of 1923 but had a more powerful Curtiss V-1400 610-hp engine (665 hp in the 1926 racer).
    The R3C-1 was a single-seat, single-bay, wire-braced biplane. The wings were covered with twoply spruce planking. 3/32-inch thick, forming a box structure that required no internal bracing. Among the interesting features were the low-drag wing radiators made of corrugated brass sheeting, .004-inch thick, covering much of the surface of both upper and lower wings with the corrugations running chordwise. The upper wing was flush with the top of the fuselage, permitting the pilot to see over the wing. All ribs were of spruce conforming to the Curtiss C-80 airfoil section, and the ailerons, made of metal, were fabric-covered. The cantilever vertical fin and horizontal stabilizer were of wood.
    An ingeniously fabricated streamlined monocoque structure, the fuselage consisted of a shell of two layers of spruce over which fabric was doped for added strength and protection. This shell was formed over seven birch plywood bulkheads that were connected by four ash longerons, making a rigid structure.
    The unbalanced movable controls were metal. Only necessary navigation and engine instruments were installed. They consisted of gauges for water temperature, oil temperature, oil pressure, and fuel quantity, as well as a tachometer and an airspeed indicator.
    The fixed landing gear in the R3C-1 was a tripod configuration. A laminated hickory tail skid was added to protect the rudder.
    As a landplane, the R3C-1 carried only 27 gallons of fuel, which gave 48 minutes flying time at full throttle. In the R3C-2, the fuel capacity was increased to 60 gallons, enough for 1.3 hours at full throttle, by installing fuel tanks in the floats.
    The wings and elevators were painted gold; the fuselage, stabilizer, fin, struts, fairings, cowling, pontoons and/or wheels were all black.
    Contemporary star cockades were painted on the right and left sides of the upper surface of the top wing and the lower surface of the bottom wing, outboard of the wing radiators. The rudder was painted with red, white, and blue vertical stripes, the blue stripe being next to the rudderpost. Both sides of the vertical fin were lettered ‘U.S. Army," in white. On both sides of the fuselage aft of the cockpit a large numeral 43 was painted in white. This was the number used in the Pulitzer Race. When flown in the 1925 Schneider Race, the aircraft carried the number 3, and in the 1926 Schneider Trophy Race it was numbered 6.
    It was on loan for several years to the Air Force Museum, where it was restored by Air Force personnel. It now hangs in the Pioneers of Flight gallery at the National Air and Space Museum.

    Credit Line

    Transferred from the U.S. War Department

    Date

    1925

    Inventory Number

    A19280002000

    Restrictions & Rights

    CC0

    Type

    CRAFT-Aircraft

    Materials

    HAZ MAT: Cadmium Plating, Radium
    Wood (birch plywood, ash, spruce strips), steel, cotton, dope, adhesive, copper alloys, duraluminum, nickel alloy,

    Dimensions

    Wingspan: 6.71 m (22 ft.) upper
    6.1 m (20 ft.) lower
    Length: 6.01 m (19 ft. 8 1/2 in.)
    Height: 2.46 m (8 ft. 1 in.)
    Weight: Empty: 975 kg (2150 lb.)
    Gross: 1152 kg (2539 lb.)
    Engine: (1925) Curtiss
    V-1400, 610 hp
    (1926) Curtiss
    V-1400, 665 hp

    Country of Origin

    United States of America

    See more items in

    National Air and Space Museum Collection

    Location

    National Air and Space Museum in Washington, DC

    Exhibition

    Barron Hilton Pioneers of Flight

    Data Source

    National Air and Space Museum

    Metadata Usage

    CC0

    Link to Original Record

    http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/nv94b310090-4d87-4794-98fd-61214ee05ddc

    Record ID

    nasm_A19280002000

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