Douglas DC-5

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Douglas DC-5
Description
Role Passenger Transport
Crew 6
Passengers 16-22
First flight February 20, 1939
Entered service
Manufacturer Douglas
Dimensions
Length 62 ft 6 in 19.05 m
Wingspan 78 ft 0 in 23.77 m
Height 19 ft 10 in 6.05 m
Wing area 824 ft² 76.55 m²
Weights
Empty 13,680 lb 6,202 kg
Loaded 20,000 lb 9,072 kg
Maximum takeoff lb kg
Powerplant
Engine 2 × Wright GR-1820-F62 Cyclone
Power (each) 850 hp 635 kW
Performance
Maximum speed 227 mph @ 7,690 ft 365 km/h @ 2,345 m
Range 1,600 miles 2,575 km
Ferry range km miles
Service ceiling 23,700 ft 7,225 m
Rate of climb ft/min m/min

The Douglas DC-5, the least well-known of the famous DC airliner series, was a 16-seat, twin-propeller aircraft intended for shorter routes than the DC-3 or DC-4. By the time it entered commercial service in 1940, many airlines were canceling orders due to World War II, and the Douglas corporation was already converting to war production.

Consequently, only five civilian DC-5's were ever built: one prototype and four production aircraft. Ironically, the prototype (configured with just 8 seats) became the personal aircraft of William E. Boeing; his own company was already in full military production mode. It was later converted for military use. The other four planes were sold to KLM and used by their colonial subsidiaries; two of them later operated in Australia, and in 1948 the last surviving DC-5 was apparently smuggled to Israel for possible military use. The planes in US Army service are designated C-110.

There was also a military version of the plane for the Navy, called the R3D. Only seven were made.

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[edit] Military Operators

[edit] Specifications

[edit] References

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