M-1 and M-2 | |
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Original Ryan M-1 NC2073 in Pacific Air Transport markings in the Historic Aircraft Restoration Museum, Creve Coeur airport, Missouri. | |
Role | Mailplane |
National origin | United States |
Manufacturer | Ryan |
Designer | Hawley Bowlus, W A Mankey, John Northrop[1] |
First flight | 14 February 1926 |
Status | two airworthy in 2009 |
Number built | 36 |
The Ryan M-1 was a mail plane produced in the United States in the 1920s, the first original design built by Ryan.[2] It was a conventional parasol-wing monoplane with two open cockpits in tandem and fixed, tailskid undercarriage.[3]
The follow-on M-2 was substantially the same as the M-1.[2] The prototype M-1 was originally powered by a Hispano-Suiza 8A, but production examples featured a variety of engines in the same general power range, with the Wright J-4B chosen for nine of the sixteen M-1s built,[2] and the prototype later refitted with this engine.[4]
A M-1 was flown in the 1926 Ford National Reliability Air Tour. [5]
Pacific Air Transport operated J-4B-powered M-1s and M-2s on their demanding Seattle–San Francisco–Los Angeles mail route,[6] while Hispano-Suiza-powered machines flew with Colorado Airways between Cheyenne and Pueblo[2] and Yukon Airways between Whitehorse and Dawson City.[6]
One M-2 (named Bluebird) was built with a fully enclosed cabin for the pilot and four passengers, foreshadowing Ryan's highly successful Brougham series.[6] The standard M-2, meanwhile, was Charles Lindbergh's first choice for his transatlantic flight.[7] His list of requirements for the aircraft soon made it apparent, however, that rather than modifying an M-2, it would be more effective to build an all-new design along the same general lines, which resulted in the Ryan NYP Spirit of St Louis.[7]
The M-1 prototype was restored to flying condition between 1980 and 1984 and is preserved in the Museum of Flight in Seattle,[3]. The seventh aircraft is preserved in airworthy condition in Pacific Air Transport markings at the Historic Aircraft Restoration Museum at Creve Coeur airport, Missouri.[8] A replica of an M-1 using a small amount of parts from serial number 11 was built by Andy King in 2001, powered by a Lycoming R-680 and also painted in Pacific Air Transport #7's scheme. [9] A replica M-1 is exhibited in the San Diego Air & Space Museum.[10]
Data from "Ryan M-1"
General characteristics
Performance
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