Metal Aircraft Corporation Flamingo
G-2-W Flamingo Red Hawk | |
---|---|
El Rio Caroní | |
Role | Passenger monoplane |
National origin | United States of America |
Manufacturer | Metal Aircraft Corp |
Designer | Ralph R. Graichen |
Status | On display |
Unit cost |
around $23,000 in 1929 |
The Metal Aircraft Corp G-2-W Flamingo Red Hawk was a monoplane produced by the Metal Aircraft Corporation in the 1930s.[1] The company had purchased the design from the Halpin Development Co. and unveiled it at the 1929 National Air Races with Elinor Smith.[2][3] The plane is best remembered for its role in the discovery of Angel Falls by Jimmy Angel in 1935. Although well known to the local indigenous population, the falls had been glimpsed only by European explorers until Jimmy Angel crash-landed while attempting to land above the falls on Auyán-tepui during gold exploration.
The Metal Aircraft Corporation Flamingo that crashed above the falls was recovered by helicopter in the 1960s by the Venezuelan government and is on display at the entrance of the Ciudad Bolívar airport, in Venezuela. A replica was put in its place for visitors of the crash site.[4]
Other operators included the Mason & Dixon airline.[5]
Variants
- Halpin Flamingo - six-passenger 410hp P&W
- G-1 - five-passengeer 450hp P&W
- G-2 - six-passenger
- G-2-H six-passenger 525hp P&W
- G-2-W eight-passenger 410hp P&W
- G-MT-6 five-passenger 410 or 525 P&W[6]
Specifications (Flamingo G2W)
Data from Skyways, Air and Space
General characteristics
- Capacity: eight
- Length: 32 ft 6 in (9.91 m)
- Height: 9 ft 6 in (2.90 m)
- Empty weight: 2,960 lb (1,343 kg)
- Gross weight: 5,600 lb (2,540 kg)
- Powerplant: 1 × Pratt & Whitney Wasp Radial, 410 hp (310 kW)
Performance
- Maximum speed: 117 kn; 217 km/h (135 mph)
- Cruise speed: 100 kn; 185 km/h (115 mph)
- Rate of climb: 800 ft/min (4.1 m/s)
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Metal Aircraft Corporation Flamingo. |
- ↑ "Cincinnati Aviation Heritage Soc." CAHS Home. N.p., n.d. Web. 20 June 2010. <http://cahslunken.org/lukhistory/lukhistory.htm>.
- ↑ Rusty McClure, David Stern, Michael A. Banks. Crosley: two brothers and a business empire that transformed the nation.
- ↑ S. Low, Marston & company, ltd. All the world's aircraft, Volume 18, Part 1928.
- ↑ Skyways. July 1999. Missing or empty
|title=
(help) - ↑ Rusty McClure, David Stern, Michael A. Banks. Crosley: two brothers and a business empire that transformed the nation.
- ↑ "Metal Aircraft Corporation". Retrieved 31 October 2011.