General-Western P-2 Meteor

Meteor
Role Parasol aircraft
National origin United States
Manufacturer General-Western Aero Corp
Designer Albin Peterson
Introduction 1932
Number built 6

The General-Western Meteor, also called the Air Transport Mfg Meteor, Phantom Meteor and the Bantam Meteor was a parasol wing aircraft.

Design and development

The P-2-S was built at Goleta Airport after development of the P-1 at the General-Western plant at Santa Barbara Municipal airport. It received its American type certificate on 6 May 1932. The aircraft was one of the earliest examples built with all-metal propellers.[1][2] Rights to the design were sold to the Air Transport Mfg Co. in 1935[3]

The P-2-S is a high-wing, conventional landing gear equipped, parasol-wing aircraft powered by a 100 hp (75 kW) Kinner radial engine.[4]

Operational history

The prototype was destroyed in testing in 1930.[5]

Variants

P-1
single seat prototype
P-2-S
Two seat sport model
P-2-T
Trainer model
Crop duster

Specifications (General-Western P-2-S Meteor)

Data from American airplane specifications[7]

General characteristics

Performance

References

  1. Neal Graffy. Historic Santa Barbara: An Illustrated History.
  2. "Santa Barbara Airport History" (PDF). Retrieved 5 November 2011.
  3. Skyways. October 2001. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  4. "Meteor P-2-S". Retrieved 5 November 2011.
  5. "Meteor P-2-S". Retrieved 5 November 2011.
  6. Joseph P. Juptner. U.S. civil aircraft, Volume 5.
  7. "American Aircraft specifications". Aviation. July 1932. pp. 314–315. (Registration required (help)).
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