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The Wright Model D was built to sell to the United States Army for an observation aircraft. It was similar in design to the Wright Model R with a 6-60 motor. The Model D could fly 66.9 mph and climb 525 feet per minute, but its excessive landing speed discouraged the Army from ordering more.[1]

Wright Model D
Wright Model D front view on ground, Simms Station near Dayton, Ohio, 1912
Role Observation
National origin United States of America
Manufacturer Wright Company
Designer Wright Brothers
Introduction 1912
Primary user United States Army
Number built 2
Developed from Wright Model C

Development


The aircraft was built to fulfill a request by the United States Army for a speed scout.


Design


The single seat aircraft was made from ash and spruce wood coated with aluminum powder. It used forward mounted finlets ("blinkers" in Wright terminology) to stabilize the aircraft. It was powered by the last six cylinder engine built by the Wright Brothers with a rubber band drive on the flywheel. The 406 cubic inch engine ran at 1,400 to 1560rpm powering two counterrotating propellers via chains.[2]


Operational history


Orville Wright considered the Model D “the easiest to control of any we have ever built” with the exception of the high landing speed. The United States Army acquired two aircraft in August 1912. One of the two was wrecked and rebuilt during trials. On May 3, 1913 the "speed scout" S.C. no 19 was accepted, and on June 6, 1913 the second aircraft was accepted.[3] Both were not flown regularly and were retired in 1914.[4]

The 1913 engine is on display at the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum.


Specifications (Wright Model D)


Data from AFHRA

General characteristics

Performance


References


Notes
  1. "Wright model D". Retrieved 9 November 2010.
  2. "Wright 6-70". Retrieved 6 November 2010.
  3. Roger D. Launius. Reconsidering a century of flight.
  4. Dr. Richard P. Hallion. THE WRIGHT KITES, GLIDERS, AND AIRPLANES:A REFERENCE GUIDE.

На других языках


- [en] Wright Model D

[it] Wright Model D

Il Wright Model D fu un modello di aereo da ricognizione veloce che i fratelli Wilbur e Orville Wright svilupparono nel 1912 in risposta a una specifica dell'U.S. Army. L'aereo era un biplano monoposto monomotore a doppia elica spingente con impennaggi in coda, molto simile in tutte le sue caratteristiche principali al Wright Model R da cui era direttamente derivato. Era tuttavia dotato di un più potente motore Wright 6-60 da 6 cilindri in linea, il quale gli garantiva prestazioni di velocità orizzontale e di velocità di salita particolarmente buone; pur risultando più facile da pilotare dei suoi predecessori nella famiglia di aeroplani Wright, il velivolo era caratterizzato da un'elevata velocità d'atterraggio che infine fece sì che l'esercito statunitense non decidesse di acquistare il Model D in grandi numeri. Costruito in due soli esemplari, impiegati dall'U.S. Army tra il 1913 e il 1914, l'aereo rimase allo stadio di prototipo.



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