
Spirit of St. Louis | |
|---|---|
| Pays | Usa |
| Rôle | Avions long-courriers |
| Premier vol | 28 Avril 1927 |
| Construit | 1 |
Lla L’esprit de Saint-Louis (anciennement le Ryan NYP, immatriculation : N-X-211) est le monoplan monomoteur, monoplace et à aile haute construit sur mesure que Charles Lindbergh a piloté les 20 et 21 mai 1927, lors du premier vol transatlantique en solo sans escale de Long Island, New York, à Paris, en France, pour lequel Lindbergh a remporté le prix Orteig de 25 000 $
Source: L’esprit de Saint-Louis sur Wikipédia
| Ryan NYP « Spirit of St. Louis » Walk Around | |
|---|---|
| Photographer | Vladimir Yakubov |
| Localisation | Evergreen Air & Space Museum |
| Photos | 33 |
Voir aussi :
General Characteristics
The Ryan NYP (New York-Paris) was a highly modified, custom-built aircraft created by Ryan Airlines under the supervision of Charles A. Lindbergh. It achieved legendary status by completing the first solo, nonstop transatlantic flight from New York to Paris on May 20–21, 1927, securing the $25,000 Orteig Prize.
| Property | Value (N-X-211) |
|---|---|
| Rôle | Long-Range Record Aircraft |
| Fabricant | Ryan Airlines Company (San Diego) |
| Designer | Donald A. Hall (in collaboration with Lindbergh) |
| First Flight | 28 Avril 1927 |
| Crew | 1 pilot (Single-seat configuration) |
| Envergure | 14.02 m (46 ft 0 in) |
| Max Takeoff Weight (Overloaded) | 2,381 kg (5,250 lb) |
| Empty Weight | 975 kg (2,150 lb) |
Design and Powerplant
- Engine: One Wright Whirlwind J-5C 9-cylinder, air-cooled radial engine.
- Power Output: 166 kW (223 hp). The reliability of this single engine was a key factor in Lindbergh’s design choice over heavier multi-engine planes.
- Fuel Capacity: 1,703 L (450 US gallons) stored in five tanks (three in the wing, two in the fuselage).
- Construction: Fabric over a welded steel tube fuselage and fabric over a wood-framed wing.
- Design Origin: Loosely based on the standard Ryan M-2 mailplane, but extensively redesigned with a 10-foot longer wingspan and strengthened structure to handle the extreme fuel load.
Safety and Cockpit Features
- Forward Visibility: The main fuel tank was placed directly in front of the pilot to improve the center of gravity and, critically, to protect Lindbergh from being crushed by the engine and tank in a crash landing. This meant there was no front windshield.
- Pilot View: Lindbergh navigated by looking out the side windows or using a small, reflective periscope mounted on the left side of the cockpit.
- Instruments: The plane was stripped of non-essential equipment (like a radio) to save weight, but included a Sperry artificial horizon, an earth inductor compass, and an econometer for precise fuel management.
- Range: Maximum range was estimated at over 6,600 km (4,100 miles). Lindbergh’s flight covered approximately 5,800 km in 33.5 hours.
- Current Status: The original Spirit of St. Louis (Registration: N-X-211) is permanently preserved and displayed at the National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C.
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