Curtiss Model F

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Model F
Curtiss f floatplane.jpg
RoleUtility flying boat
Manufacturer Curtiss Aeroplane and Motor Company
Designer Glenn Curtiss
First flight12 January 1912
Primary users United States Navy
Russian Navy
Italian Navy
Number builtover 150

The Curtiss Models F made up a family of early flying boats developed in the United States in the years leading up to World War I. Widely produced, Model Fs saw service with the United States Navy under the designations C-2 through C-5, later reclassified to AB-2 through AB-5. Several examples were exported to Russia, and the type was built under license in Italy.

Contents

First successful flight of the Curtiss Flying Fish over Keuka Lake, July 1912. Curtiss 'Flying Fish' (Flying Boat Nr.2).jpg
First successful flight of the Curtiss Flying Fish over Keuka Lake, July 1912.
Marshall Earle Reid at Lake Keuka in his Curtiss seaplane, 1912. Note the step in the hull. Curtiss F of M Reid over Keuka Lake.JPG
Marshall Earle Reid at Lake Keuka in his Curtiss seaplane, 1912. Note the step in the hull.
Gustave Maurice Heckscher in his Curtiss seaplane at 60 miles per hour, 1912. Curtiss F of GM Heckscher c1912.jpg
Gustave Maurice Heckscher in his Curtiss seaplane at 60 miles per hour, 1912.

Design and development

In configuration, these were biplane flying boats powered by a single engine mounted amongst the interplane struts and driving a pusher propeller. The pilot and a single passenger sat side by side in an open cockpit. The wing cellule was derived from the Model E landplane and was of two-bay, unstaggered, equal-span construction with large ailerons mounted on the interplane struts and extending past the span of the wings themselves. The earliest examples of this design were built and sold by Curtiss in 1912 without any designation applied to them; the Model F name only coming into use the following year. Confusingly, Curtiss also used the designation Model E to refer to some early machines in this family, although these were quite distinct from Curtiss landplanes that bore this same designation and all but identical to the Model Fs.

Model Fs built from 1918 featured a revised, unequal-span wing that incorporated the ailerons into the upper wing and sponsons on the sides of the hull to improve the aircraft's handling in water. These were known as the Model MF (for Modernised-F), and years later as the Seagull in the postwar civil market.

Operational history

The US Navy initially purchased four of these aircraft in addition to the Freak Boat (C-1/AB-1) that it had already obtained and which was retrofitted to approximately the same design as the others. One of these, the C-2 became the first aircraft to fly under automatic control on 30 August 1913 when fitted with a gyroscopic stabiliser designed by Elmer Sperry. The same aircraft (by now redesignated AB-2) then became the first aircraft to be launched by catapult from a warship while underway when it took off from USS North Carolina on 5 November 1915, piloted by Captain Henry C. Mustin, Navy Air Pilot No.3, and Naval Aviator No. 11. Her sister, AB-3, became the first US heavier-than-air aircraft to see military action when launched from the USS Mississippi on 25 April 1914 on a scouting mission over Veracruz during the United States Occupation of Veracruz. [2]

The US Navy bought another eight aircraft before the end of 1916, but orders in quantity only came following the type's selection as the Navy's standard flying-boat trainer in April 1917. An initial batch of 144 of the basic F model were ordered, followed by 22 MFs in 1918. Another 80 MFs were produced under license by the Naval Aircraft Factory. This aircraft was especially useful for training because of its favorable stall recovery, while many other aircraft of the era were likely to stall into a spin. [3] A small number of Model Es and Fs were also purchased by the US Army.

The Russian Navy purchased two batches of Model Fs in 1913-14 and operated them as part of the Black Sea and Baltic Sea fleets until replaced by the Model K shortly thereafter. In Italy, the Curtiss representative Enea Bossi secured rights for local license-production of the Type F by the Zari brothers, who built eight examples at their workshop in Bovisa, Milan. The first of these was demonstrated to the Italian Navy on Lake Como on 22 September 1914. The Model F was adopted by Regia Marina on the battleship Dante Alighieri, cruisers Amalfi and San Marco, and the seaplane tender Elba. [4]

Rogers Airlines operated a postwar fleet of ten Curtiss Seagulls as late as 1927. The aircraft flew routes out of Miami and Nassau in the winter months and returned to upstate New York for maintenance and barnstorming in the summer. [5]

Variants

Model E
Designation sometime erroneously applied to certain early members of this family.
Model F
Standard production model from 1912 onwards, received this designation 1914, and given numerical designation of Model 7 in 1930.
White & Thompson 100 hp Curtiss Flying Boat
Improved version of the Model F flown in March 1913 - Curtiss inter-wing ailerons replaced by ailerons on the upper wing trailing edge.
White & Thompson Bass-Curtiss Airboat
Major reconstruction of a Model F fitted with an Anzani engine in June 1914.
Sperry-Curtiss
Amphibious version of Model E for Lawrence Sperry.
School Machine
Trainer with nose boarding ramp.
Sport Boat
Three-seat deluxe version.
Reid Hydroaeroplane
Custom version for Marshall Reid with shoulder-yoke aileron controls.
Model FL
Model F fitted with wings from Curtiss Model L. Single example, also designated Model 7 built 1917. [6]
Model BAT
Tractor-engined prototype for MF, later designated Model 13 in Curtiss sequence.
Model BAP
Pusher-engined prototype for MF similar to BAT, later designated Model 14 in Curtiss sequence.
Model MF
Modernised version of 1914, production standard from 1918 onwards, later designated Model 18
Cox-Klemin CK-14
Model MFs rebuilt and modified to use 180 hp Hispano Suiza engine [7]
Seagull
Postwar civil version of MF with two additional seats, later designated Model 25. Approximately 16 sold. [8]
Crane
Amphibious version of Seagull, later designated Model 20. [9]
Judson Triplane
Enlarged custom triplane version.
McCormick Flying Boat
Enlarged, five-seat custom version for Harold Fowler McCormick.

Operators

Flag of Brazil.svg  Brazil
Flag of Italy (1861-1946) crowned.svg  Kingdom of Italy
Flag of New Zealand.svg  New Zealand
Flag of the Ottoman Empire (1844-1922).svg  Ottoman Empire
Flag of Russia.svg  Russian Empire
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg  United Kingdom
Flag of the United States (1912-1959).svg  United States

Surviving aircraft

Specifications (1917 Model F)

Curtiss MF NC903 on display at the Omaka Aviation Heritage Centre in 2017 Curtiss MF NC903 Omaka 20170414 Zac Yates.jpg
Curtiss MF NC903 on display at the Omaka Aviation Heritage Centre in 2017

Data fromCurtiss Aircraft 1907–1947 [6]

General characteristics

Performance

See also

Related development

Related Research Articles

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References

  1. "Prve lietjuce clny - Gakkel a Curtiss". LOJZOJAGO CAFE. lojzojago. 4 October 2012. Retrieved 10 June 2017.
  2. Cressman, Robert (22 August 2007). "Mississippi II (Battleship No. 23)". NHHC. Retrieved 2022-05-13.
  3. Darden, Colgate W. Jr. (1984). "Naval Aviation in World War I". Proceedings. 110 (11). United States Naval Institute: 163–166.
  4. "Idrovolante Curtiss "Flying Boat"" . Retrieved 3 May 2011.
  5. "The Curtiss Seagull". Sport Aviation. August 1960.
  6. 1 2 Bowers 1979, p. 83
  7. "American airplanes: Cl - Cr". www.aerofiles.com.
  8. Bowers 1979, p. 178
  9. Bowers 1979, p. 181.
  10. Nicolle, David C. (August 2019). Air Power and the Arab World 1909-1955 Volume 1: Military Flying Services in Arab Countries, 1909-191. Helion. p. 33. ISBN   9781912866434.
  11. Air & Space Magazine, December 2017/January 2018
  12. Hair, Steve (22 August 2018). "Aviation History Takes Off From Moses Lake". NCWLife. NCWLife Channel. Retrieved 23 August 2018.
  13. "Knights of the Sky - WW1 Exhibition". www.omaka.org.nz.
  14. Lednicer, David. "The Incomplete Guide to Airfoil Usage". m-selig.ae.illinois.edu. Retrieved 16 April 2019.

Bibliography

Further reading