"Dragonfly" Plane Climbs After Fifty-Foot Run

Item

It takes the army’s new slow-flying observation plane just fifty feet to get into the air, and it can land and roll to a stop in 100 feet. Nicknamed the “dragonfly” for its appearance, the YO-51 is made highly maneuverable by special flaps and slots, and on test flights it is understood to have landed at only twenty-eight miles an hour. Top speed is under 140 miles an hour. The two-seat monoplane was designed for landing in small areas and for infantry liaison service. Its wingspread is fifty feet, and it is driven by a 420-horsepower engine. Officers of the Ryan company, its builders, say the plane can hover at a standstill in a slight wind.

Title (Dublin Core)

"Dragonfly" Plane Climbs After Fifty-Foot Run

Subject (Dublin Core)

Article Title and/or Image Caption (Dublin Core)

"Dragonfly" Plane Climbs After Fifty-Foot Run

Language (Dublin Core)

eng

Temporal Coverage (Dublin Core)

Date Issued (Dublin Core)

1940-05

Is Part Of (Dublin Core)

pages (Bibliographic Ontology)

647

Rights (Dublin Core)

Public Domain (Google digitized)

Source (Dublin Core)

References (Dublin Core)

Archived by (Dublin Core)

Enrico Saonara
Alberto Bordignon (Supervisor)

Spatial Coverage (Dublin Core)

Item sets