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Aircrafts
The durable Douglas
C-47 Skytrain was the military variant of the Douglas DC-3.
It was America's
do-anything, go-anywhere transport plane of World War II.
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DOUGLAS C-47
BY THE EDITORS OF PUBLICATIONS INTERNATIONAL, LTD.
When the Douglas C-47's ancestor, the Douglas DST (Douglas
Sleeper Transport) first took to the air on December 17, 1935, Donald Douglas
and his supremely competent crew looked forward to selling perhaps as many as
400 of the comfortable airliners over the next several years.
Not one of them, not Douglas,
the company founder, nor Arthur Raymond, his chief engineer, nor Carl Cover,
the chief test pilot, could have imagined that more than 13,000 of the type
would be built, and that it would become one of the most effective warplanes in
history.
Developed into the
21-passenger DC-3, the twin-engine beauty from Santa Monica revolutionized the
world of air transport, becoming the best-selling airliner of its day.
By 1940, a total of 430 DC-3s
were carrying 90 percent of the world's airline travelers.
The DC-3 had placed the
United States well in the lead in commercial aviation, a position the nation
would retain for the rest of the century, and beyond.
Gen. Dwight
Eisenhower cited the Douglas C-47
as a key factor in the successful U.S.
military effort.
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The U.S. Army Air Corps had
watched the development of Douglas airliners and had purchased small numbers of
the earlier military versions including the C-32, C-33, C-34, C-38, C-39, C-41,
and C-42.
(Ultimately, there would be
more than 60 different designations assigned to variations of the basic
design.)
The C-41 served as a test bed
for the Army Air Corps' first order of 953 C-47s, which were built in a new
Douglas plant in Long Beach, California.
Many Douglas C-47s
were sold as surplus following the war.
Others were retained in active service
for decades.
During the Vietnam War, Douglas C-47s were
modified
for service as low-flying, heavily armed gunships,
picking up the
designation AC-47.
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The all-metal Douglas C-47
featured strengthened floors, bucket seats, large loading doors, and a pair of
sweet-running Pratt & Whitney R-1830 engines of 1,200 horsepower each.
From that point, orders
swelled so that a second factory had to be built in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
Ultimately 10,632 aircraft of
all versions were built in the United States, while 2,930 were built under
license in the Soviet Union and 485 in Japan.
(Initial production runs in
those nations were built under license, but subsequent wartime conditions encouraged
considerable unlicensed production.)
Variants of the basic
aircraft were used by all the military services of the United States and by
almost every Allied nation.
Even the Luftwaffe flew the doughty Douglas
design, using aircraft impressed from airlines of occupied countries.
Douglas C-47 Specifications
The
versatile Douglas C-47 could be used for troop and cargo transport, dropping
paratroops, towing a glider, medical evacuation, and virtually any other task
assigned to it.
It was turned into a
troop-carrying glider by the removal of its engines and into a seaplane by the
addition of huge floats manufactured by the EDO company.
The Dougas C-47 operated
under all weather conditions on every continent around the world, and it did so
with a grace and rugged reliability that made it a favorite of pilots and
mechanics alike.
One of the results of this
affection was its many nicknames, the most enduring of which was "Gooney
Bird."
When
World War II ended, it would have been reasonable to expect the Douglas
C-47 to serve for a few more years and then retire, going the way of the B-17s,
P-47s, and other combat veterans.
Many were retired, but
instead of going to some boneyard for salvage, some were refurbished and became
the nucleii of many airline start-ups.
Available at bargain prices
from U.S. government surplus sales, they had a stultifying effect upon the sale
of new transport designs.
A Douglas C-47 attached to the Air Transport
Command of the
U.S. Army Air Forces stands at the ready in India in 1945.
This
plane would be loaded with supplies needed by American troops in China.
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New aircraft
like the Convair 240 and Martin 404 had moderately better performance than the
Douglas C-47, but were far more expensive to purchase and operate.
As a result,
the converted C-47s were mainstays of smaller airlines for many years.
Other uses
were found for the aircraft over time, and it has been successfully modernized
with turbo-prop engines by several companies.
Despite the
age of the Douglas C-47s, almost every air force retained many of the craft in
active service.
The plane
soldiered on, performing well for the United States during the 1948 Berlin
Airlift, in Korea, and in Vietnam.
The C-47's
longevity derived from the conservative Douglas engineers building in more
strength than was necessary, endowing the airplane with a virtually unlimited service
life.
No wonder it
earned General Dwight D. Eisenhower's praise as one of the five most important
weapons of World War II.
DOUGLAS
C-47 SPECIFICATIONS
Wingspan: 95
ft. 6 in.
Length: 63
ft. 9 in.
Height: 17
ft.
Empty
Weight: 18,200 lbs
Gross
Weight: 26,000 lbs
Top
Speed: 230 mph
Service
Ceiling: 24,000 ft.
Range: 1,600
miles
Engine/Horsepower: Two
Pratt & Whitney R-1830s/1200 each
Crew: 3
Accommodation: 27
troops or 18-24 litters
FEARSOME
WARPLANES OVER VIETNAM
A team of men led by USAF Captain Ronald W. Terry would turn the
lovable Gooney Bird into one of the most fearsome warplanes in history.
Terry
felt that a Douglas C-47, armed with side-firing "Gatling Guns" --
six-barrel General Electric 7.62 machine guns -- would fill the urgent
requirement to provide heavy fire support to outlying Vietnamese strategic
hamlets.
Quickly
tested and pressed into service, the AC-47s were flown in orbit over the
beleaguered hamlets, laying down a withering 18,000 round-per-minute cone of
fire that beat off attacks and earned the plane a new nickname -- "Puff
the Magic Dragon."
Operating
under the call-sign "Spooky," the AC-47s became indispensable, and it
was their proud boast that no South Vietnamese position was ever lost when a
gunship was on duty overhead.
Although
supplemented by later AC-119 and AC-130 gunships, the South Vietnamese operated
Spookys until the end of the war in 1975.
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