Douglas DC-3: Διαφορά μεταξύ των αναθεωρήσεων
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imported>Philip Trueman μ Reverted 2 edits by Timsdad to last version by Binksternet |
imported>Timsdad Χωρίς σύνοψη επεξεργασίας |
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The '''Douglas DC-3''' is a [[fixed-wing aircraft|fixed-wing]], [[propeller]]-driven [[
==History==
The DC-3 was engineered by a team led by chief engineer [[Arthur E. Raymond]], and first flew on [[December 17]], [[1935]] (the 32<sup>nd</sup> anniversary of the [[Wright Brothers]] flight at Kitty Hawk). The aircraft was the result of a marathon phone call from [[American Airlines]] CEO [[C.R. Smith|Cyrus Smith]] to [[Donald Douglas]] requesting the design of an improved successor to the [[Douglas DC-2|DC-2]]. The amenities of the DC-3 (including sleeping berths on early "DST" -- Douglas Sleeper Transport -- models and an in-flight kitchen) popularized air travel in the [[United States]]. With only three refueling stops, eastbound transcontinental flights across America taking approximately 15 hours became possible. Westbound trips took 17 hours 30 minutes due to typical prevailing headwinds - still a significant improvement over the competing [[Boeing 247]]. Before the arrival of the DC-3, such a trip would entail short hops in commuter aircraft, during the day, coupled with train travel overnight.
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