(Redirected from Lockheed Model 14 Super Electra)
The 'Lockheed Model 14 Super Electra' was a civil cargo and passenger
aircraft built by the
Lockheed Aircraft Corporation during the late
1930s.
Design and development
The design was a scaled-up version of the original
Electra; the design team was lead by Don Palmer. The first Model 14 flew on
July 29,
1937, piloted by
Marshall Headle. Lockheed built a total of 114 Model 14s; another 119 were built under license in
Japan by the Tachikawa Aircraft Company under the designation Tachikawa Type LO "Thelma".
Operational history
The Model 14 entered commercial service with
Northwest Airlines in October 1937. Aircraft were exported for use by
Aer Lingus of
Ireland,
BOAC of
Britain,
Union Airways and
National Airways Corporation (NAC) of
New Zealand. The Model 14 was the basis for development of the
Lockheed Hudson maritime
reconnaissance and
light bomber aircraft operated by the
Royal Air Force,
USAAF,
United States Navy and many others during the
Second World War.
Record-breaking flights
In May 1938, a team of aviators of the Polish airline
LOT, made up of Waclaw Makowski, director of the LOT and first pilot, Zbigniew Wysiekierski, second pilot, Szymon Piskorz, mechanic and radionavigator, Alfons Rzeczewski, radio-navigator and Jerzy Krassowski, assistant, accomplished an experimental flight from the United States to Poland. This flight was carried out on board one of the planes bought by LOT and manufactured by Lockheed in California, Lockheed L-14H Super Electra (of which the Polish registration was SP-LMK
[1]). The crew took off from Burbank (Los Angeles) where these planes were manufactured, towards Warsaw.
The distance covered was of 24,850 km. They flew over the states of Central America (Mexico City), of South America (Lima, Santiago, Buenos Aires, Rio, Natal), the South Atlantic, Africa (Dakar, Casabianca, Tunis), Italy (Roma). The flight lasted 85 hours between May 5 and June 5. The overflight of the Atlantic - from Natal in Brazil to Dakar in Africa - lasted 11 hours and 10 minutes (3,070 km). This exploit of Polish aviators really marked the history of the air communication on a world level.
[2]
Howard Hughes flew a Super Electra (NX18973) on a global
circumnavigation flight. With four crewmates (Harry Connor, copilot and navigator; Tom Thurlow, navigator; Richard Stoddart, radio operator; and Ed Lund, flight engineer), the plane took off from
Floyd Bennett Field in New York on
July 10,
1938. The flight, which circled the narrower northern latitudes, passed through
Paris,
Moscow,
Omsk,
Yakutsk,
Fairbanks, Alaska, and
Minneapolis, before returning to New York on
July 14. The total distance flown was 14,672 mi (23,612 km).
Operators
Civilian
★
Aer Lingus
★
BOAC
★
Continental Airlines
★
National Airways Corporation
★
Northwest Airlines
★
Santa Maria Airlines
★
Trans Canada Airlines
★
Union Airways
★
LOT Polish Airlines (10 in 1938-1940)
★
KNILM
Military
★ :
Royal Canadian Air Force
★
Japan
★
South Africa :
South African Air Force
★ :
US Army Air Force,
US Navy
Specifications (Model 14-WF62 Super Electra)
References
★ Francillon, René J. ''Lockheed Aircraft since 1913.'' Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, 1987. ISBN 0-85177-835-6.
External links
★
Lockheed R4O Super Electra
Related content