1931 Laird "Super Solution" - Part IV


Title:
1931 Laird "Super Solution" - Part IV

Description:
1931 Laird "Super Solution" NR12048 The Original Laird Super Solution The 1930s were the Golden Age of Air Racing, when air races were more popular, and drew larger crowds, than baseball. E.M. "Mattie" Laird was an experienced airplane designer whose Laird "Solution" won the 1930 Thompson Trophy Race. Two Laird "Speedwings" also performed well in the 1930 Chicago National Air Races. In mid-1931, the Cleveland Speed Foundation asked Laird to build a new airplane to challenge the Travel Air "Mystery Ship," which was burning up race courses around the country. The "Super Solution" was based heavily on the Solution and other earlier Laird designs, but it looked like an entirely new airplane. With the Cleveland Air Races scheduled for Labor Day, work began on the racer in July of 1931 and it was test-flown about six weeks later on 22 August. It needed very few changes or refinements before Laird delivered it to his race pilot, Jimmy Doolittle. The Foundation's goal was to enter the Super Solution in the Los Angeles to Cleveland Bendix Trophy Race and then, a few days later, run it in the 100-mile closed-course Thompson Trophy Race in Cleveland Ohio. Laird provided two different engines for the Super Solution. For the cross-country Bendix Race, where steady power at high altitudes would be the key, the airplane would use a direct-drive engine. For the closed-course Thompson Race, a 3:2 geared-drive engine would give the best flat-out power. Both engines were highly modified versions of the Pratt & Whitney "Wasp Junior" nine-cylinder radial. Off the shelf, the Wasp Jr. was rated at 375 hp. With high-compression pistons and "doped" fuel, both modified engines produced well over 500 hp. Super Solution in the Bendix and Thompson Races Sponsored by Vincent Bendix and the Bendix Corporation, the cross-country Bendix Trophy Race was meant to encourage transcontinental air travel. It was an open-class dash from Los Angeles to Cleveland with a bonus prize for the airplane that could continue from Cleveland to Newark, NJ and win a truly transcontinental race. Doolittle and the Super Solution won the Bendix Race handily with an elapsed time of 9 hours, 10 minutes, and 21 seconds, and an average speed of 223 miles per hour—well ahead of the closest competitor. After just a few minutes on the ground in Cleveland, Doolittle headed for Newark to complete the full transcontinental flight. His elapsed time from Burbank, CA to Newark, NJ (2,882 miles) was 11 hours, 16 minutes, and 10 seconds, at an average speed of 217 miles per hour. Doolittle and Super Solution beat the 1930 transcontinental record set by the Travel Air Mystery Ship, by 1 hour, 8 minutes. Less than 30 minutes after landing, Doolittle flew the Super Solution back to Cleveland for an engine change and the Thompson Trophy Race at the Cleveland National Air Races. The Thompson Trophy Race was a 100-mile pylon race for airplanes with engines of unlimited displacement. Planes had to reach 175 mph in time trials to qualify for the race. With the geared engine installed, the Super Solution roared through the time trial at 260 mph, on partial throttle, but proved to be almost uncontrollable. The torque and vibration of the geared engine induced wing warping and aileron reversal at speeds above 250. The direct drive engine was reinstalled and Doolittle flew a new pre-race time trial at a scorching 272 mph. As the Thompson race began, Super Solution took a commanding lead, but by the second lap the engine, which had already flown the Bendix race, was ailing badly. Doolittle lost the lead in the third lap to Lowell Bayles in the Granville brothers' Gee Bee Z racer. With gauges above redline, Doolittle landed the Super Solution after the seventh lap to avoid a complete engine failure. An engine teardown revealed a scuffed piston, possibly caused by a particle of foreign matter. Even with its sick engine, the Super Solution had averaged 228 mph over the seven laps. The Last Record After an engine overhaul at the Pratt & Whitney plant in Hartford, CT, Doolittle flew the Super Solution to Ottawa, Canada for another cross-country record attempt—from Ottawa, to Washington, DC, to Mexico City, Mexico. His elapsed time on 20 October 1931 was 12 hours, 36 minutes, a record that stood for many years. In the summer of 1932, Doolittle and a new sponsor, Shell Oil Company, set out to modify the Super Solution to provide better forward visibility and to strengthen the wing rigging so the cooler-running geared engine could be used without warping the wings. Other modifications included a controllable-pitch propeller and retractable landing gear. The new Super Solution, looked very little like its 1931 namesake, and it was plagued with problems, including severe rudder and elevator flutter. With the date of the Thompson Trophy Race fast approaching, the Granville brothers asked Doolittle to fly their Gee Bee R-1 racer. He accepted and won the 1932 Thompson Trophy in the R-1. Shell Oil put the Super Solution in storage where it sat for years, ignored or cannibalized for parts. It may have passed through several owners before its fuselage was donated to the Smithsonian in 1948 by the Swallow Aircraft Company of Wichita, KS. Laird Super Solution Replica Specifications

Author:
RonaldArif

Tags:
Laird, JimSuchy, RC, 1931, SuperSolution, NR12048, Elyria, Ohio, AMA, CrawfordField, JimmyDoolittle,

Related Videos:

Laird Super Solution
Gummimotor-Modell in Elektro Version
Gee Bee Z - 28" RC model
Flight video of my Gee Bee Z rc model taken by Paul Penna on August 4, 2008 at the Rideau RC flyers field
Kyosho Gee Bee Z
Kyosho model airplane Gee Bee model Z owned and piloted by Fernando Schneider. Powered by an OS 52 4-strokes and controlled by radio gear JR X9303 2.4 ghz.
Throws a strike
I throw for strike one.
Saito Radial 5 cylinder in Zero cmpro#2
CMPRO Zero with saito radial in AUSTRIA SALZBURG LUNGAU www.mfc-lungau.at
Stearman #850 In Hammondsport, NY
Lloyd Carlton Stearman (October 26, 1898 -- April 3, 1975) was an American aviator and aircraft designer. Lloyd was born in Wellsville, Kansas. From 1917 -- 1918, he attended Kansas State College (later renamed Kansas State University) in Manhattan, Kansas, where he studied engineering and architecture. In 1918, he left school to enlist in the US Naval Reserve in San Diego, California; while there Stearman learned to fly Curtiss N-9 seaplanes. During the mid-1920s Matty Laird, designer of ...
Blériot XI monoplane
½ scale Bleriot -- built by Roy Salter and flown by Dave Johnson. A short clip from the 1 hour 'Boys with Big Uns' DVD available at www.modelairplanevideos.com Designed by Louis Blériot and Raymond Saulnier (of Morane-Saulnier), the original Blériot XI was a light and sleek monoplane constructed of oak and poplar. The flying surfaces were covered with cloth. The aircraft's original configuration included a REP engine spinning a four blade metal propeller which proved to be unsatisfactory ...
Two giant biplanes doing aerobatics in formation "Stan und Olli"
Two huge RC model biplanes do great aerobatics during the rc pilots meeting in Anklam on 22.5.2009: Both planes, type YMF-5 with 3m wingspan are powered by 215ccm 5 cylinder gas radial engines. The sound is really awesome! Beim Herrentagsfliegen in Anklam am 22.5.2009 haben "Stan und Olli" mit ihren beiden riesigen Doppeldeckern vom Typ YMF-5 einen anspruchsvollen Formationskunstflug an den Himmel gezaubert!
The Story of the 1939 National Air Races
Visit our website www.nationalairraces.net or call toll-free 888-NAR-8886 to purchase the full 90-minute award winning DVD. The Story of the 1939 National Air Races DVD captures all of the thrills and excitement of the last Golden Age air race. A unique and extra-special feature of the DVD is over 45 minutes of extremely rare, very high-quality, color film from the 1939 event. This breath-taking film has been seamlessly woven together with hundreds of archival photographs and a specially ...
Gee Bee R3 Moki 400 big radial engine Airworld http://www.exclusiv-aircraft.de/
www.exclusiv-aircraft.de