Travel Air 5000 | |
---|---|
Role | Airliner and Racer |
National origin | United States of America |
Manufacturer | Travel Air Manufacturing Company |
Designer | Lloyd Stearman and Clyde Cessna and Walter beech |
First flight | March 1926 |
Primary user | National Air Transport |
Number built | 13 |
Unit cost |
$23,000 for Dole Race models in 1927
|
Variants | Travel Air 6000 |
The Travel Air 5000 was an early high-wing monoplane airliner and racing monoplane designed by Clyde Cessna and is chiefly remembered for being the winner of the disastrous Dole Air Race from California to Hawaii.
Cessna broke away from traditional biplane development with a monoplane in 1926. The first prototype was a 5-passenger aircraft with an 110 hp (82 kW) Anzani engine. The aircraft was modified by Cessna, Lloyd Stearman and Walter Beech that fall. A second aircraft was built that December, and featured a Wright J-4 Whirlwind as the Travel Air 5000. National Air Transport awarded Travel Air a contract to produce the aircraft with the larger Wright J-5C engine and seating for four passengers. Eight aircraft were built for air mail contract and passenger service.
The Travel Air 5000 was a high-wing monoplane with conventional landing gear. The fuselage was constructed of welded steel tubing. The cockpit was fully enclosed in a canopy above the forward fuselage, but at least one model had the canopy omitted. The Dole racers were modified with 425 gallon fuselage fuel tanks and earth inductor compasses.
The prototype Travel Air 5000, s/n 160 "The Spirit of Oakland" was originally sold to Pacific Air Transport in April 1927 and then resold to Ernest Smith for a 14 July flight from Oakland, California to Molokai, Hawaii where it crashed on landing becoming the second aircraft to complete a trans-pacific flight, and the first civilian aircraft to do so.
Orders placed in June 1927 for two custom-built Travel Air model 5000 aircraft to compete in the Oakland, California to Honolulu, Hawaii Dole Air Race. Two teams placed $5000 deposits, and were later sponsored by Frank Phillips of Phillips Petroleum to promote their "Nu-Aviation" fuel. The "Oklahoma" was forced to return to land, while the "Woolaroc" completed the flight and won.