When production of the earlier
Martin 2-0-2 was stopped due to problems with wing structural failure the company decided to re-wing an improved version (which had already flown as the Martin 3-0-3). The new aircraft was the Martin 4-0-4. It had structural changes to the wings, pressurization and was lengthened slightly to take 40 passengers. Like the earlier 2-0-2, the 4-0-4 was a
cantilevermonoplane with a standard tail unit (cantilever tailplane and single vertical stabilizer). It had an
airstair in the lower tail section for passenger boarding and disembarkation, retractable
tricycle landing gear and was powered by two
Pratt & Whitney R-2800-CB16radial piston engines.
Operational history
First deliveries in 1951 were made to
Eastern Air Lines (EAL), which had ordered 60, and
Trans World Airlines (TWA), which had ordered 40. The only other new aircraft from the production line were delivered to the
United States Coast Guard which had ordered two as executive transports with the designation RM-1G later changed to RM-1 and then in 1962 to VC-3A. In 1969 they were transferred to the United States Navy and were withdrawn from use by 1970. A total of 103 aircraft were built at the
Glenn L. Martin factory in
Baltimore.
TWA operated its 40 4-0-4s under the name "Skyliner" on scheduled services between 1 September 1950 and the last flight on 29 April 1961.[2] EAL operated its 4-0-4s in the eastern USA using the class name "Silver Falcon". The first EAL schedule was flown on 5 January 1952 and retirement came in late 1962.[3]
Later in their airline career, as they became displaced from the EAL and TWA fleets by turbine-powered aircraft, the 4-0-4s became popular with "second level" operators, known as "local service air carriers" in the U.S. as described and regulated by the federal
Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB), with these airlines needing to replace their
Douglas DC-3s.[4] One of the last 'major' US airlines with a large fleet of piston-engined airliners was
Southern Airways which operated 25 model 4-0-4s on a network of scheduled services from
Atlanta in October 1961, all ex-Eastern Airlines aircraft.[5] Southern Airways' last 4-0-4 service was flown on 30 April 1978[6] with the air carrier then replacing them with smaller
Fairchild Swearingen Metroliner "Metro II" turboprops. This was the last piston-engine airliner flight of all the mainstream USA carriers. Martin 4-0-4s were also flown by
Pacific Air Lines (which subsequently merged with
Bonanza Air Lines and
West Coast Airlines to form Air West, which was then renamed
Hughes Airwest),
Piedmont Airlines (which operated former
TWA 4-0-4 airliners),
Ozark Air Lines and
Mohawk Airlines during the 1960s. Most of these planes were replaced in 1968 with
Fairchild F-27 and/or
Fairchild-Hiller FH-227B turboprop aircraft.
19 February 1955:
TWA Flight 260 crashed into the Sandia Mountains; the three crew and 13 passengers died.[8]
1 April 1956:
TWA Flight 400 crashed on takeoff from Greater Pittsburgh International Airport; 22 of the 36 people aboard the aircraft died.[9]
2 July 1963:
Mohawk Airlines Flight 112 crashed during takeoff from Rochester-Monroe airport, seven people died and 36 were injured.[10]
30 May 1970:
Lehigh Acres Development Inc. Flight 701 crashed near
Atlanta, Georgia, one passenger and five people in a car died. Thirty other passengers were injured after just departing moments before from the
DeKalb–Peachtree Airport.[11][12]
14119 – Fuselage in storage at
Fantasy of Flight in
Polk City, Florida. It was previously registered as N40415 and is in former Provincetown–Boston Airlines livery.[14]
Andrade, John. U.S. Military Aircraft Designations and Serials since 1909. Leicester, UK: Midland Counties Publications, 1979, pp. 95, 217.
ISBN0-904597-22-9.
Breslau, Alan Jeffry The Time Of My Death: Story of Miraculous Survival (E. P. Dutton, New York 1977) The July 2, 1963 crash of Mowhawk Airlines in Rochester, New York.
Bridgman, Leonard. Jane's All The World's Aircraft 1953–54. London: Sampson Low, Marston & Co. Ltd, 1953.
Gunston, Bill. The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Propeller Airliners. Leicester, UK: Windward Imprint, 1980.
ISBN0-7112-0062-9.
The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Aircraft (Part Work 1982-1985). London: Orbis Publishing, 1985.
Killion, Gary L. The Martinliners. Sandpoint ID: Airways International Inc., 1997.
ISBN0-9653993-2-X.
Proctor, Jon (2019). "TWA's Skyliners: The Martin 2-0-2 and 4-0-4 in TWA Service". The Aviation Historian (29): 58–67.
ISSN2051-1930.
Sievers, Harry. North American Airline Fleets. Tunbridge Wells, Kent, UK: Air-Britain (Historians) Ltd., 1969.
ISBN0-85130-005-7.
Smith, M.J. Jr. Passenger Airliners of the United States, 1926–1991. Missoula, Montana: Pictorial Histories Publishing Company, 1986.
ISBN0-933126-72-7.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Martin 404.