The S-35 was designed as a twin-engined transport with a 1,000-mile (1,600-kilometre) range.[1] During 1926
René Fonck, a French
First World War fighter ace, was looking for a multi-engine aircraft to enter a competition to be the first to fly non-stop from New York to Paris.
Raymond Orteig offered a
prize of $25,000.[1] Fonck had Sikorsky redesign the aircraft with three engines.[1]
The S-35 was a
sesquiplane with a fixed tail-skid landing gear. It was modified to take three 425 hp (317 kW)
Gnome-Rhône Jupiter 9A[a] radial engines and fitted with jettisonable auxiliary landing gear directly under the fuselage to support its weight at takeoff.
Fuel was carried in tanks in the upper wing leading edge, the engine nacelles, and the fuselage. Fuel was pumped up to the wing tanks from which it fed the engines under gravity. The wing tanks alone gave four hours flight time.[2]
As it was designed for passenger and transport use, the cabin behind the cockpit (described as "exceptionally large and roomy") was 4 ft (1.2 m) wide by 6 ft (1.8 m) high and 15 ft 6 in (4.72 m) long accessed by a door at the rear.[2]
These modifications took time to complete and the aircraft first flew on 23 August 1926 from
Roosevelt Field.[1] Sikorsky started a series of test flights but as none were at the
maximum takeoff weight of 24,200 lb (11,000 kg), Sikorsky wanted to delay the transatlantic crossing until early 1927, but the promoters of the flight would not accept a delay and the aircraft was prepared for the crossing.[1] Speaking after the accident to the French press, Fonck said that he had completed 27 hours test flying the S.35 at various weights including 280 passengers over the period.[3]
Operational history
The first transatlantic attempt was scheduled for the September 16 but was abandoned after the aircraft developed a fuel leak.[1] The next available break in the weather was to be the 21 September and the aircraft was fueled during the previous night from 50 barrels of gasoline. When the aircraft was weighed it was found to be 4,000 pounds (1,800 kg) overweight.[1] Fonck insisted on carrying a
sofa and
refrigerator on the journey.[citation needed] Fonck and his co-pilot Lt Lawrence Curtin of the U.S. Navy were joined by a radio operator and a Sikorsky mechanic for the flight.[1][b]
Departure was scheduled for sunrise and the takeoff began at 6:36.[5] In front of a large crowd at Roosevelt Field the aircraft gathered speed, the auxiliary landing gear broke away, the aircraft failed to get airborne and plunged down a steep slope at the end of the runway and burst into flames.[1][6] The two pilots escaped injury but the radio operator Charles Clavier and mechanic Jacob Islamoff were killed in the fire. The aircraft, which had cost $80,000, was not insured.[1]
^Flight gave the originally announced crew accompanying Fonck as "Lieut. Allan Snody, U S. Navy (navigator), Capt. Homer Berry (second pilot), and Capt. John Irwin (wireless operator)"[4]
^Flight gives 8,000 lb (3,600 kg) with a further 490 lb (220 kg) "equipment"[2]
^
abcdefghijkBest, Martin (2002). "Sikorsky American Fixed-Wing Aircraft, Part 1: Sikorsky S-29-A to S-35". Air-Britain Archive. 2002 (4): 127.
ISSN0262-4923.
^"New York- Paris Flight Tragedy". Flight. Vol. XVIII, no. 38. 23 September 1926. p. 628.
^Joshua Stoff. Long Island aircraft crashes 1909-1959. p. 48.
Bibliography
Laureau, Patrick (February 2000). "La première tentative de traversée de l'Atlantique (1926): L'écheque du Sikorsky S-35" [The First Tentative Attempts to Cross the Atlantique: The Failure of the Sikorsky S-35]. Avions: Toute l'aéronautique et son histoire (in French) (83): 38–43.
ISSN1243-8650.
"The Sikorsky S.35". Flight. Vol. XVIII, no. 39. 30 September 1926. pp. 638–640 – via Internet Archive.
External links
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