Fokker F.VII

The Fokker F.VII, also known as the Fokker Trimotor, was an airliner produced in the 1920s by the Dutch aircraft manufacturer Fokker, Fokker's American subsidiary Atlantic Aircraft Corporation, and other companies under licence.

Design and development

The F.VII was designed as a single-engined transport aircraft by Walter Rethel. Five planes of this model were built for the Dutch airline KLM. One of these planes, registered H-NACC, was used in 1924 for the first flight from the Netherlands to the Dutch East Indies. In 1925, while living in the US, Anthony Fokker heard of the inaugural Ford Reliability Tour, which was proposed as a competition for transport aircraft. Fokker had the company's head designer, Reinhold Platz, convert a single-engined F.VII A airliner (a 1924 Walter Rethel design) to a trimotor configuration powered by 200 hp Wright Whirlwind radial engines. The resulting aircraft was designated the Fokker F.VII A/3M. Following shipment to the US, it won the Ford Reliability Tour in late 1925. The Trimotor's structure comprised a fabric-covered steel tubing fuselage, and a plywood-skinned wooden wing.

C5

C5, C05, C V or C-5 may refer to:

Military use

  • C-5 Galaxy, a military transport aircraft
  • C-5 North Star, a 1940s Canadian military aircraft
  • HMS C5, a 1906 Royal Navy C-class submarine
  • USS C-5 (SS-16), a 1908 United States Navy C class submarine
  • USS San Francisco (C-5), an 1889 United States Navy protected cruiser
  • Albatros C.V, a World War I German military reconnaissance aircraft
  • AEG C.V, a World War I prototype German two-seat biplane reconnaissance aircraft
  • DFW C.V, a World War I German military reconnaissance aircraft
  • Fokker C.V, a 1924 Dutch light reconnaissance and bomber biplane aircraft
  • Halberstadt C.V, a World War I German single-engined reconnaissance biplane
  • Fokker C-5, an American military version of the Fokker F.VII aircraft
  • SM UC-5, a 1915 German Type UC I U-boat
  • C-5 (blimp), a United States Navy airship that attempted a trans-Atlantic flight in 1919
  • Transport, vehicles, roads, public transport routes

  • C5 automatic, a successor to Ford C4 transmission
  • Kinner C-5, an American five cylinder radial engine for small aircraft of the 1930s
  • C-5 (blimp)

    C-5 was a hydrogen inflated C class blimp operated by the U.S. Navy in 1918 and 1919. It was one of ten C class non-rigid airships built by Goodyear and Goodrich primarily for training and patrol duty for the navy during World War I. The C-5's engines were built by Hispano-Suiza, and its control car was built by Curtiss Aeroplane and Motor Company. In early May 1919, the C-5 made a pioneering flight from its home base at Cape May, New Jersey to Montauk Point, New York and St. John's, Newfoundland, becoming the first airship to reach that city and in the process sending the first radio voice transmission from Newfoundland. The C-5's goal was to fly across the Atlantic, paralleling the route used by the U.S. seaplane NC-4. Previous attempts to cross the Atlantic Ocean in a balloon were unsuccessful. The most famous of these attempts was that of the dirigible America in October 1910.

    On 14 May 1919, the C-5 departed Montauk Point in clear weather. It made good time, but encountered heavy fog near Saint Pierre Island, Canada and became lost for several hours. It eventually regained its way, but the extended trip caused the crew to exhaust its food supply and wind and rain continuously buffeted the blimp. The C-5 again became lost, this time over Newfoundland itself, when its radio navigation equipment malfunctioned. The C-5's crew used its voice radio to contact the U.S. Navy cruiser Chicago, which was in St. John's, and the radio signal was used to guide the C-5 to the tracks of the Colonial Railroad, which it followed to St. John's and a safe landing at 11 a.m. on 15 May. The commander of the blimp, Lieutenant Commander Coll, said it was the roughest trip he had ever experienced.

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    Dutch Fokker D.VII Fighter Looted During WWII to Be Returned

    Flying 13 Mar 2025
    Eight decades after a Dutch Fokker D.VII Fighter was looted by Nazis, the World War I-era fighter biplane is set to return to the Netherlands, the National Military Museum (NMM) located there announced.
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