Douglas DC-4
| Douglas DC-4 | ||
|---|---|---|
| Image caption | ||
| Description | ||
| Role | Cargo, Commercial Transport | |
| Crew | 3 | |
| Passengers | ||
| First Flight | ||
| Entered Service | 1938 | |
| Manufacturer | Douglas | |
| Dimensions | ||
| Length | 93 ft 11 in | 28.6 m |
| Wingspan | 117 ft 6 in | 35.8 m |
| Height | 27 ft 6.25 in | 8.39 m |
| Wing area | ft² | m² |
| Weights | ||
| Empty | 40,806 lb | 18,509 kg |
| Loaded | lb | kg |
| Maximum takeoff | lb | kg |
| Capacity | ||
| Powerplant | ||
| Engines | 4 Pratt & Whitney R2000 reciprocating | |
| Power | 1,450 hp | 1,081 kW |
| Thrust | lb | kN |
| Performance | ||
| Maximum speed | 280 mph | 450 km/h |
| Combat range | miles | km |
| Ferry? range | 4,250 miles | 6,839 km |
| Service ceiling | 22,300 ft | 6,800 m |
| Rate of climb | ft/min | m/min |
| Wing loading | lb/ft² | kg/m² |
| Thrust/Weight | ||
| Power/Mass | hp/lb | kW/kg |
| Avionics | ||
| Avionics | ||
| Armament | ||
| Guns | ||
| Bombs | ||
| Missiles | ||
| Rockets | ||
| Other | ||
The designation DC-4 was used by Douglas Aircraft Company when developing the DC-4E as a large, four-engined type to complement its forthcoming DC-3 design. It was intended to fulfill United Airlines' requirement for a long-range passenger airliner. The DC-4E (E stands for experimental) emerged as a 40-passenger airliner with a fuselage of unusually wide cross-section for its day and a triple fin tail unit, similar to that later used by Lockheed on its Constellation.
The DC-4E first flew on June 7, 1938, and was used by United Air for test flights. But the type proved to be ahead of its time - it was complicated to maintain and uneconomical to operate. The sponsoring airlines, Eastern and United, decided to ask instead for a smaller and simpler derivative but before the definitive DC-4 could enter service the outbreak of the Second World War meant production was channelled to the US Army Air Force and the type given the military designation C-54.
The DC-4 had a notable innovation in that its nose-wheel landing gear allowed it to introduce a fuselage of constant cross-section. This lent itself to easy stretching into the later DC-6\ and DC-7. The original DC-4 entered production in 1941 and 1,162 were ordered by the United States services. Nine military versions were produced but Douglas continued to develop the type in preparation for a return to airline services when peace returned. But the type's sales prospects were hit by the offloading of 500 wartime C-54s, and R5D US Navy, machines on to the civil market.
Douglas built just 74 new-build aircraft before production switched to the upgraded DC-6. All were unpressurised, as were the DC-4s built by Victory Aircraft, later Canadair, in Canada with Rolls-Royce Merlin engines. Canadair did build the pressurised DC-4M Argonaut for BOAC.
The DC-4 proved a popular type and several remain in service today, particularly in the USA where it proved popular as charter/freight plane.
Douglas DC-4 Specifications
- Country: United States of America
- Designation: DC-4/C-54
- Gross Weight: 73,000 lbs (33,112 kg)
- Maximum Range: 4,250 miles (6,839 km)
External links
Boeing McDonnell Douglas page on DC-4
| Related content | |
|---|---|
| Related Development | DC-6 - DC-7 - C-54 Skymaster |
| Similar Aircraft | |
| Designation Series | DC-1 - DC-2 - DC-3 - DC-4 - DC-5 - DC-6 - DC-7 |
| Related Lists | List of airliners-List of civil aircraft |
| List of Aircraft | Aircraft Manufacturers | Aircraft Engines | Aircraft Engine Manufacturers Airlines | Air Forces | Aircraft Weapons | Missiles | Years in Aviation |