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The Douglas DC-2 is a 14-seat, twin-engined airliner that was produced by the American company Douglas Aircraft Corporation starting in 1934. It competed with the Boeing 247. In 1935, Douglas produced a larger version called the DC-3, which became one of the most successful aircraft in history.
In the early 1930s, fears about the safety of wooden aircraft structures (responsible for the crash of a Fokker Trimotor) compelled the American aviation industry to develop all-metal types. The United Aircraft and Transport Corporation had a monopoly on the Boeing 247; rival Transcontinental and Western Air issued a specification for an all-metal trimotor.
The Douglas response was more radical. When it flew on July 1, 1933, the prototype DC-1 had a robust tapered wing, retractable landing gear, and two 690 hp (515 kW) Wright radial engines driving variable pitch propellers. It seated 12 passengers.
TWA accepted the basic design and ordered twenty DC-2s having more powerful engines and a bit more length, to carry 14 passengers in a 66-inch-wide cabin. The design impressed American and European airlines and further orders followed. Those for European customers KLM, LOT, Swissair, CLS and LAPE were assembled by Fokker in the Netherlands after that company bought a licence from Douglas.[1] Airspeed Ltd. took a similar licence for DC-2s to be delivered in Britain and assigned the company designation Airspeed AS.23, but although a registration for one aircraft was reserved none were actually delivered.[1] Another licence was taken by the Nakajima Aircraft Company in Japan; unlike Fokker and Airspeed, Nakajima built five aircraft as well as assembling at least one Douglas-built aircraft.[1] A total of 130 civil DC-2s were built with another 62 for the United States military. In 1935 Don Douglas stated in an article that the DC-2 cost about $80,000 per aircraft if mass-produced.[2]
Although overshadowed by its ubiquitous successor, it was the DC-2 that first showed that passenger air travel could be comfortable, safe and reliable. As a token of this, KLM entered its first DC-2 PH-AJU Uiver (Stork) in the October 1934 MacRobertson Air Race between London and Melbourne. Out of the 20 entrants, it finished second behind only the purpose-built de Havilland DH.88 racer Grosvenor House. During the total journey time of 90 hours, 13 min, it was in the air for 81 hours, 10 min, and won the handicap section of the race. (The DH.88 finished first in the handicap section, but the crew was by regulations allowed to claim only one victory.) It flew KLM's regular 9,000 mile route, (a thousand miles longer than the official race route), carrying mails, making every scheduled passenger stop, turning back once to pick up a stranded passenger, and even became lost in a thunderstorm and briefly stuck in the mud after a diversionary landing at Albury racecourse on the very last leg of the journey.[3]
Modified DC-2s built for the United States Army Air Corps under several military designations:
♠ = Original operators
There are no longer DC-2s in commercial service, however, several aircraft have survived into the 21st century:
The DC-2 was the "Good Ship Lollipop" that Shirley Temple sang about in the film Bright Eyes (1934).[48] A DC-2 appears in the 1937 film Lost Horizon; the footage includes taxiing, takeoff, and landing, as well as views in flight.[49]
Author Ernest K. Gann recounts his early days as a commercial pilot flying DC-2s in his memoir Fate Is the Hunter. This includes a particularly harrowing account of flying a DC-2 with heavy ice.
General characteristics
Performance
Douglas DC-2, Douglas C-47 Skytrain, Douglas C-54 Skymaster, Douglas A-20 Havoc, Douglas DC-6
United Kingdom, New Zealand, New South Wales, Canada, Queensland
Berlin, North Rhine-Westphalia, Hamburg, France, United Kingdom
Isle of Man, India, Canada, European Union, British Overseas Territories
Douglas DC-3, Douglas DC-2, India, Douglas C-54 Skymaster, United States
Douglas DC-3, Douglas DC-2, Douglas C-47 Skytrain, Douglas A-20 Havoc, Douglas C-54 Skymaster
Douglas DC-3, Douglas DC-2, McDonnell Douglas, Douglas C-47 Skytrain, McDonnell Douglas DC-9
Douglas DC-3, Douglas DC-2, Fairchild FC-2, Fairchild Aircraft, Lockheed Model 18 Lodestar
Douglas DC-3, Fairchild Aircraft, United States Navy, Fairchild C-119 Flying Boxcar, Douglas DC-2