The Stearman C2 was the second aircraft type designed by the Stearman Aircraft company. The aircraft first flew in 1927.

C2
Stearman C2B on display at the Alaska Aviation Museum in Anchorage, Alaska.
Role 3-seat commercial biplane
National origin United States
Manufacturer Stearman Aircraft Corp.
First flight March 1927
Number built 4
Developed from Stearman C1

Design and development

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The airframe of the C2 was virtually identical to the model C1. Differences included an aileron control system that actuated the single set ailerons on the upper wings via torque tubes internal to the upper wings rather than from vertical push-pull rods connected to the lower wings. All further C-series Stearmans had this system.[1]

Various types of engines were installed on C2 aircraft. Some were air cooled while others were water-cooled. Unlike the model C1 that had the radiator located in the nose cowl, Stearman C2 aircraft with liquid-cooled engines installed had the radiator located between the main gear legs.[1]

When the follow-on but similar model C3 became the first Stearman aircraft to receive a type certificate, some of the C2B aircraft were approved as C3B aircraft.

The most popular version of the type was the C2B which had a Wright J4 or J5 radial engine installed. The C2M ("M" for mail) met the specifications of Varney Airlines, and Western Air Express, included having the front cockpit replaced by a covered mail pit.[1]

Production

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Stearman C2 3-view drawing from Aero Digest May 1928

In total, 33 model C2 aircraft were manufactured with the first three built in the original Stearman plant in Venice, California.

Variants produced were:

C2A 90 hp liquid-cooled Curtiss OX-5 engine

C2B 220 hp Wright J4, J5, or J6 air-cooled radial engine. Left and right side throttle installed as standard, with 38 gallon upper wing and 30 gallon forward fuselage fuel tanks, plus a Stellite tailskid.

C2C C2 model with a 180 hp Wright/Martin Hispano Suiza liquid-cooled V-8 engine

C2H(1 built) 280 hp Menasco-Salmson air-cooled radial engine and counter-clockwise rotating propeller. Custom-built aircraft with experimental "speed wings"

C2K(2 built) 128 hp Siemens-Halske SH-12 air-cooled radial engine

C2M(mail) 200 hp 9-cylinder Wright J4 or J5 air-cooled radial engine. Front cockpit replaced by a covered mail pit. Reinforced windshield to prevent cargo loading damage.

See also

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Aircraft of comparable role, configuration and era

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(Partial listing, only covers most numerous types)

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References

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  1. ^ a b c Phillips, Edward (2006). Stearman Aircraft: A Detailed History. North Branch, MN: specialtypress. pp. 36–39, 198. ISBN 9781580070874.