Northrop Alpha
Northrop Alpha
The Northrop Alpha represents a notable point of transition in modern airline design, for it combined features of the past and of the future in a very utilitarian package. The passengers were enclosed in a comfortable cabin, while the pilot remained exposedand sensitiveto the elements. The modern aspects of the Alphaan all-metal structure, semimonocoque fuselage, and cantilever wingwere partially offset by the use of a single engine and fixed gear. John K. Northrop, who had previously designed the Lockheed Vega, conceived of the Alpha as a means of proving his ideas for quantity production of an all-metal airplane with the machine tools existing in the early 1930s. Always pioneering new ideas and new techniques, Northrop became one of the most influential men in the aviation industry. The Alpha was designed to be a high-performance plane that could carry mail and passengers out of small fields. The plane was attractive to airlines because of its comparatively high top speed (177 mph for later models) and high reliability. The latter was due in large part to the use of the dependable air-cooled Pratt and Whitney Wasp engine of 420 horsepower. With the advent of the larger twin-engine Boeing and Douglas transports, the Northrop Alphas were relegated to carrying freight, serving well in this capacity. The Alpha could fly from coast to coast in twenty-three hours, carrying such commodities as freshly cut gardenias, silk worms, medical serums, and auto parts. Stops were made at Winslow (Arizona), Albuquerque, Amarillo, Wichita, Kansas City, St. Louis, Terre Haute, Indianapolis, Columbus, Pittsburgh, Philadelphia, and New York. Although the Alpha served well, its real importance was its demonstration of Northrops multicellular wing and stress skin construction. These concepts were of fundamental importance to the Douglas DC-2 and DC-3. Transcontinental & Western Air (which was to become TWA) was the launch customer and ordered 5 alphas. Those aircraft began services on April 20, 1931 from San Francisco to New York with 13 intermediate stops. The entire trip took just over 23 hours.
Alpha - Model 2
Capacity: Pilot + 6 passengers
Capacity: Pilot + 2 passengers + Cargo or Pilot +
Cargo
Alpha - Model 4
Length: 28 ft 4-1/2 in Height: 9 ft Wingspan: 43 ft
10 in Wing Area: 312 sq ft |
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