The Cessna 
                            Airmaster is the plane that rescued the Cessna 
                            Aircraft Company from oblivion in the 1930's.  
                            Clyde Cessna was a self-taught and well known early 
                            barnstormer, racer, and designer of aircraft, and he 
                            had gone into business during the 20's building 
                            aircraft professionally.  Some early examples 
                            of his work include the Cessna AW.  Clyde 
                            Cessna was also involved in the Travel Air company, 
                            which is where a number of early aviation pioneers 
                            got their start (including Walter Beech and Lloyd 
                            Stearman).
                            
                            
                            Unfortunately during the early years of the Great 
                            Depression the Cessna Aircraft Company essentially 
                            went out of business, along with most of the rest of 
                            the aviation industry.  By the mid-thirties the 
                            economy was picking up again and Dwane Wallace, a 
                            newly minted aeronautical engineer and Clyde 
                            Cessna's nephew, decided to build airplanes.  
                            He designed the first Airmaster and it first flew in 
                            1934.  It was therefore designated a C-34.  
                            Further, Wallace persuaded Clyde Cessna to resurrect 
                            the remains of the Cessna Aircraft Company and 
                            Wallace arranged funding to put the C-34 into 
                            production.
                            
                            The C-34 
                            borrows some design characteristics of the earlier 
                            Cessna airplanes, including a high mounted full 
                            cantilever wing structure, and a narrow band of 
                            cabin windows.  Together these give the plane a 
                            rather Art-Deco streamlined appearance.  Wing 
                            construction is all wood, and the fuselage is steel 
                            tubing with wooden stringers and formers.  The 
                            tail surfaces are wooden covered with plywood.
                            
                            The 
                            Airmaster sold reasonably well for the time period, 
                            and was sold as the "World's Most Efficient 
                            Airplane" after winning several aerial competitions 
                            and Trophy Races.
                            
                            In 
                            addition to their reputation for efficiency and 
                            speed, Airmasters were used as aerial photography 
                            platforms because of their stability in the air.  
                            The aircraft that I own was originally a photo 
                            plane, having been converted by the Cessna factory 
                            to have a camera port in the floor and bottom of the 
                            aircraft, downward viewing windows in the lower 
                            front fuselage, and a built-in oxygen bottle rack.
                            
                            
                            The 
                            Airmaster models developed from the C-34 into the 
                            C-37 and C-38.  Improvements included 
                            wing-mounted flaps on the C-37 and a belly-mounted 
                            drag flap on the C-38, wider fuselages, wider 
                            landing gear, and rubber engine mounts.  These 
                            models were built with the 145 HP Warner Super 
                            Scarab engine.
                            
                            The final 
                            iteration of the Airmaster was the C-145 and C-165.  
                            On these models the C-38's belly flap was dropped 
                            and the wing split flaps put back, and the fuselage 
                            was lengthened.  The difference between the two 
                            models was the engine horsepower, with the C-165 
                            getting an upgraded 165 HP Warner engine.
                            
                            All of the 
                            Airmasters appear to be visually similar.  Cues 
                            for differentiating the aircraft include the belly 
                            drag flap vs. wing flaps, and the location of the 
                            bumps on the cowling.  C-165s have bumps 
                            located further to the rear of the cowling than the 
                            Warner 145 hp models.  C-34's have narrower 
                            landing gear than the later models.
                            
                            WWII 
                            brought an end to the Airmaster line.  All 
                            together about 180 Airmasters were built.  
                            Their classic lines were carried forward by Cessna 
                            into the post-war era with the Cessna 195, a much 
                            enlarged and all-aluminium cruiser.  Even 
                            before the 195 was built, though, it too was a 
                            throwback design, for by the end of WWII Cessna had 
                            hit upon the formula that was to make Cessna the 
                            most prolific manufacturer of light airplanes in the 
                            world.
                            
                            The 
                            Airmaster's 30's-era technology of welded tubular 
                            steel fuselage, fabric covering, extensive fitted 
                            woodwork and wooden wing, and somewhat finicky 
                            radial engine were all too expensive, slow to 
                            produce, and difficult to maintain.  Instead 
                            the company focused on all-aluminium construction, 
                            side-by-side seating, sturdy strut-braced high-wing 
                            configuration, monocoque fuselage construction, 
                            simple flat spring steel landing gear, and highly 
                            reliable horizontally opposed engines.  This 
                            combination was first seen in the Cessna 120, and it 
                            was rapidly developed into the Cessna 140, 170, and 
                            ultimately into the utilitarian but incredibly 
                            successful 152, 172, and 182.