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      Beech Model 18 
                
            
            
            
                            
                              
            
                            
                            On January 15, 1937, 
                            the Beechcraft Model 18 made its first demonstration 
                            flight at the factory in Wichita, Kansas, and it 
                            continued in production for thirty-two years. This 
                            low-wing, all-metal, twin-engine monoplane was 
                            originally intended as a six-to-eight-passenger 
                            executive or feeder airline transport. As the years 
                            passed, however, the Model 18 was adapted to many 
                            uses and, in all, thirty-two different versions were 
                            produced.  
                            
                
                  
                        
            
                            
                            When 
                            production began on the Model 18 in 1937, there was 
                            virtually no market for this airplane in the United 
                            States. At the time, air transportation in the 
                            United States was a trunk line operation, and few 
                            feeder lines existed. Acceptance of the Model 18 by 
                            foreign and charter lines was immediate, however. 
                            The Model 18A, which also operated on 
                            interchangeable ski- or float-landing gear, was an 
                            ideal adaptation for snowbound areas and for lake 
                            and inter-island service. Prairie Airlines of 
                            Alberta, Canada, for example, ordered several of 
                            these airplanes for use in delivering air mail over 
                            a route that extended from Prince Albert to North 
                            Battleford, south to Saskatoon and Moose Jaw, 
                            finally joining up with the main route of Trans 
                            Canada Airlines at Regina. Also, businessmen were 
                            favourably impressed with the performance of the 
                            Model 18 as an executive transport, with orders 
                            coming from Alaska, Canada, and Puerto Rico. 
                             
            
            
                        
                            
                              
                
                        
                            On 
                            January 13, 1939, Beech began negotiations with the 
                            U.S. government on a contract for a photo 
                            reconnaissance version of the 18. Fourteen of these 
                            aircraft, designated Type F-2, were ordered as part 
                            of the Emergency Procurement Program. This order was 
                            followed by a contract for eleven C-45 personnel 
                            transports. Later that year, Beech began 
                            negotiations with the Chinese government for a 
                            bomber trainer. This version had a clear plastic 
                            nose, a single gun turret on the upper fuselage, and 
                            a machine gun in a tunnel in the rear floor. It also 
                            had internal bomb racks, which carried up to twenty 
                            25-pound bombs.  
                            
            
                            1939 
                            also saw a standard Beech 18S set a new flight 
                            record while on a demonstration tour, flying from 
                            Bogota to Barranquilla, Colombia, a distance of 450 
                            miles, in 1 hour, 54 minutes. Later the same 
                            airplane made a 1,350-mile flight from Maracay, 
                            Venezuela, to Miami, Florida, in 6 hours, the first 
                            known non-stop flight between those two cities. To 
                            further demonstrate the capable performance of the 
                            Beech Model 18, Walter Beech entered a D18S in the 
                            1940 Macfadden Race from St. Louis to Miami. With 
                            "Ding" Rankin as his pilot, Beech crossed the finish 
                            line in Miami in 4 hours, 37 minutes to win first 
                            place. Their average speed for the flight was 234 
                            mph. 
                
                        
                            
              
                
            
                
                
            
                        
                            
                            
                            World War II brought more orders for military 
                            versions of the Beech 18S from the United States and 
                            foreign governments for a wide range of uses. About 
                            90 percent of the U.S. Air Force's navigators and 
                            bombardiers received their training on AT-7s and 
                            AT-11s respectively. The U.S. Navy SNB-1 was similar 
                            to the AT-11, the SNB-2 to the AT-7. The JRB-1 was a 
                            radio-control airplane for target or drone aircraft. 
                            The Navy's personnel transports similar to the C-45 
                            were known as JRB2, JRB-3, and JRB-4. 
                            
                            With 
                            the end of the war came the end of military 
                            production, although many of these aircraft remained 
                            in service for years. By October 1945 Beech was back 
                            into full commercial aircraft production. The first 
                            aircraft off the line was the newest model, the 
                            D18S, which incorporated a number of improvements. 
                            Structural modifications allowed for an increase in 
                            maximum weight and new landing gear, brakes, and 
                            tires were installed. Two 450-hp Pratt & Whitney 
                            Wasp, Jr., engines with Hamilton Standard constant 
                            speed propellers powered the D18S. It was the 
                            premier executive transport among businessmen and it 
                            was also used by the new local service airlines that 
                            emerged after the end of World War II.  
                            
                            On 
                            December 10, 1953, the prototype of the Super 18, 
                            the last version of the Beech 18, made its first 
                            flight. The last three production aircraft were 
                            delivered in November 1969. More than 9,000 Model 
                            18s were produced since 1937, and, in 1970, more 
                            than 2,000 were still being flown in the United 
                            States alone. 
                            
                            type: Light 
                              utility transport.  
                            period built: 
                              1937-1969  
                            country of origin: United States  
                            engines: Two 
                              Pratt & Whitney R-985AN-14B Wasp Junior 9-cyl. 
                              radial piston engines of 450 hp.  
                             
                            dimensions: 
                 
                            
                            
                             
                            Wing span: 49 ft 8 
                                in / 15.14 m. 
                            
                                
                                
                             
                            Length: 35 ft 3 
                                in / 10.7 m  
                            Height: 9 ft 4 
                                in / 2.84 m.  
                            
                            
                               
                            
                            
                             
                            weights: 
                             
                            Empty equipped: 
                                5,845 lb / 2,650 kg 
                            
                                
                                
                            
                             
                            Max. takeoff: 
                                9,900 lb / 4,490 kg  
                             
                            
                             
                            performance: 
                             
                            Max. cruising 
                                speed: 191 kt / 354 kph 
                            
                                
                            
                             
                            Economical 
                                cruise: 160 kt / 298 kph  
                            Initial climb: 
                                1,400 ft per min.  
                            Service 
                                ceiling: 21,400 ft  
                            Range: 1,330 nm 
                                / 2,460 km with maximum fuel 
      
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