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      Lockheed Vega 
      
      
        
      
      
      Although the Lockheed Vega is best remembered 
      for its speed and record-breaking flights, it was designed as an airliner 
      by the Lockheed Company. The Vega was named for one of the brightest stars 
      in the sky and followed Lockheed's custom of naming aircraft after 
      astronomical bodies. Designed by the talented Jack Northrop, it marked the 
      limits of wooden design and single-engine performance. It had a 
      streamlined, smoothly rounded monocoque fuselage that was made of moulded 
      plywood in two halves and glued together to produce an extremely smooth 
      surface. It had no external struts or wires to break its smooth look and 
      was what Northrop called "clean." The plane had cantilever (internally 
      braced) wings set above the fuselage, a feature that had been introduced 
      by the Dutch aeronautical pioneer Anthony Fokker in the early 1920s, and a 
      similarly constructed tail assembly. Its wing design helped give the 
      aircraft its superior speed. 
       
      The original Vega could seat four and a pilot. It had a wingspan of 41 
      feet (12.5 meters) and was 27.5 feet (8 meters) long. It weighed 2,900 
      pounds (1,315 kilograms) fully loaded and fuelled and could fly at 
      altitudes up to 15,000 feet (4,572 meters). A single 225-horsepower 
      (168-kilowatt), air-cooled nine-cylinder Wright Whirlwind J-5 engine 
      powered it.  
       
      Produced at minimal cost, the Vega made its first flight from Los Angeles 
      on July 4, 1927. It had a cruising speed of 118 miles per hour (190 
      kilometres per hour), a top speed of 135 miles per hour (217 kilometres 
      per hour), and a 900-mile (1,448-kilometer) range. The prototype Vega, the 
      Golden Eagle flown by Jack Frost and Gordon Scott, was lost in the Dole 
      Derby race from California to Hawaii in August 1927. 
       
      The third Vega was used by Sir Hubert Wilkins for a series of Arctic 
      flights in 1928. Wilkins and Alaskan bush pilot Carl Ben Eielsen flew 
      across the Arctic from Point Barrow, Alaska, to Spitzbergen, Norway, in 20 
      hours. On December 20, 1928, Wilkins and a team of pilots flew two Vegas 
      to Antarctica to conduct aerial mapping of 100,000 square miles (259,000 
      square kilometres) of the continent.  
       
      During 1928, Lockheed built 64 Vegas in its Burbank plant—28 were the 
      original Vega 1 configuration. The aircraft won all of the speed trophies 
      in the 1928 National Air Races in Cleveland, and the company's slogan 
      became "It takes a Lockheed to beat a Lockheed!" 
       
      Over the years, the basic design was improved and modified, which 
      increased its speed and power. The Vega 5, which appeared directly after 
      the Vega 1, was the same size as the Vega 1, but was powered by a 
      450-horsepower (336-kilowatt) air-cooled Pratt & Whitney Wasp engine that 
      gave it a cruising speed of 155 miles per hour (249 kilometres per hour) 
      and a top speed of 165 miles per hour (266 kilometres per hour). 
      Originally also holding four, it was improved to hold six passengers, 
      still too small to be regarded as a practical airliner. Its major 
      advantage was its speed, and it found use as an executive plane. Later 
      models also added the NACA cowling around the radial engine, further 
      streamlining the plane. Five were fitted as seaplanes. 
      
        
      
      One of its most famous pilots was Wiley Post, 
      who, in the white and purple Winnie Mae named after the owner's daughter, 
      won the 1930 Los Angeles to Chicago Air Derby, flying 1,760 miles (2,832 
      kilometres) in nine hours, nine minutes, four seconds, at an average speed 
      of 192 miles per hour (309 kilometres per hour) in spite of a faulty 
      compass. Then, along with navigator Harold Gatty, he went on to fly around 
      the world in the plane between June 23 and July 1, 1931, taking eight days 
      15 hours and 51 minutes. The first round-the-world flight, only seven 
      years earlier, had taken 175 days. Post, flying alone, broke another 
      round-the-world record two years later when he circled the globe in seven 
      days 19 hours and 43 minutes. This feat was even more remarkable because 
      Post had only one eye since one had been removed due to an infection 
      resulting from an industrial accident.  
       
      In 1934, Post also flew the Winnie Mae to an altitude first of 40,000 feet 
      (12,192 meters) and then to a record-breaking altitude in the range of 
      50,000 feet (15,240 meters). (It was not confirmed due to a faulty 
      barograph—an instrument that measures altitude.) In preparation, Post 
      realized that the Winnie Mae was unsuitable for a pressurized cabin so he 
      flew wearing the world's first high-altitude aircraft pressure suit, which 
      he modified from a deep-sea diver's suit. Flying at that altitude, he 
      discovered the jet stream—fast-moving currents of air that flowed in a 
      westerly direction. He believed correctly that if an airplane could fly in 
      the jet stream, it would fly faster and use less fuel than an aircraft at 
      a lower altitude, and in 1935 demonstrated this by cruising at more than 
      30,000 feet (9,144 meters) at an average speed of 279 miles per hour (449 
      kilometres per hour)—more than 100 miles per hour (161 kilometres per 
      hour) above the Vega's normal cruising speed. 
       
      Others set records in their Vegas too, including Amelia Earhart, Jimmie 
      Mattern, Ruth Nichols, and Roscue Turner. Earhart was the first woman to 
      cross the Atlantic alone. Her flight had taken 14 hours 54 minutes and had 
      suffered severe icing, going into a 300-foot (91-meter) plunge from which 
      Earhart managed to recover. Nichols, known as the "Flying Debutante," set 
      both transcontinental endurance and altitude records, climbing to 28,743 
      feet (8,761 meters) in her Vega before Post's climb into the stratosphere.
       
       
      During its production lifetime, more than 128 Vegas were built, including 
      the Model 4 Air Express which had a parasol wing and open cockpit behind 
      the passenger cabin. Air Express planes were built for Western Air Express 
      and for the Texaco Oil Company. 
       
      Considered a trendsetter, the Vega made famous the Winged Star insignia 
      that later Lockheed planes wore.  
            
      Lockheed Vega 1 Specifications 
       
      Length (overall): 27 ft 8 in 
      Height: 8 ft 6 in 
      Span: 41 ft 0 in 
      Wing Area: 275 sq ft 
      Gross Weight: 3,470 lb 
      Empty Weight: 1,875 lb 
      Useful Load: 1,595 lb 
      High Speed: 138 mph 
      Cruise Speed: 118 mph 
      Landing Speed: 49 mph 
      Climb (SL): 850 fpm 
      Ceiling: 15,000 ft 
      Range: 900 sm 
      Powerplant: Wright J-5 (220 hp) 
      Fuel: 96 gal 
      Year of Introduction: 1927 
      Quantity Built: 28 
       
            Lockheed Vega 5 Specifications 
       
      Length (overall): 27 ft 8 in 
      Height: 8 ft 6 in 
      Span: 41 ft 0 in 
      Wing Area: 275 sq ft 
      Gross Weight: 4,033 lb 
      Empty Weight: 2,361 lb 
      Useful Load: 1,672 lb 
      Seats: 5 
      High Speed: 170 mph 
      Cruise Speed: 140 mph 
      Landing Speed: 54 mph 
      Climb (SL): 1,300 fpm 
      Ceiling: 20,000 ft 
      Range: 725 sm 
      Powerplant: P&W Wasp (425 hp) 
      Oil: 10 gal 
      Fuel: 96 gal 
      Year of Introduction: 1928 
      Quantity Built: 28 
      Quantity Built: 35 
       
            Lockheed Vega 5B Specifications 
       
      Useful Load: 1,775 lb 
      Span: 41 ft 0 in 
      Length (overall): 27 ft 6 in 
      High Speed: 180 mph 
      Cruise Speed: 155 mph 
      Landing Speed: 55 mph 
      Range: 690 sm 
      Powerplant: P&W Wasp (450 hp) 
      Quantity Built: 29 
  
                
            
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