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Cloudster

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The Douglas Cloudster was a 1920s American biplane aircraft. It was the only product of the Davis-Douglas Company , and was designed to make the first non-stop flight coast-to-coast across the United States.

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6-611: The term Cloudster can refer to a number of different aircraft types: Douglas Cloudster Douglas Cloudster II Pop's Props Cloudster Rearwin Cloudster Ryson ST-100 Cloudster Simplex Aeroplanes Cloudster Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Cloudster . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change

12-566: The United States. David R. Davis provided the financing for the company. The resulting aircraft was the Cloudster , a single-bay equal-span biplane of wooden construction designed to carry payload of equivalent weight. It was fabric-covered except for the forward fuselage , which was clad in sheet metal . The aircraft was powered by a 400 hp (298 kW) Liberty V-12 piston engine . The Cloudster first flew on 24 February 1921,

18-630: The aircraft broke the Pacific Coast altitude record by climbing 19,160 ft (5839 m) on 19 March that year, and attempted the coast-to-coast journey in June. The aircraft failed to make a non-stop journey due to engine failure, it had to make a forced landing at Fort Bliss, Texas on 27 June 1921. In 1923, the Cloudster was sold and modified for sightseeing flights, with two additional open cockpits and seats for five passengers replacing one of

24-654: The coast of Ensenada, Baja California in December 1926. It was damaged beyond repair by the tide before it could be recovered. Following the failure of the coast-to-coast flight, Davis lost interest and Douglas went on to form the Douglas Company (later the Douglas Aircraft Company ) in July 1921. Douglas Aircraft would revive the name in 1945 for a proposed general aviation aircraft with

30-430: The fuel tanks. In 1925 it was again sold to T. Claude Ryan , who had it modified further by adding an enclosed cabin with ten seats, the aircraft became the flagship of Ryan's San Diego–to–Los Angeles airline, one of the first scheduled passenger lines in the country. It was subsequently used by a number of operators and flew beer to Tijuana , Mexico after the 1926 flood, before it made a forced landing in shallow water off

36-525: The link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Cloudster&oldid=419457211 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Douglas Cloudster The Davis-Douglas Company was formed in July 1920 to enable Donald Douglas to design and build an aircraft capable of non-stop flight coast-to-coast across

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