American Flying Torpedo

hesham

ACCESS: USAP
Senior Member
Joined
26 May 2006
Messages
32,646
Reaction score
11,827
Hi,

here is a twin boom flying torpedo designed by American Television Institute
of Chicago,had a pusher engine and low-wing,my dear Tophe also discovered
this report also;


 

Attachments

  • 3.png
    3.png
    529.8 KB · Views: 289
  • 4.png
    4.png
    158 KB · Views: 258
Last edited:
The man in the photo at the top is the inventor, Ulises A. Sanabria. This image was reproduced in:
Chicago: Historia de Nuestra Cominidad Puertorriqueña by Manuel A Martinez, Reyes and Sons, Chicago, 1989.

The drawing of the 'Television Torpedo' came from from a 1938 issue of the Collaborator, the American Television Institute journal.

"In 1938, Sanabria's Collaborator journal (an ATI publication) included his description of a new weapon. This weapon is the 'Television Torpedo,' a television-guided cruise missile. A wire antenna across its twin tales receives control signals from the mother plane. An iconoscope tube in the nose of the missile allows the remote pilot to spot the target. In World War II, RCA actually manufactured such a missile for the US Army. At the time when Sanabria published, the Television Torpedo was already a proven technology."

http://www.hawestv.com/mtv_chicago/mtv_cgo.htm
 
Another mystery ?.

 

Attachments

  • 1.jpg
    1.jpg
    131.2 KB · Views: 53
Another mystery ?.

FWIW, a bit of bio on the designer of that Long Distance Aerial Torpedo-Bomb - Adam Craigon ...

Craigon was an aeronautical engineer based in Ontario. He may have begun in Quebec (since he settled a lawsuit there with Lancashire Land & Construction Co. Ltd. of Sherbrooke in 1929). In his 1930 fuel injection patent, he is listed as being from Toronto - although the assignee is Craigon Engines Limited of Hamilton, Ontario.

In 1939, [1] Craigon formed International Aeronautical Corporation Ltd. in Toronto. Craigon became President and Chief Engineer. A.F. ('Sandy') MacDonald was VP. The address is given as #910, the Concourse Building (whose street address was/is 100 Adelaide St W, Toronto).

The Aeroplane, Volume 58 (March 22 1940), page 409

According to Canada's Dominion Bureau of Statistics, Department of Trade and Commerce (1945 Census of Industry), International Aeronautical Corporation Limited still existed in 1945. By then, the corporate address had moved from the Concourse Building 3 km east to 10 Sword Street, Toronto.

In its Index to Volume LXVI (July-Dec 1954) Commonwealth Directory (page 305a), Flight listed this firm as InAerCo, Ltd. But, by this time, Craigon and MacDonald were gone - replaced by Ian S. Filsche as President and a Col. S.C. Cook as VP.

________________________________

[1] Most sources say the International Aeronautical Corporation was formed in 1940. However, an incorporation notice was given in American Aviation Vol.3, No.1 (June 1 1939), page 26.
 

Attachments

  • Radio-Craft_1945_08-001-001.jpg
    Radio-Craft_1945_08-001-001.jpg
    501.1 KB · Views: 28
  • Radio-Craft_1945_08-018-018.jpg
    Radio-Craft_1945_08-018-018.jpg
    883.7 KB · Views: 22
  • Radio-Craft_1945_08-057-057.jpg
    Radio-Craft_1945_08-057-057.jpg
    1.1 MB · Views: 17

Similar threads

Back
Top Bottom