hesham

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Hi,

this is an unusual method for cargo aircraft,from
Curtiss-Wright.

http://www.google.com/patents?id=izx-AAAAEBAJ&pg=PP1&dq=curtiss+wright+airplane#PPP1,M1
 

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Hi,

the Curtiss-Wright cargo aircraft.

http://www.google.com/patents?id=V1pHAAAAEBAJ&pg=PA1946&dq=curtiss+wright+airplane#PPA1946,M1
 

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Hi,

here is an emergency floatation gear for Mr. C.E. Hathorn,which used a Curtiss
aircraft as airframe.

https://www.google.com/patents/US1833646?dq=aircraft+emergency+floatation&hl=ar&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiUzY_zyrDJAhVMfxoKHQTVCWIQ6AEIJTAB

http://fineartamerica.com/featured/1931-aircraft-emergency-floatation-patent-blueprint-nikki-marie-smith.html
 

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Hi,

anther amazing one.

https://patents.google.com/patent/US1358527A/en?q=airplane&inventor=Glenn+H.+curtiss&oq=Glenn+H.+curtiss+airplane
 

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hesham said:
anther amazing one.
https://patents.google.com/patent/US1358527A/en?q=airplane&inventor=Glenn+H.+curtiss&oq=Glenn+H.+curtiss+airplane

Very interesting. This aircraft was patented by Curtiss, but its general principles are quite clearly derived from the Burgess-Dunne Tailless Hydro designs (see Navy AH-10 image for instance).
Since Curtiss was still busy with trying to invalidate many of the Wrights' preposterous claims over everything that flew, whereby they would sue most anyone who would try to produce flying machines, first and foremost Curtiss. In his efforts to disprove the Wrights' paternity and exclusive claims over aviation, Glenn Curtiss spent a lot of time and energy to build and fly pre-Wright designs for instance, or to patent and test every possible aviation invention that shared no commonality with any of the Wright Brothers' airplanes. That is why I have a feeling this could be a case of Curtiss securing a patent for a non-Curtiss configuration that hadn't been protected before.
 

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Also, I should add that during the late 1920s, the Dunne design principle apparently grew on Glenn Curtiss, and he devoted his last efforts to promoting the Safety B-2 Arrowhead aircraft, directly based upon the same general configuration.
 

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Curtiss fully acknowledges Dunne's work and patents in the text but he does not expand upon this work as that is not the subject of the patent. This patent is actually for a three-float layout for a seaplane, which benefits from utilising Dunne's swept wing arrangement as it provides a good triangulation for the floats and hence stability on the water, or so he assumed. It was submitted in 1916, so roughly around the same time as the Burgess-Dunne Hydro was built. I wonder if that resulted in further patent arguments/
 
Thank you my dears Skyblazer and Schneiderman.
 
What was this Donovan R. Berlin aircraft ?.

Why is this posted under "really weird aerospace patents"? It is a standard design patent for a conventional aircraft

Yes,but it looks like a familiar designers,such as Curtiss or North American ?.
 
What was this Donovan R. Berlin aircraft ?.

Why is this posted under "really weird aerospace patents"? It is a standard design patent for a conventional aircraft

Yes,but it looks like a familiar designers,such as Curtiss or North American ?.
Maybe because it IS a Curtis P-40.
 

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