Aeronca E-113, Horizontally-Opposed 2 Engine, Cutaway, ca. early 1930s. Creator: Aeronautical Corporation of America.

Aeronca E-113, Horizontally-Opposed 2 Engine, Cutaway, ca. early 1930s. Creator: Aeronautical Corporation of America.

2-839-597 - Heritage Art/Heritage Images

Aeronca (Aeronautical Corporation of America) built the first widely accepted light planes in the U.S., the Collegian. These were originally powered by an engine based on a Harley-Davidson motorcycle engine, the Harlequin. To overcome limitations of that engine, Aeronca designed its own engine, the E-107, and that engine proved inadequately powered for a larger aircraft. Certificated in April 1931, the Aeronca E-113 was an outgrowth of the Wright-Morehouse engine and was designed again for light aircraft. Considered highly reliable, it was the most powerful two-cylinder engine of its time. The E-113 first powered the Aeronca C-1 Cadet aircraft in 1931. It was also used in the Aeronca C-2 and C-3 aircraft. The C-3 was widely used for student instruction in the 1930s.


Image Details


People Information

Creator
  1. Aeronautical Corporation of America, attributed to: American: Maker, manufacturer

Medium
  1. Aluminum, steel, paint, brass, rubber, copper, phenolic

Picture Type
  1. Object
  2. Propulsion-reciprocating & rotary

Category Hierarchy

Lifestyle & Leisure Transport & Travel

Science & Nature Technology & Innovation


Digital Image Size

Pixel Dimensions (W x H) : 6600x4950
File Size : 95,713kb


Aliases

  1. A19610069000
  1. NASM-A19610069000-NASM2015-01431.txt
  1. 0990010181
  1. 2-839-597
  1. 2839597
  1. A19610069000

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