Felixstowe F5L
The twin-engine F5L was one of the Felixstowe F series of flying boats developed by John Cyril Porte at the Seaplane Experimental Station, Felixstowe, England, during the First World War for production in America.
A civilian version of the aircraft was known as the Aeromarine 75.
Design and development
Porte had taken the Curtiss H-12, an original design by the American Glenn Curtiss, and developed it into a practical series of flying boats at the Felixstowe station. They then took their F.5 model and further redesigned it with better streamlining, a stronger hull using veneer instead of doped linen and U.S.-built 330 hp Liberty 12A engines. The prototype was built and tested in England and the design then taken over by the Naval Aircraft Factory, Philadelphia, where further modifications were made to suit their production methods under wartime conditions. The American-built version was also known as the Curtiss F5L and as the Aeromarine 75.The F5L was built by the Naval Aircraft Factory, Curtiss and Canadian Aeroplanes Limited. Some were converted for civilian use by the Aeromarine Plane and Motor Company in 1919.
Operational history
The F5L entered U.S. service at the end of the war and was the U.S. Navy's standard patrol aircraft until 1928, when it was replaced by the PN-12.In civil service, named the Aeromarine 75, the Felixstowe F5L could accommodate 10 passengers and was operated by Aeromarine Airways on flights from Key West to Havana, carrying the first U.S. Post Office international air mail on flights from New York City to Atlantic City, and from Cleveland to Detroit. The first in-flight movie screened in an Aeromarine 75 during the Pageant of Progress Exposition, Chicago, August 1921.
A further civil conversion for the Atlantic Coast Airways Corporation of Delaware was reported to accommodate 25 passengers in August 1928, with talkies by First National Pictures run as a test on the inaugural flight. The airline bought about six ex-U.S. Navy aircraft and advertised a service between Montreal, Boston, Newport, New York, Atlantic City, Charleston, Miami and Havana.
Operators
- Argentine Naval Aviation
- Brazilian Naval Aviation – Curtiss F5L
- Philippine Air Service
- United States Navy
- Aeromarine Airways
- Atlantic Coast Airways Corporation of Delaware
Accidents and incidents