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General Info

Sikorsky H-5 Dragonfly  flight 18 August 1943

General information
Type Helicopter
Manufacturer Sikorsky Aircraft
Primary users United States Air Force
Number built over 300
History
Manufactured 1944–1951
Introduction date February 1945
First flight 18 August 1943
Retired 1957
Developed from Sikorsky R-4
Variants Westland WS-51 Dragonfly
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History Sikorsky 
Sikorsky H-5 (initially designated R-5
 and also known as S-48, S-51 and by company designation VS-327)

Design and development

U.S. Air Force H-5D takes off post-World War II.

The H-5 was originally built by Sikorsky as its model S-48, designated as the R-5 by the United States Army Air Forces. It was designed to provide a helicopter having greater useful load, endurance, speed, and service ceiling than the Sikorsky R-4. The R-5 differed from the R-4 by having an increased rotor diameter and a new, longer fuselage for two persons in tandem,though it retained the R-4's tailwheel-type landing gear. Larger than the R-4 or the later R-6, the R-5 was fitted with a more powerful Wasp Junior 450-hp radial engine, and quickly proved itself the most successful of the three types. The first XR-5 of four ordered made its initial flight on 18 August 1943. In March 1944, the Army Air Forces ordered 26 YR-5As for service testing, and in February 1945, the first YR-5A was delivered. This order was followed by a production contract for 100 R-5s, outfitted with racks for two litters (stretchers), but only 34 were actually delivered. Of these, fourteen were the R-5A, basically identical with the YR-5A. The remaining twenty were built as the three-place R-5D, which had a widened cabin with a two-place rear bench seat and a small nosewheel added to the landing gear, and could be optionally fitted with a rescue hoist and an auxiliary external fuel tank. Five of the service-test YR-5As were later converted into dual-control YR-5Es. The United States Navy evaluated three R-5As as the HO2S-1

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Howard Sikorsky helicopters MD

Sikorsky, a Lockheed Martin Company
Sikorsky H-5 Dragonfly
Manufactured 1944–1951 Introduction date February 1945 First flight 18 August 1943

1

General Info

  • Crew: 1 or 2
  • Capacity: two stretchers in external panniers
  • Length: 57 ft 1 in (17.40 m)
  • Height: 13 ft 0 in (3.96 m)
  • Empty weight: 3,780 lb (1,715 kg)
  • Gross weight: 4,825 lb (2,189 kg)
2

Powerplant

  • Powerplant: 1 × Pratt & Whitney R-985 Wasp Junior 9-cylinder air-cooled radial piston engine, 450 hp (340 kW)
  • Main rotor diameter: (14.63 m)
  • Main rotor area: (168 m2)
plane
3

Specifications

  • Maximum speed: 106 mph 171 km/h,
  • Range:  (580 km, 310 nmi)
  • Service ceiling:(4,400 m)
  • Time to altitude: (3,000 m) in 15 min
4

Armament

Special Links Sikorsky CH-53K King Stallion

Links to Youtube & Others

The S-51 was the first helicopter ever to be delivered to a commercial operator; on July 29, 1946, the first of three aircraft was handed over to the president of Helicopter Air Transport (HAT) at Sikorsky's plant in Bridgeport, Connecticut. HAT paid a discounted price of $48,500 per aircraft and operated them from Camden Central Airport, Camden, in New Jersey,

Sikorsky H-5 Dragonfly flight 18 August 1943

The U.S. Navy ordered four S-51s "off-the-shelf" from Sikorsky in late 1946 for use in the Antarctic

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Youtube Link

During its service life, the H-5/HO3S-1 was used for utility, rescue, and mercy missions throughout the world, including flights during Operation Highjump in the Antarctic

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Aircrafttotal : Helicopters

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