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SPAD VII.c.1
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| Specifications | |
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MANUFACTURER
TYPE ENGINE WINGSPAN LENGTH HEIGHT WEIGHT MAXIMUM SPEED RANGE CEILING ARMAMENT CREW |
Société pour les Appareils Deperdussin
(SPAD) Single-seat fighter Hispano-Suiza 8-Aa 180-hp water-cooled V8 25 ft 8 in (7.82 m) 19 ft 11 in (6.08 m) 7 ft 2 in (2.2 m) 1,554 lbs (705 kg) 129 mph (207 kmh) 217 miles (349 km) 21,500 ft (6,553 m) Vickers .303 MG One |
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About the Museum's Aircraft |
The Museum's aircraft, serial number B9916, was one of ten manufactured by
Mann, Edgerton and Co. of Norwich, England in 1917. Later that year, it was
sold to the United States and was one of many sent to Rockwell Field (now
North Island) in San Diego. While there, the SPAD VIIs, retaining their
British markings, were used for advanced fighter training and took part in
the huge Armistice celebration flyover of downtown San Diego in 1919.
Little is known of B9916's history during the 1920s except that it was acquired by the Adcox School of Aviation in the Pacific Northwest. In 1930, the aircraft was purchased by Bensen Polytechnic High School in Oregon. The SPAD when through several subsequent owners until 1971 when it was loaned to the Smithsonian Institution. It went on public display hanging upside down over the Smithsonian's equally rare German Fokker D.VII. In 1981, it was purchased by the San Diego Aerospace Museum at an auction. The Museum began restoration of the SPAD in 1990 with a team of volunteer craftsmen and expert consultants, included noted antique aircraft authorities Jim and Zona Appleby who were enlisted to restore the fuselage, empennage, instruments and engine at their home in Yucca Valley, California. Restoration of the wings and painting and assembly was done by volunteers working at the Museum's Gillespie Field facility in El Cajon, California. During restoration, it was determined that the aircraft was ninety-five percent original, making B9916 one of hte most authentic World War I aircraft in existence and extremely rare. Almost all missing parts were replaced by original substitutes, including a 1917 Hispano-Suiza engine made fully operational by Appleby. All systems are functional on this aircraft. It is finished in 1917 British colors and markings. |
Items of Interest...
| Related Links |
| SPAD VII Colours & Markings |
| SPAD VII - National Museum of the USAF |
| SPAD VII and SPAD XIII |
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