Stinson W

The 1931 Stinson W (ATC 435) was a deluxe version of Junior, priced at $8,995.

Five were built; NC10849, NC12144, NC12146, NC12160, and NC12177.

Engine: P&W Wasp Jr, 300hp
Wingspan: 42’1″
Length: 30’10”
Useful load: 1271 lb
Max speed: 143 mph
Cruise: 122 mph
Stall: 60 mph
Range: 470 mi
Seats: 4

Stinson R / R-1 / R-2 / R-3

Stinson R NC12153

The Stinson R / R-1 (ATC 457) of 1932 was designed by Robert Ayer and C R Irvine as a four-place cabin high wing monoplane. A deluxe Junior, and forerunner of Reliant, powered by a 215hp Lycoming R-680 engine, the R-1 was to have a retractable gear added, but was never built.

Thirty R-1 were sold, priced at $5,595, including NC436M/440M, NC446M/448M, NC479M, NC10861, NC10874, NC10876, NC12134, NC12139, NC12147/12156, prototype NC12178, NC12189, and NC12197.

Stinson R NC12153

Eddie Stinson was fatally injured in a crash landing of the prototype R on 25 January 1932.

The 1932 R-2 (ATC 489), powered with a 240hp Lycoming R-680 engine, was advertised for $6,497 with retractable gear modification, but none was produced as such. Three were built; NS40, NX447M, and NX12178 modified from R, and possibly one other.

Stinson R-3 NC12187

The 1933 R-3 (ATC 493) was the same as the R-2, but with fixed, non-operating prototypical retracting gear. Three were built; NC449M, NC12131, and NC12187, priced at $5,995. Only one was so modified to operating retractable gear as R-3S

The 1934 R-3S (ATC 539) conversion from R-3 NC449M featured a 245hp Lycoming R-680 engine, controllable prop and other improvements.

Stinson R-3S N449M

R / R-1
Engine: 215hp Lycoming R-680
Wingspan: 43’3″
Length: 26’1″
Useful load: 1100 lb
Max speed: 130 mph
Cruise: 110 mph
Stall: 52 mph
Range: 450 mi
Ceiling: 12,500′
Seats: 4

R-2
Engine: 240hp Lycoming R-680
Wingspan: 43’3″
Length: 26’2″
Useful load: 1210 lb
Max speed: 138 mph
Cruise: 118 mph
Stall: 62 mph
Range: 550 mi
Seats: 4

R-3
Engine: 240hp Lycoming R-680
Wingspan: 43’3″
Length: 26’2″
Useful load: 1210 lb
Max speed: 133 mph
Cruise: 112 mph
Stall: 62 mph
Range: 450 mi
Seats: 4

R-3S
Engine: 245hp Lycoming R-680
Wingspan: 43’3″
Length: 26’2″
Useful load: 1010 lb
Max speed: 133 mph
Cruise: 112 mph
Stall: 52 mph
Range: 450 mi
Seats: 4
Specs

Stinson U

Stinson U Prototype NC432M

The 1932 Stinson Model U (ATC 484) was a 10-12 seat cabin monoplane, designed by Art Saxon. Almost a sesquiplane with its stub wings on the undercarriage, they were priced at $19,500.

Twenty-three were built for American Airways, including one for competition (NR/NC12127), and one experimental model, NX12132, that crashed on 2 August 1933.

Stinson U Prototype NC432M

ATC 2-413 was for a weight adjustment for prototype X/NC432M c/n 9000.

The 1933 U-1 (ATC 2-437) was an 11 seat Model U with three 285hp Wright R-760 engines. One was built for Eastern Air Transport, NX12129 c/n 9014.

U
Engines: three 240hp Lycoming R-680BA
Wingspan: 66’2″ (stub-wing 14’3″)
Length: 45’3″
Useful load: 3100 lb
Max speed: 145 mph
Cruise: 123 mph
Stall: 60 mph
Range: 450-500 mi
Ceiling: 14,000′
Seats: 10-12

U-1
Engines: three 285hp Wright R-760.
Seats: 11

Stinson 76 Sentinel

Stinson 76 NX27772

The Stinson 76 Sentinel of 1940, designed by A P Fontaine, featured full-span slots, which created a problem during testing with near-fatal results. It first flew on 28 June 1941, powered by a 175hp Lycoming, and piloted by Al Schramm. With modification to half-span slots and enlarged tail surfaces it became final prototype for L-5.

Only the one was built, registered NX27772.

Stinson SM-4 Junior

The 1929 Stinson SM-4 Junior was a special retractable-gear, high-wing two-place cabin monoplane endurance plane, Sally Sovereign, developed from SM-1 NX9696 and powered by a 300hp Wright R-975 engine. It was damaged in a wheels-up landing after a failed endurance flight, piloted by Eddie Stinson and Randolph Page.

It was rebuilt with fixed gear as K of New Haven for an aborted attempt at a US-Argentina non-stop flight on 7/15/30, when the crew became lost in a fog over Georgia and ran out of gas. They bailed out and the SM-4 crashed to destruction.

Stinson SM-3

One prototype SM-3 was built in 1927 for retractable gear tests. A four-place cabin low-wing monoplane, the SM-3 featured a tapered, strut-braced gullwing, and was powered by a 220hp Wright J-5C engine. Flown in one test by Eddie Stinson, who likened its flight characteristics to “a brick” and cancelled the project in 1928.

Stinson Greyhound

The 1920 Stinson Greyhound was the first Stinson-designed and -built airplane; side-by-side cockpit. Mahogany-lined cockpits, electric starter.

Two were built, N2554 and N352V, but the market was “not quite ready,” so the project was considered a failure.

Engine: 90hp Curtiss OX-5
Wingspan: 34’2″
Length: 22’4″
Useful load: 545 lb
Max speed: 90 mph
Cruise: 65 mph
Stall: 25 mph
Seats: 2