
The 1924 Tiffany Sport, due to very short wingspan and low power, it had some difficulties taking off. It was entered in the 1925 Dayton Lightplane Air Race without much success.
Engine: Harley-Davidson, 18.5hp
Seats: 1

The 1924 Tiffany Sport, due to very short wingspan and low power, it had some difficulties taking off. It was entered in the 1925 Dayton Lightplane Air Race without much success.
Engine: Harley-Davidson, 18.5hp
Seats: 1
In 1928 Thunderbird Aircraft Inc was contracted by a Lt C A Burrows of the California National Guard for use in “scouting new passenger and air mail routes,” but it is unclear whether this was a state or personal order. A seven place cabin monoplane, there is no record of the plane being constructed.
Engine: P&W Wasp
Max speed: 145 mph
Cruise: 120 mph

Thunderbird Aircraft was established to build and develop the Thunderbird biplane, designed by Theodore A. Woolsey, and first flown in June 1926. The production W-14 was a three-seat open-cockpit biplane powered by a Curtiss OX-5 engine.
Design of the Thunderbird W-14 family was begun in 1926 by the W-F-W Aircraft Corporation (formed by Theodore Woolsey, Jack Frye and Paul Whittier).
The Thunderbird W-14 was an unequal span single bay biplane with wings of rectangular plan out to rounded tips, built around twin wooden spars and fabric-covered. Both upper and lower wings were set with 3° of dihedral and had externally interconnected ailerons. Outward-leaning N-form interplane struts joined the wings, set with 20 in (510 mm) of stagger, and the upper wing was mounted over the fuselage on outward-leaning cabane struts with an inverted V from the forward spar and a single strut from the rear spar on each side.
The prototype’s OX-5 water-cooled engine was cleanly cowled, with its 43 US gal (36 imp gal; 160 L) fuel tank immediately behind it and its radiator centrally positioned on the upper wing underside. There were two open cockpits in tandem. The forward one seated either two passengers side-by-side or a trainee pilot, positioned largely under the upper wing. The pilot sat, sightly raised, in the rear cockpit. The stagger and a gentle cut-out enhanced the field of view from both cockpits. Behind the engine the fuselage was a trapezoidal section girder structure of welded steel tubes, tapering rearwards and with a rounded decking behind the cockpits.
The Thunderbird had a conventional tail with a semi-circular plan tailplane mounted on top of the fuselage, wire-braced to the fin. It carried rounded elevators separated by a gap for rudder movement. The fin was also rounded, with a large unbalanced rudder of semi-elliptical profile.
Its original fixed, conventional landing gear was a standard single axle design with pairs of legs and trailing drag struts. There were no brakes and the early tailskid could not be steered.
The Thunderbird made its first flight 11 July 1926. By the autumn of 1927 numerous modifications had been made in preparation for production. These included laminated, rather than solid, wing spars, Warren girder ribs and a steel, rather than wire, cross-braced fuselage. A new, split axle undercarriage was introduced, with axles hinged from the central fuselage underside and equipped with rubber-chord shock absorbers. The tailskid was now steerable.
Designed by Ted Woolsey, the open cockpit biplane series was first flown on 11 July 1926 (piloted by Jack Frye).
As production started W_F_W was re-organised as the Aero Corporation of California with investment from Walter Hamilton (Frye & Woolsey, Monte Edwards, Walter Hamilton, Paul Richter). With the break-up of the partnership Woolsey arranged new investment to take over the business, which became Thunderbird Aircraft Inc. of 900 N Allen St, Glendale, CA.

Production Thunderbirds offered several other engines, all more powerful than the Curtiss (for $3,350). The least powerful was the 95 hp (71 kW) Dayton Bear which originally powered an iceboat.

The Bailey CR-7 Bull’s Eye was a 120 hp (89 kW) 7-ctlinder radial engine as was the 150 hp (110 kW) Axelson (Floco) B as W-14-F. The elderly, heavy 140 hp (100 kW) Hispano E water-cooled V-8 engine (for $3,750) increased speeds of the W-14-H by 15 mph (24 km/h; 13 kn) and the climb rate by 12% but needed a 60 US gal (50 imp gal; 230 l) fuel tank to maintain the W-O-14’s range. All but the first were certified to power the W-14.
One was registered N7201as a W-14 (no suffix) with a 130hp Hallett engine,

Between 40 and 50 production Thunderbirds (ATC 2-141) were built between 1927 and 1929. There were several agencies across the south-western states and it was popular with small flying clubs in the Los Angeles area. Some were used in the Philippines until the Japanese invasion. Others were exported to Canada. In 1929, however, the onset of the depression and a management dispute ended the company even though they had an outstanding order for 50 from a single buyer.
Known registrations:
N5243, N5404, N5457, N5588, N5770, N5830, N5969, N6502, N6573, N6589, et al.
Because the early advertisements for the Thunderbird said only that its maximum speed was over 100 mph, some journals suggested that the 95 mph cruising speed was in fact the maximum. To refute this, a standard Thunderbird with a three-year-old OX-5 engine, previously used by an aero club, was entered for the November 1927 Santa Anna air meet for aircraft with under 100 hp engines, where it won a trophy by completing a triangular course at an average speed of 114 mph (183 km/h; 99 kn). A few days later on 21 November 1927, at the National Guard field in Los Angeles Clint Burrows, the company test pilot, flew four flights each in opposite directions at an average speed of 119.4 mph (192.2 km/h; 103.8 kn). The aircraft was then sold to an air-taxi company for use between Los Angeles and Tucson.
One standard W-14, NX9830, was bought by Roscoe Turner and modified by the addition of a 50 ft (15 m) diameter parachute held in the wing centre-section to be deployed to save the aircraft and those aboard in an emergency.
Only one Thunderbird remains airworthy, a W-O-14. It was restored by Denny Trone and flew from Brodhead, Wisconsin. After his death in a 2008 flying accident it was donated to the Eagles Mere Air Museum along with other old aircraft he had restored. Ogden lists it as a General Aircraft Company Thunderbird W-14.
Variants:
Engine: Curtiss OX-5, 90hp
Wingspan: 31’0″
Length: 24’6″
Useful load: 850 lb
Max speed: 115 mph
Cruise speed: 95 mph
Stall: 38 mph
Range: 400 mi
Ceiling: 15,000′
Seats: 3
W-B-14 (W-14-B)
Probable designation of the Thunderbird when powered by a 140 hp (104 kW) Bailey C-7-R “Bull’s Eye” 7-cyl radial engine.
W-O-14 (W-14-O)
Engine: 150 hp (112 kW) Curtiss OX-5
Propeller: 2-bladed fixed-pitch
Upper wingspan: 33 ft (10 m)
Lower wingspan: 31 ft (9.4 m)
Wing area: 300 sq ft (28 m2)
Length: 24 ft 6 in (7.47 m)
Height: 9 ft (2.7 m)
Empty weight: 1,300 lb (590 kg)
Gross weight: 2,100 lb (953 kg)
Fuel capacity: 43 US gal (36 imp gal; 160 L)
Maximum speed: 120 mph (190 km/h, 100 kn)
Cruise speed: 95 mph (153 km/h, 83 kn)
Stall speed: 38 mph (61 km/h, 33 kn)
Range: 400 mi (640 km, 350 nmi)
Service ceiling: 15,000 ft (4,600 m)
Rate of climb: 800 ft/min (4.1 m/s) initial
Landing speed:38 mph (61 km/h; 33 kn)
Crew: One
Capacity: Two passengers / 850 lb (386 kg) payload
W-F-14 (W-14-F)
Powered by a 140 hp (104 kW) Axelson-Floco B 7-cyl radial engine.
W-H-14 (W-14-H)
Powered by a 150 hp (112 kW) Wright-Hisso E V-8 engine.
W-14
One aircraft (7201) powered by a 130 hp (97 kW) Hallett H-526 7-cyl radial engine.

W-F-W Aircraft Corp
Aero Corp of California
1926:
W-F-W Aircraft Corp
(Theodore Woolsey-Jack Frye-Paul Whittier),
Los Angeles CA.
USA
1926:
Aero Corp of California
(Frye & Woolsey, Monte Edwards, Walter Hamilton, Paul Richter),
106 St & Western Ave.
Los Angeles CA.
USA
The Thunderbird Aircraft Company was established in November 1927 at Glendale, California, to build and develop the Thunderbird biplane, designed by Theodore A. Woolsey, and first flown in June 1926. The production W-14 was a three-seat open-cockpit biplane powered by a Curtiss OX-5 engine.
1928:
Thunderbird Aircraft Inc,
900 N Allen St,
Glendale CA.
USA
1928:
General Aircraft Corp,
Los Angeles CA.
USA
1929:
Ended production.

The Thulin K was based on the Nieuport IVG which they’d imported.

Eighteen Thulin Ks were built in 1917, sixteen going to the Dutch Army in 1920.
Engine: Thulin A, 105 hp
Wingspan: 29 ft 9 in
Length: 21 ft 4 in
Max speed: 93 mph
Cruise: 81 mph
Landing speed: 53 mph
Time to 3300 ft: 4 min
Ceiling: 20,000 ft

A two place cabin, low wing monoplane, produced in 1939 the Thorp T-5 NX15542 was a prototype trainer for the Boeing School of Aeronautics, based on Paulic XT-3B design, which had been dismantled.

The Boeing T-5 or Thorp T-5 was a student-built aircraft that was an all-metal, side-by-side configuration, low-wing, conventional landing gear-equipped aircraft. It was test flown by Eddie Allen in 1939.

Officially neither a Boeing Co design nor product, this attractive tandem-seat trainer was built by students at Boeing School and thusly adopted the Boeing name for licensing convenience as NX15542.
Refitted with tricycle gear and a 215hp Lycoming as the T-6 in 1939 by Paulic.
It was flown for 15-20 hours, then dismantled.

War clouds and metal shortages brought an end to the project and the T-5 / T-6 was scrapped.
Engine: Wright R-760, 350hp
Wingspan: 34’1″
Length: 24’9″
Useful load: 885 lb
Max speed: 226 mph
Cruise speed: 200 mph
Stall: 65 mph
Seats: 2
In 1937 B B Thompson, of Belle WV., USA, built the BBT-2 two place open cockpit monoplane registered N20491. Power was a 60hp LeBlond engine.
Belle WV.
USA
Circa 1937 built the BBT-2
In 1933 Earl O Thompson built the Sportplane two-place open cockpit monoplane registered N13660 c/n E-711. Power was a 50hp Ford engine.
Marshalltown IA.
USA
Circa 1933 built a Sportplane