Radioplane Company
The Radioplane Company was an American
History
Reginald Denny Hobby Shops
Reginald Denny served with the Royal Flying Corps during World War I, and after the war emigrated to the United States to seek his fortunes in Hollywood as an actor. He was successful as a supporting actor in dozens of films and made a good living. Like many actors of the era, he took up flying for sport in the 1920s. But he then lost almost all of his money speculating in oil and mining stocks.[1]
Between films, Denny overheard a racket next door and went to investigate. He found the neighbor's son attempting to start one of the earliest radio-control model airplanes. Denny attempted to help, but they instead ended up destroying the model. While attempting to get it fixed, Denny became acquainted with the newly forming model industry, one of whom convinced him to take it up as a hobby. In 1934 he started a small hobby shop with a partner on Hollywood Boulevard,[2] but after two years it went out of business.[3]
Reginald Denny Industries
Denny approached (or was approached by) Nelson Paul Whittier, grandson of California
In 1936 Denny met General W.S. Thiele at
In spite of the crash, the Army agreed to purchase three models for $11,000 if they met certain performance requirements. In 1938 they purchased a new aircraft design by Fred Hardy and its associated engine from Walter Righter, who had supplied the engines for their previous designs. They began marketing them as the "Dennyplane" with the "Dennymite" engine.[9] After continued development, they demonstrated the design to the Army in March 1939 as the RP-2, and this was far more successful.[6]
In November they demonstrated the RP-3, which used welded steel tubing in place of glue-and-screwed
Radioplane
Denny and Whittier sought bankers to provide
Another year of development was required before the new RP-4 design was complete, having been extensively re-designed by
The production models were further modified, known to Radioplane as the RP-5, and to the Army as the Radioplane OQ-2. Delivery of these began in June 1941.[12]
Wartime work
Orders began to pour in, and the company expanded into the former
By 1943 there was a demand for a faster version, which led to the December introduction of the OQ-3, or TDD-2. This was essentially a strengthened version of the OQ-2 with a larger 8 horsepower (6.0 kW) O-15-3 engine that allowed it to reach 103 miles per hour (166 km/h).[b] It also used a single propeller in place of the OQ-2's counter-rotating variety, as the torque effects were no longer a concern for the operators.[14] The OQ-3/TDD-2 was the most-produced Radioplane drone of the war era, with over 9,400 produced.[15]
It was on the RP-5 assembly line in 1945 that Army photographer David Conover saw a young woman assembler named Norma Jeane Dougherty, whom he thought had potential as a model. She was photographed working on the OQ-3, which led to a screen test for Norma Jeane, who soon changed her name to Marilyn Monroe.[16][17]
In November 1943 the company produced the OQ-7, essentially an OQ-3 with some cleanups and a new mid-mounted, slightly swept wing. This reached 112 miles per hour (180 km/h) but was not taken into production.[15]
A totally new design was introduced in April 1944, the RP-8. This was powered by a new 22 horsepower (16 kW) O-45-1, allowing it to reach 141 miles per hour (227 km/h). This was taken into service as the OQ-14 and TDD-3, and a larger O-45-35 engine was used by the Navy's TDD-4.[15] The RP-10 tested a new low-mounted wing on an otherwise unmodified OQ-7. A new four-cylinder 22 horsepower (16 kW) Righter O-45 powered the RP-14 which reached 168 miles per hour (270 km/h). A 60 horsepower (45 kW) O-60 four-cylinder engine from McCulloch Motors Corporation provided speeds of 195 miles per hour (314 km/h) on two experimental RP-15's (OQ-6A) in November 1944. Combining this engine with a totally new metal-skinned fuselage and wings produced the RP-19, which reached 140 miles per hour (230 km/h). About 5,200 OQ-14/TDD-3's were produced.[15] Adding the more powerful O-45-35 engine produced the OQ-17/TDD-4, but only small numbers were produced.
By the end of the war the company's factory floor had expanded from 979 square feet in 1940 to 69,500 spread over five buildings, and was delivering 50 drones a day.
Post-war, Northrop purchase
Shortly after the end of the war the company produced a report sponsored by the Office of Naval Research with proposals for small aircraft capable of carrying a single marine over irradiated territory in an amphibious assault.[19]
As the post-war wind-down began to take effect, Denny eventually sold his 25% stake in the company to Collins in 1948.
Late in the war the company began development of an entirely new drone design known as the Basic Training Target, or BTT. Unlike the previous models which retained some semblance of their original model-airplane origins, the BTT series were metal skinned and much more streamlined. The first examples mounted a 72 horsepower (54 kW) McCullough O-100-1 engine and was able to reach 220 miles per hour (350 km/h) and was designed so that at 700 feet (210 m) range it appeared and flew like a jet fighter flying at 700 miles per hour (1,100 km/h) at 300 yards (270 m) range. It entered service in 1950 with some examples used as late as the 1980s.[20]
A further improvement was the OQ-19/KD2R-5, with a 95 horsepower (71 kW) McCullough that raised speed to 230 miles per hour (370 km/h). These included wing-tip mounts for teardrop-shaped
For even higher speeds, the company began experimenting with
The company was purchased by
Notes
References
Citations
- ^ Churchill 1946, p. 30.
- ^ Reginald Denny Hobby Shops
- ^ Dunkin 1940, p. 57.
- ^ Radioplane 1945, p. 2.
- ^ a b Ingells 1940, p. 8.
- ^ a b c Churchill 1946, p. 32.
- ^ Don Ryan, "Reginald Denny Revealed as Father of War's Robot Plane", Los Angeles Times
- ^ "Fighting Services Interested", Los Angeles Daily News, 21 February 1938.
- ^ Denny plane
- ^ a b Churchill 1946, p. 112.
- ^ Radioplane 1945, p. 4.
- ISBN 978-0-9897906-0-4.
- ^ "Radioplane RP-5A Target Drone", Western Museum of Flight
- ^ a b Churchill 1946, p. 114.
- ^ a b c d Andreas Parsch, "Radioplane OQ-14/TDD", 20 March 2003
- ^ Axe, David. P. 46. Drone War Vietnam. Pen & Sword, Military. 2021. ISBN 978 1 52677 026 4
- ISBN 978-0-9897906-0-4.
- ^ Radioplane 1945, p. 16.
- ^ "Hollywood, Model Planes, and Atomic Bombs: Office of Naval Research Support for Vertical Envelopment". National Archives. 14 December 2016. Retrieved 13 September 2022.
- ^ a b "Northrop KD2R5 'Shelduck' Basic Training Target Drone", Western Museum of Flight
- ^ Andreas Parsch, "Radioplane B-67/GAM-67 Crossbow", 9 January 2003
- ^ Andreas Parsch, "AQM-35", 19 January 2003
- ^ Reginald Denny profile at modelaircraft.org (PDF) Archived 2005-11-06 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Parker, Dana T. Building Victory: Aircraft Manufacturing in the Los Angeles Area in World War II, pp. 129–30, Cypress, CA, 2013.
Bibliography
- Axe, David. (2021) Drone War Vietnam. Pen & Sword, Military, Great Britain. ISBN 978 1 52677 026 4
- Edward Churchill, "Aerial Robots", Flying Magazine, March 1946
- Jim Dunkin, "Pictures, Planes and Persistence", Mechanix illustrated, April 1940
- Douglas Ingells, "Uncle Sam Buys a Model Plane", Model Airplane News, September 1940
- Radioplane, "Ten Years of Radioplane Development", 1945
External links
- Reginald Denny and Walter Righter, an extensive history on Radioplane and the people who made the company.