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Stinson Detroiter

The Stinson SM-1 Detroiter was a six-seat high-wing monoplane cabin airliner for passengers or freight designed and built by the Stinson Aircraft Company, later the Stinson Aircraft Corporation. It was based on Stinson's earlier SB-1 biplane.

Development
The first design from the Detroit-based Stinson Aircraft Syndicate was the Stinson SB-1 Detroiter, a cabin biplane with novel features such as cabin heating, individual wheel brakes and electric starter for the nose-mounted 220 hp (164 kW) Wright J-5 Whirlwind engine. It made its first flight on January 25, 1926, with 26 aircraft following the prototype. Eddie Stinson believed that a monoplane would be more popular and efficient than a biplane and so tasked William C. Naylor to design a monoplane derivative of the SB-1. The resulting design, the Stinson SM-1 Detroiter, had a fuselage based on that of the SB-1, but stretched to accommodate six seats, and a high mounted monoplane wing, and first flew in April 1927. The SM-1 made a number of significant long-range flights. Seventy-five of the Wright J-5-powered versions were built, followed by 30 Wright J-6-powered aircraft. From 1928, SM-1 aircraft were used on scheduled services by Paul Braniff's Braniff Air Lines and by Northwest Airways. In 1930 a SM-1FS with a crew of three reached Bermuda from New York City, the first flight ever to the islands. Getting there the aircraft had to land twice, once because of darkness and later after running out of fuel. With a wing strut damaged, it was shipped back to New York. E.L. Cord's personal SM-7 was operated for several years during/after World War II by Western Air Express with (illegally) a Pratt; subsequently restored in 1980–2020 with a legal 300 hp Lycoming R-680. In 1928 Stinson developed the smaller SM-2 Junior model to appeal to private owners. ==Variants==
Variants
;Stinson SB-1 Detroiter :Biplane with a Wright J-4 Whirlwind engine or a J-5 Whirlwind. 26 built. ;SM-1B (ATC 2-24, 2–224) :1928 variant with higher allowable loads. 36 built, some converted from SM-1s. ;SM-7A Junior (ATC 329) :1930 development of SM-2 with a wingspan and a Wright J-6. Eight built, including 7AS sub-variants. ;SM-7AS Junior (ATC 2–313) :SM-7A fitted with Edo floats. ;SM-7B (ATC 298, 2–313) :SM-7 with a Pratt & Whitney R-985 Wasp Junior radial engine, Eight built. ;SM-8A (ATC 295, 2–301, 2–461) :Five-seat wingspan model for 1930, originally powered by a Lycoming R-680 radial engine. Around 300 built. ;SM-8B/SM-8B Special (ATC 294) :SM-8A with lower-powered Wright J-6. Five built, three of which were converted to SM-8B Special. ;SM-8D (ATC 312) :SM-8 with a Packard DR-980 Diesel radial engine. Two built as NC200W and NC227W in 1930. ==Operators==
Operators
; • China National Aviation CorporationChina Airways FederalShanghai-Chengtu Airways (1920s–30s) ; • FaucettPeruvian Air Force operated four from 1929 to 1943. ; • Braniff Air LinesNorth American AirwaysNorthwest Airways ; • Honduran Air Force operated three from 1931, including an SM-1F and an SM-8A. ==Specifications (SM-1F)==
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