As the most powerful Whirlwind to be produced, commercially, it was also the most successful. It powered a wide variety of civil utility aircraft, such as the
Beechcraft Staggerwing, and various airliners, such as the
Ford 4-AT-E Trimotor and the
Lockheed 10B Electra. In addition, it powered U.S. military training aircraft including the
North American BT-9 and
Vultee BT-15 Valiant for the Army and the
Curtiss-Wright SNC Falcon for the Navy. The
Curtiss F9C Sparrowhawk parasite fighter operated from U.S. Navy airships was also powered by the R-975. One notable record set by a Wright J-6 Whirlwind-powered aircraft occurred during July 28–30, 1931, when
Russell Norton Boardman and
John Louis Polando flew non-stop from
Floyd Bennett Field, on
Long Island to
Istanbul, Turkey in the
Cape Cod, a
Bellanca Special J-300 high-wing
monoplane in 49:20 hours, establishing a distance record of , the first nonstop record flight to surpasse . However, the R-975 faced heavy competition from
Pratt & Whitney's
R-985 Wasp Junior and from their larger
R-1340 Wasp. Pratt & Whitney R-985 outsold the Wright R-975 by a wide margin. Wright's production of the R-975 ceased in 1945, with over 7,000 engines being produced by the company.
Production by Continental Motors , are powered by nine-cylinder, 400-horsepower Wright Whirlwind aviation-type engines. These men are working on the engine wiring sub-assembly. In 1939 the U.S. Army, which had been using
Continental R-670 radial engines in its
light tanks, chose Continental Motors to build the R-975 under license as the engine for its
M2 medium tanks. Subsequently, the same engine was selected for the
M3 Lee medium tank, the
M4 Sherman medium tank, the Canadian
Ram tank (which used the M3 chassis), the
M7 Priest self-propelled gun, the
M18 Hellcat tank destroyer, and other Allied armored vehicles based on these. Continental versions of the R-975 for armored vehicles included the R-975E-C2, the R-975-C1, and the R-975-C4. In contrast to the 7,000 built by Wright, Continental built over 53,000 R-975 engines. surpassing any Wright version. A military version, the R-975-46, could reach , and was used in
Piasecki's HUP Retriever and H-25 Army Mule helicopters. Continental's production of R-975 engines continued into the 1950s.
Other license-built R-975s The engine was built in
Spain as the
Hispano-Suiza 9Q or
Hispano-Wright 9Q without modification apart from the use of Hispano's patented
nitriding finishing process and, on one version only, the 9Qdr, an epicyclic output speed reducer. The R-975 was also produced under licence by
Fábrica Nacional de Motores in
Brazil. ==Variants==