Cuatro Vientos (aircraft) explained

The Cuatro Vientos was a specially built Br.19 TF Super Bidon, which Mariano Barberán y Tros de Ilarduya, Lieutenant Joaquín Collar Serra and Sergeant Modesto Madariaga flew from Spain to Cuba in 1933. The flight, which took 39 hours and 55 minutes, departed Seville at 4:40 on 10 June 1933, and arrived in Camagüey at 20:45 (local time) on 11 June 1933, after a flight of .

On 20 June 1933, the aircraft departed for Mexico City, without Madariaga on board. It disappeared in flight, and was last sighted in the vicinity of Villahermosa, Mexico. No trace of the plane or of its occupants was subsequently found.[1]

A replica of the Cuatro Vientos is housed at the Museo del Aire.

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Gloria y tragedia del vuelo Sevilla – Cuba – Méjico (90º aniversario) . Betes . Antonio G. . 1 March 2023 . www.xn . El Español Digital . 16 July 2024 .