Ryan Foursome Explained

The Ryan C-1 Foursome, also known as the "Baby Brougham" was a single-engine, four-seat light aircraft built by Ryan Aeronautical in the United States in 1930 as an executive transport.[1] It was a high-wing, braced monoplane based on Ryan's highly successful Brougham design, but substantially smaller.[2] The interior was luxuriously furnished, with deeply upholstered seats,[2] and an oversize cabin door was fitted to ease boarding and disembarking for the three passengers.[1] Only three examples were built before deteriorating economic conditions led to the sale of the Ryan factory in October 1930.[3] One of the three machines was fitted with a Packard DR-980 diesel engine and designated the C-2.[4] This latter aircraft was lost during an attempted transatlantic crossing by Alex Loeb and Richard Decker in August 1939.[5] They were en route to Ireland[5] with (Palestine perhaps their intended final destination - this is supposition, not stated in the source article).[4]

Variants

References

Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Notes and References

    1. Munson 1982, p.129
    2. Taylor 1989, p.773
    3. The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Aircraft p.2835
    4. "Ryan, Ryan-Douglas, Ryan-Flamingo, Ryan-Standard"
    5. "Wasted Courage" 1939, p.167