St. Louis CG-5 explained

The St. Louis CG-5 was a 1940s American prototype military transport glider designed and built by the St. Louis Aircraft Corporation.[1]

Development

In 1941 the United States Army Air Force decided to use secondary sources to boost aircraft production and the St. Louis Aircraft Corporation was contracted to design and build a prototype of both an eight-seat and fifteen-seat troop carrying glider. In total with the St. Louis examples, eight prototypes were ordered from different aircraft manufacturers.

The model SL-5 eight seat glider was given the military designation CG-5[2] and the prototype designated XCG-5. Howard C. Blosom test flew the XCG-5 from Lambert Field in 1942.[3] It proved to have serious aerodynamic flaws and structural problems causing Dutch Roll at speed. The heavier fifteen-seat glider (designated the XCG-6) was not built.

The USAAF ordered the Waco CG-3 for the eight/nine seat requirement, although only 100 were built. The fifteen-seat requirement was met by the Waco CG-4 of which more than 13,000 were built.

References

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The St. Louis Cardinals, et al. . Greater St. Louis Air & Space Museum . 2009-07-28 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110903125644/http://www.airandspacemuseum.org/STLCARDINALS.htm . 2011-09-03 .
  2. Andrade 1979, p. 97
  3. Skyways. The St. Louis Aircraft Corporation. David Ostrowski.