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Bellanca CH 400 Skyrocket
performance and specifications
Bellanca Aircraft Corp. of New Castle, Del., produced a series of aircraft
known for innovation, utility and efficiency. The CH-400 Skyrocket is an
excellent example. Powered by a 450 hp Pratt and Whitney WASP Jr. radial
engine, this aircraft featured some of the standard Bellanca traits,
airfoil shaped struts and an airfoil contoured fuselage, which added extra
lift, resulting in a higher payload. Almost all examples of this aircraft
were destroyed while performing their missions. This Skyrocket was
originally a CH-300 Pacemaker, powered by a 300 hp Wright J-6 radial
engine. After salvaging it off an Alaskan glacier in 1962, it was restored
with the 450 Pratt & Whitney and painted to represent the Columbia in
which Clarence Chamberlin and Charles Levine made a trans-Atlantic flight
from New York to Eisleben, Germany, on June 4, 1927, only days after
Lindbergh arrived in Paris. It is interesting to note that Lindbergh
originally sought to acquire a WB-2 (an earlier version of this Bellanca
with a Wright J-5 radial engine) for his attempt to cross the Atlantic.
This offer was turned down, forcing him to have a special plane built by
Ryan Aircraft, the now famous Spirit of St. Louis.
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10 place seating capacity.
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Manufactured in 1946,
original serial #03.
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Total time 5010 hours
(as of May, 1972).
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Powerplant was 600 HP
P&W R1340.
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