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THE FOKKER F-VIIA/3M AND F-10

​Fokker F-VIIa/3m

Pan Americans first service airplane ó the term airliner had not yet come into use ó was a model of one of the most important series of commercial aircraft produced during the first decade following the end of World War II and the beginning of air transport. The Fokker F-VIIa/3m was the first three-engined version of the single engined F-VII, which had first flown in April 1924 and had entered service with the famous Dutch airline, KLM, on 1 July of that year.

The basic method of Fokker construction was to construct a welded tubular steel frame fuselage, and cover this with plywood or fabric, while the thick wing was built entirely of wood. This latter was the best available that combined strength with light weight, the Dutch factory preferring Lithuanian birch. As was customary at the time, with engines normally attached to the front end of the fuselage or hung on the wings, power plants varied, but the first F-VII had one Rolls-Royce Eagle engine. The aircraft weighed a little over 21/2 tons, fully loaded, and cruised at about 85 mph. Napier Lion engines added about 10 mph to the speed.

The F-VIIa, with Bristol Jupiter engines, was a cleaned up version, with neater landing gear and rounded wingtips, and the 480 hp engine permitted a speed of up to 118 mph, and more than 11/2 tons additional gross weight. Then, while on a visit to the U.S.A., Anthony Fokker sent word back to the factory in Amsterdam to produce a three-engined version, so as to enter the Ford Reliability Trials competition. Powered by three Wright Whirlwind engines, with an all-up weight of 8800 lb. (almost 41/2 tons) the aircraft was an immediate success.

When Juan Trippe obtained the Fokkers, he obtained the services of Andre Priester, KLM's chief engineer, who was to set the safety and engineering standards for all airlines that exist to this day. The F-VIIa/3m's life with Pan American was brief, but the aircraft was an undoubted success, especially in Europe. Including the finest of the series, the higher-powered, faster, and heavier F-VIIb/3m, 170 of the 600 airline aircraft in Europe in 1933 were Fokkers, and most of these were exported to foreign countries.
Fokker F-10​
The first Fokker F-10 was produced in April 1927 as an enlarged version of the successful F-VII series of tri-motored commercial airliners. Its 425 hp Pratt & Whitney Wasp engines, with twice the power of the Wright Whirlwinds in the F-VII, permitted a 12-passenger load instead of eight. At this time Fokker aircraft were receiving much favorable publicity from some notable achievements. F-VIIb's were used by such famous flyers as Admiral Byrd, Sir Hubert Wilkins, and Amelia Earhart, while the first crossing from California to Hawaii, by Maitland and Hegenberger, and of the Pacific Ocean, by Charles Kingsford-Smith and his crew, were also made by Fokker tri-motors of the same type.

They went into service early in 1929 on the main route from Miami to San Juan, via Cuba and Santo Domingo. Some were later transferred to Mexico and two were used on the significant sortie to the north, in cooperation with Boston-Maine Airways. But in little more than a year or two after their introduction, the Fokker company as a whole suffered a severe blow, when a TWA F-10A crashed in Texas on 31 March 1931. This was bad enough, but one of the victims was Knute Rockne, the Notre Dame University football coach, and the effect on the nation could not have been worse had he been the President himself. The aircraft were grounded by the Department of Commerce on 4 May, five weeks after the accident, and although permitted to fly again within two weeks, and Fokkers continued to perform well in Europe and for the U.S. Army Air Corps, the suspicion remained that the wooden construction of the wing was suspect. This view coincided with the conviction that, like motor cars, aircraft should be built of metal. The era of the wooden airplane was at an end, at least in the U.S.
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