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Product Description
Martin M-130 "Clipper" Flying Boat Set.
This is a set of THREE models...
1 x Martin M-130 complete model (separate propellers to be glued in place).
1 x Beaching Trolley for bringing her up the slipway for maintenance.
1 x Martin M-130 Waterline model with doors and hatches open ready to receive passengers and freight.
Please note that in 1:700 and 1:600 scales the individual items are supplied "caged" together to avoid loss and damage - simply cut the cage away to release the parts, using small sidecutter pliers or snips. Once the cage is removed there are NO sprues to cut away and clean up. You have a choice of scale and material- please check your choices in the top right corner of this page.
A single, "in-flight" model of the M-130 is available HERE.
Designed to meet Pan American World Airways President Juan Trippe's desire for a trans-Pacific aircraft,the M-130 was an all-metal flying boat with streamlined aerodynamics and engines powerful enough to meet Pan Am's specified range and payload. They were sold at US$417,000 compared with $78,000 for a Douglas DC-2, the largest contemporary landplane airliner. The first flight was on December 30, 1934.On November 22, 1935, the China Clipper, piloted by Captain Edwin C. Musick and First Officer R.O.D. Sullivan, flew the first trans-Pacific airmail route.
Weekly passenger flights across the Pacific Ocean began in October 1936 when Hawaii Clipper left San Francisco for Manila, stopping overnight at Honolulu, Midway Island, Wake Island and Guam. An S-42 began flying the Manila-Hong Kong route in 1937, and the Martins replaced it in 1938
.In July 1938, Hawaii Clipper disappeared between Guam and Manila with the loss of nine crew and six passengers. No cause was determined.
Their range and capacity made them valuable for trans-ocean military flights during World War II. Beginning in 1942, the two remaining planes were pressed into transport roles for the United States Navy.
The M-130 has a remarkable place in history but only three were built.
Historical notes are from the book "PanAm - an airline and its aircraft" by R.E.G. Davies and Wikipedia.
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