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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Martin_T
rdf:type
yago:Content105809192 yago:Cognition100023271 yago:Abstraction100002137 owl:Thing wikidata:Q11436 yago:Type105840188 dbo:MeanOfTransportation dbo:Aircraft umbel-rc:Model_airplane yago:Category105838765 yago:PsychologicalFeature100023100 schema:Product yago:Concept105835747 yago:Idea105833840 yago:Kind105839024
rdfs:label
Martin T
rdfs:comment
The Martin T or TT was a training biplane produced in the United States in 1913 for military use. It was a conventional, three-bay biplane with unstaggered wings of equal span. The pilot and instructor sat in tandem, open cockpits with dual controls. Fixed, taildragger undercarriage was fitted, which could be exchanged for a single pontoon under the fuselage and wingtip floats. Early examples were delivered to the Army without engines, so the Army could power them with engines salvaged from other aircraft, but later TTs came equipped with Curtiss, Hall-Scott, or Sturtevant engines.
foaf:depiction
n14:A_Girl_of_Yesterday_1915.jpg
dcterms:subject
dbc:Aircraft_first_flown_in_1913 dbc:Martin_aircraft dbc:1910s_United_States_military_trainer_aircraft
dbo:wikiPageID
19859023
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID
1118553218
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Aileron dbr:Oscar_Brindley dbr:Aeronautical_Division,_U.S._Signal_Corps dbr:United_States_Army dbr:Curtiss_OX-2 dbc:Aircraft_first_flown_in_1913 dbr:Charles_Forster_Willard dbr:Aviation_Section,_U.S._Signal_Corps dbc:1910s_United_States_military_trainer_aircraft dbc:Martin_aircraft dbr:Martin_S dbr:Pancho_Villa dbr:Glenn_L._Martin_Company dbr:Air_Enthusiast
owl:sameAs
dbpedia-fa:مارتین_تی n9:4rEHo freebase:m.04q3d2d wikidata:Q6776712
dbp:spanFt
38
dbp:spanIn
8
dbp:spanM
11.79
dbp:variantsWithTheirOwnArticles
dbr:Martin_S
dbp:wingAreaSqft
379
dbp:wingAreaSqm
35.2
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbt:Infobox_aircraft_type dbt:Martin_aircraft dbt:Commons_category dbt:Cite_book dbt:Cite_magazine dbt:Aircraft_specs dbt:Aircontent dbt:Reflist
dbo:thumbnail
n14:A_Girl_of_Yesterday_1915.jpg?width=300
dbp:primeUnits%3F_
imp
dbp:firstFlight
1913
dbp:nationalOrigin
United States
dbp:primaryUser
dbr:United_States_Army
dbp:crew
two - pilot and instructor
dbp:designer
dbr:Charles_Forster_Willard
dbp:heightFt
9
dbp:heightIn
4
dbp:lengthFt
26
dbp:manufacturer
dbr:Glenn_L._Martin_Company
dbp:ref
Holcomb
dbp:type
Military trainer aircraft
dbo:abstract
The Martin T or TT was a training biplane produced in the United States in 1913 for military use. It was a conventional, three-bay biplane with unstaggered wings of equal span. The pilot and instructor sat in tandem, open cockpits with dual controls. Fixed, taildragger undercarriage was fitted, which could be exchanged for a single pontoon under the fuselage and wingtip floats. Early examples were delivered to the Army without engines, so the Army could power them with engines salvaged from other aircraft, but later TTs came equipped with Curtiss, Hall-Scott, or Sturtevant engines. In 1915, a Model TT was piloted by Oscar Brindley to win the Curtiss Marine Trophy for the longest flight within 10 consecutive hours in one day, covering 444 mi (710 km). The Model T was the basis for the Martin S Hydro seaplane, with a lengthened fuselage, a greater span, and upper wing ailerons. The first Martin T acquired, Signal Corps Number 31, was deployed to Texas in April 1915 as the Army massed around Brownsville in response to civil war in Mexico involving forces under Pancho Villa. On April 20, S.C. 31 became the first American military aircraft to be fired on by a hostile force. Although not hit by a machine gun firing at it from the Mexican side of the border, the returning pilot taxied it into a ditch and damaged it beyond repair.
dbp:ceilingFt
9500
dbp:ceilingM
2900
dbp:emptyWeightKg
600
dbp:emptyWeightLb
1320
dbp:eng1Hp
90
dbp:eng1Kw
67
dbp:eng1Name
dbr:Curtiss_OX-2
dbp:eng1Number
1
dbp:grossWeightKg
780
dbp:grossWeightLb
1720
dbp:heightM
2.85
dbp:lengthIn
4
dbp:lengthM
8.01
dbp:maxSpeedKmh
152
dbp:maxSpeedMph
96
dbp:numberBuilt
17
gold:hypernym
dbr:Biplane
prov:wasDerivedFrom
wikipedia-en:Martin_T?oldid=1118553218&ns=0
dbo:wikiPageLength
5142
dbo:numberBuilt
17
dbo:designer
dbr:Charles_Forster_Willard
dbo:manufacturer
dbr:Glenn_L._Martin_Company
dbo:successor
dbr:Martin_S
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf
wikipedia-en:Martin_T