Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Kinner Envoy

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First flight
  
1934

Designer
  
Max B. Harlow

Kinner Envoy httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Manufacturer
  
Kinner Airplane & Motor Corporation

The Kinner C-7 Envoy was a 1930s American four-seat cabin monoplane built by Kinner Airplane & Motor Corporation.

Contents

Design and development

The Envoy was a four-seat version of the Sportwing. It had low wings fitted with wire bracing from fuselage points just below the cabin windows. The fixed tailwheel undercarriage was fitted with streamlined spats. The low-set tailplane was braced by wires from the middle of the fin.

Four civil examples were completed from 1934. These were fitted with a 300 h.p. Kinner C-7 engine and were sold to civil pilot owners. . The civil aircraft were followed in 1936 by three aircraft for the United States Navy (USN) for use in communications work and designated XRK-1. The USN machines served until the early years of World War II. The Imperial Japanese Navy evaluated a single example as the LXK.

When they were delivered the USN examples were fitted with a 340 h.p. Kinner R-1044-2 engine, but one example used for VIP transport was later fitted with a 400 h.p. Pratt & Whitney R-985-38 radial engine.

The C-7 was the last of Kinner's production models.

Operators

 United States
  • United States Navy
  • Specifications (XRK-1)

    Sources : Swanborough, 1990, p. 502 and Aerofiles

    General characteristics

  • Crew: 1
  • Capacity: 4
  • Length: 28 ft 7 in ( m)
  • Wingspan: 39 ft 9 in ( m)
  • Empty weight: 2550 lb ( kg)
  • Gross weight: 4000 lb ( kg)
  • Powerplant: 1 × Kinner R-1044-2, 340 hp (254 kW)
  • Performance

  • Maximum speed: 171 mph ( km/h)
  • Cruise speed: 150 mph ( km/h)
  • Range: 700 miles ( km)
  • References

    Kinner Envoy Wikipedia