Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Tom Swift and His Sky Racer

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Country
  
United States

Publisher
  
Grosset & Dunlap

Originally published
  
1911

Page count
  
200

Language
  
English

Publication date
  
1911

Author
  
Victor Appleton

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Original title
  
Tom Swift and His Sky Racer, or, The Speediest Flight on Record

Media type
  
Print (hardback & paperback)

Preceded by
  
Tom Swift in the Caves of Ice

Followed by
  
Tom Swift and His Electric Rifle

Genres
  
Young adult fiction, Adventure fiction

Similar
  
Victor Appleton books, Tom Swift Original Series books, Classical Studies books

Tom swift and his sky racer


Tom Swift and His Sky Racer, or, The Speediest Flight on Record, is Volume 9 in the original Tom Swift novel series published by Grosset & Dunlap.

Contents

Plot summary

A$10,000 prize lures Tom into competing at a local aviation meet at Eagle Park. Tom is determined to build the fastest plane around, but his plans mysteriously disappear, which means Tom must redesign his new airplane from the beginning. A side-plot through the story is Mr. Swift's failing health.

Inventions & Innovation

Tom's Sky Racer, known as the Humming-Bird, is a two-seater monoplane, like his previous monoplane the Butterfly. However, the Sky Racer, is smaller and faster — making it ideal for air racing. It uses a single gasoline, air-cooled engine, which can attain air speeds of well over 100 mph with a minimum thrust of 1000 lbs at 2000rpm. Tom also invented an automated stabilizing unit which allowed the Sky Racer to handle adverse weather conditions without loss of control. The Sky Racer's design was compared to that of the Blériot XI and the Antoinette VII, however its wings were patterned after that of the hummingbird, rather than standard rectangular wings.

References

Tom Swift and His Sky Racer Wikipedia