Sikorsky Product History

Sikorsky S-29-A

Background

Igor Sikorsky left Russia in February 1918 in the midst of the Russian Revolution, leaving behind family and credentials as a General of the Russian Army. He spent a short period of time in Paris designing a bomber called the I.S 27 “Atlas” for the French Air Service. When that work was discontinued following the Armistice ending World War I, he immigrated to the United States.  America inspired him with its progressively developing nature and who’s wide open geographic expanses that offered a potential market for air travel. On March 30, 1919, at just under 30 years of age, with a few hundred dollars and speaking very little English, Igor Sikorsky arrived in New York.

Igor Sikorsky in New York City shortly after his arrival in America on March 30, 1919.
Igor Sikorsky in New York City shortly after his arrival in America on March 30, 1919.

S-28

Despite his wide-spread reputation and success within the aviation industry in Europe, Igor Sikorsky faced many challenges getting established in the United States. American military aviation was in a post-war slump, and commercial aviation was still in its infancy. Igor Sikorsky’s limited English made it difficult for him to pitch technical plans to potential investors. Through a cohort of fellow Russian emigrants and friends, he fortunately found employment in 1919 as chief engineer for Hannevig Aircraft Corp. in New York (renamed Hannevig-Sikorsky Aircraft Company upon his joining), where plans were being made for a new airplane capable of transporting a payload of 12,000 lbs at 90 miles per hour – the S-28. Unfortunately, the company was dissolved before manufacturing could begin. Igor Sikorsky then worked for a short time at McCook Field in Dayton, Ohio, designing a bomber for the U.S. Army Air Service, but this project too was unfortunately discontinued for lack of funding.

The S-28 was a civil variant of the Ilya Muromets family. This sketch by Igor Sikorsky is dated April 22, 1919, about three weeks after his arrival in America.
The S-28 was a civil variant of the Ilya Muromets family. This sketch by Igor Sikorsky is dated April 22, 1919, about three weeks after his arrival in America.

S-29-A

Nearly out of funds himself, Igor Sikorsky returned to New York, still optimistic with a firm belief in a potential future market of long-range commercial air transport. He realized that reliance on military contracts was risky and with minimal opportunities in the immediate postwar years, he focused his ventures once again on designing freight and passenger aeroplanes. In February 1920, Igor Sikorsky formed a partnership with Ivan Prokofieff and Joseph Michael, but this too was unfortunately short lived and dissolved due to insufficient financial backing.

Requiring a source of income, Igor began teaching night courses in mathematics and astronomy at the Russian Collegiate Institute upon encouragement from fellow Russian immigrants. Although he had no professional training as a teacher, he was fondly respected by his students. He became involved in the Nauka (Science) Society, through which he met not only his future wife Elizabeth Semion, but also many fellow science and aviation enthusiasts.

On March 5, 1923, Sikorsky Aero Engineering Corporation was officially established, with financial backing and officers including (in addition to Igor Sikorsky himself): W. A. Barry, J. V. Kravchenko, V. V. Utgoff, N. P. Stookalo, S. V. Rachmaninoff, and L. A. Shoumatoff. Furthermore, a team, many of whom were similarly Russian immigrants, and had training as naval officers, pilots, engineers, and mechanics, provided additional financial contributions and made up a large part of the original work force. Michael and Serge Gluhareff, Michael Buivid, Robert Labensky, Nicholas Solovioff, Nicholas Glad, D. D. Viner, Victor Koodroff, and Boris Sergievsky were among many of the loyal, often going without paychecks in the early days, motivated by their enthusiasm, confidence, and trust in Igor’s vision. It was with the support and dedication of this team, that Igor Sikorsky’s S-29A, and his establishment within the American aviation industry, came to fruition.

Some of the first "volunteers" of the Sikorsky Aero Engineering Corporation: (from left to right) unidentified, D. D. "Jimmy" Viner, W. Skorohodoff, A. Samilkin, Baron Soloviev, A. Kotilevtseff, I. Popov, J. Islamoff, Igor Sikorsky, Bob Labensky, V. Ivanoff, Nick Glad, unidentified, A. Krapish, and I. Fursoff.
Some of the first “volunteers” of the Sikorsky Aero Engineering Corporation: (pictured rom left to right) unidentified, D. D. “Jimmy” Viner, W. Skorohodoff, A. Samilkin, Baron Soloviev, A. Kotilevtseff, I. Popov, J. Islamoff, Igor Sikorsky, Bob Labensky, V. Ivanoff, Nick Glad, unidentified, A. Krapish, and I. Fursoff.

The S-29-A was the first of Igor Sikorsky’s aircraft that was manufactured in the United States. The designation 29 represented the order in succession of Sikorsky aircraft designs, and the A signified its development in America. The earliest construction occurred at “Plant No. 1”, a crude “factory” established on the farm of one of Igor Sikorsky’s friends, Victor Utgoff, near Roosevelt, Long Island, NY. A small wooden shed and a chicken house were the only shelter for indoor construction, otherwise all assembly was performed outdoors. Not only were aircraft parts fabricated, but also unique tools for construction, handmade to serve a particular function. Budget was so constrained, much of the airframe structure was built from scrap metal scavenged from junkyards, and “[rivets] were later retrieved from the [stomachs of] chickens who then graced the dinner table each Saturday night”. The workforce often consisted of many volunteers, ranging from local onlookers curious about the project, to former Russian officers and veterans with extensive engineering education and talent who had similarly fled during the Bolshevik Revolution.

The S-29-A was assembled at the Utgoff Farm in the spring of 1923.

As the winter of 1923 approached, Igor Sikorsky rented hangar space at the nearby Roosevelt Field near Westbury Long Island (ten miles north of the Utgoff farm) to complete assembly of the S-29-A. This move was made possible by a generous gift in the amount of $5,000 from Russian composer Sergei Rachmaninoff. Construction continued on the S-29-A throughout the winter, until finally in May 1924, it was completed.

The great composer Sergei Rachmaninoff stands in front of the S-29-A, with Baron Soloviev to the left and Igor Sikorsky to the right.

First flight of the S-29-A occurred on May 4, 1924. Unfortunately, the aircraft was underpowered with its two 300-horsepower Hispano Suiza engines (Igor suspected this might be the case, but wanted to allow his eager eight most dedicated workers to partake in the first flight). The aircraft only reached an altitude of 100 ft, and soon after crash landed in a nearby golf course after one engine failed. No personnel were injured, but the aircraft sustained substantial damage, and had to be carried back to Roosevelt Field for repairs.

After extensive negotiating with the stockholders (in a meeting in which Igor Sikorsky locked the doors and forbid anyone from leaving until funds had been pledged), the team was granted the necessary $2,500 to upgrade the engines to two 400-horsepower Liberty engines. On September 25, 1924, the S-29-A made its first successful flight (and with only three additional men on-board). In the following days, many more crew and stockholders were treated to flights aboard the S-29-A. So successful was Igor’s long-awaited first American design, a New York newspaper described it as “a triumph of Russian ingenuity and perseverance”.

Side view of the S-29-A.

To help establish his name and reputation within the U.S. industry, Igor Sikorsky performed demonstration flights of the S-29-A for the public, military, and press. By the end of 1924, the plane had flown over 420 passengers across a series of 45 flights (totaling just under 16 hours cumulatively). One such flight was to conduct performance tests, led by New York University Aeronautics professor Alexander Klemin and a group of five students, to study cruise performance with only one engine, the results of which ended up being published in Aviation magazine.

The following year, the S-29-A made further demonstration flights and its first contracted cargo jobs, which helped bring Sikorsky Aero Engineering Corporation its the first real revenue. The S-29-A performed one flight transporting two baby grand pianos from New York to Washington DC (one delivered to the wife of President Herbert Hoover and the other to a department store). World War I ace pilot Harold Hartney proposed establishing a commercial airline connecting the major metropolitan cities. The aircraft was even used for airborne photography. The most notorious photo flight involved Igor’s nephew Jimmy Viner, sitting strapped out on a wing tip, to snap pictures of New York City.

View of from the S-29-A of downtown New York City with West Street in the foreground.

Igor Sikorsky piloted the S-29-A more than two hundred times, although its very successful career wasn’t without risk or incident. One evening, on a return flight from Staten Island, dusk fell upon the crew sooner than expected. The aircraft was not equipped for night flight, and Roosevelt field was not illuminated (ground crew failed to light a signal flare), resulting in the aircraft overshooting the field. Realizing this, Igor decided to land the aircraft. Despite one rough bump on the descent, the aircraft was safely landed. Upon inspection, Igor discovered a tree branch protruding from one wing, indicating a likely near-miss of a tree. After that sobering experience, Igor Sikorsky placed the branch in his office, where it still resides to this day, as a symbol of fate.

The S-29-A along with the S-31

Despite the widespread success of the S-29-A, there was unfortunately not yet a market for large transport aircraft, and so the Sikorsky Aero Engineering Corporation received no contracts for the plane. In 1926, the S-29-A was sold for $11,000 to racing pilot Roscoe Turner, who went on to use the plane for advertising and charter flights. In 1928, it was sold to its final owner, Howard Hughes, who modified the plane to resemble a German Gotha bomber for the filming of the movie “Hell’s Angels”. For this, the S-29-A made its final flight, which concluded with a spectacular fiery crash.  

In February 1928, Roscoe Turner flew the S-29-A to California, where Howard Hughes bought the aircraft. It was cosmetically changed to look like a World War I German Gotha bomber and played a major role in Hughes’ aviation epic, Hells Angels. It was deliberately crashed for the film in March 1929.

Although no contracts were awarded for the S-29-A, it’s successful reputation as a prototype commercial aircraft, combined with the enacting of the Contract Air Mail Act (or Kelly Act) in February 1925, for the Post Office Department to award airmail service contracts to private airlines, provided a  promising opportunity for investment and security within the commercial aviation industry.

Design Details

An all metal sesquiplane, much of the airframe was assembled from repurposed scrapyard finds. The fuselage main structure was built out of angle irons from discarded bedsprings. Duralumin covered the fuselage and wings. But despite its cobbled build, the S-29-A was described as being “an attractive aircraft for its day, with straight lines and a trim, sturdy look”.

The S-29-A fuselage, shown under construction, was made from angle iron retrieved from hospital bedsteads at a local junkyard.

Engine

Two 300-horsepower Hispano Suiza engines were originally installed on the S-29-A. Although they were suspected to be inadequate, they were all that Igor Sikorsky could afford, purchased at $250 per engine from a war surplus store. Later, these powerplants were replaced by two 400-horsepower Liberty engines. The enginers were mounted from the lower wing, with the forward wooden propellers nearly in-line with the nose.

Landing Gear

The landing gear of the S-29-A was the conventional two forward wheels with an aft tail skid.

Cockpit

The cockpit of the S-29-A was open, with the pilot seated farther aft (closer to the tail than the nose).

Igor Sikorsky in the S-29-A cockpit. Because of the prevailing opinion at the time that a pilot should feel the wind, the S-29-A featured an open cockpit.

Furnishings

The 14-passenger cabin spanned from the front end of the fuselage to just aft of the wings and had large horizontal windows on either side.

The interior of the S-29-A. The cabin was large enough to fit 14 passengers, comfortably seated in wicker chairs.
The interior of the S-29-A. The cabin was large enough to fit 14 passengers, comfortably seated in wicker chairs.

General Arrangement Drawing

S-29-A general arrangement drawing signed by Igor Sikorsky.

General Characteristics and Performance 

Performance – Standard Day at Sea Level 
High Speed116 mph / 100.8 kts / 186.7 km/hr
Cruising Speed100 mph / 87 kts / 161 km/hr
Service Ceiling12,500 ft / 3,810 m

Weights 
Weight Empty7,775 lbs / 3,527 kg

General Data 
Crew Seating Capacity1 pilot
Seating Capacity14 passengers

Powerplant Ratings Standard Day at Sea Level 
Hispano Suiza300 hp / 223.7 kw
Liberty400 hp / 298.3 kw

Aircraft Dimensions 
Span, Upper Wing69 ft / 21 m
Span, Lower Wing62 ft 6 in / 19 m
Length Overall49 ft 10 in / 15.2 m
Height Overall13 ft 6 in / 4.1 m
Total Wing Area992 sq. ft / 92.2 sq. m
Loading per Horsepower15 lbs / 6.8 kg

Production History

No S-28 aircraft were ever produced.

One S-29-A was produced

by Dana Halline

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