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Douglas Observation Bi-Planes
Douglas Observation Bi-Planes
Conceptually similar
Douglas O-2B Observation Biplane on Ground
Douglas O-8 Observation Biplane on Ground
Douglas O-29 Observation Biplane on Ground
Douglas O-25 Observation Biplane on Ground
Douglas O-2E Observation Biplane on Ground
Douglas O-24 Observation Biplane on Ground
Douglas O-29 Biplane
Douglas O-2 Observation Biplane on Ground
Douglas O-22 Observation Biplane on Ground
Douglas O-22 Observation Biplane on Ground
Douglas O-7 Observation Biplane
Douglas O-2J on Ground
Douglas O-2D on the Ground
Douglas O-2 Observation Biplane Framework
Mexican O-2M on Ground
Douglas O-25B on Tarmac
Douglas O-2C Observation Plane
Douglas Observation Biplane, the O-38A
Douglas O-2 Flight Line in Field
O-22 Observation Plane Nose
Similar tones
View images with similar tones
Douglas O-2B Observation Biplane on Ground
Douglas built its first experimental observation aircraft in 1923 and delivered 45 production-version O-2s in 1924. On February 16, 1925, a contract was signed with the Army for 75 more, the largest single contract the company had received up to that time. More than 250 O-2s were built in 11 versions over a five-year period. These models were so different from one another that is surprising the Army retained the O-2 designation. What all the O-2s had in common were welded steel-tube fuselages, fabric-covered wooden wings and the bulky but durable World War I Liberty engine. Like any aircraft produced in large numbers over a span of years, later O-2 variants incorporated many design improvements. Some O-2s had more streamlined fuselages and two-bladed metal propellers instead of the previous wooden ones. Others were modified as basic trainers by the addition of flight controls and instruments in the rear cockpit. The Douglas O series of observation biplanes were among the most important American military aircraft produced during the 1920s and early 1930s. They saw service with the U.S. Army, Navy, Marine Corps, National Guard units and even the U.S. Coast Guard. Between 1923 and 1936, Douglas produced a total of 879 biplanes in O series including 770 for the U.S. military services, 108 to foreign air forces and one as a civil aircraft.
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Unique identifier
BI2364
Boeing ID
sm660
Size
6091px × 4278px 24MB
License type
RM
Keywords
1920s
airplanes
biplanes
copy space
day
exteriors
full body views
ground shots
head on views
historic production status
military
military livery
military observation aircraft
nobody
photos
propeller planes
symmetry
unpaved ground
vintage / retro
Restrictions
Manage crops
NAME
RATIO
Square
1 : 1
Portrait
2 : 3
Landscape
3 : 2