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Dolphin
Dolphin
Conceptually similar
Dolphin at Catalina Airport
Dolphin at Catalina Airport
Dolphin at Pier
Dolphin Assembly
Dolphin at Shore's Edge
Dolphin at Grand Central Airport, Glendale, CA
Dolphin Hull in Factory
B-24 Liberator is Prepped for Painting at Douglas-Tulsa Plant
Working on the A-26 Invader
B-17 Flying Fortress Restoration at Renton
Crosley Dolphin on Tarmac
Dolphin Wing Box on Truck
XB-19 Behemoth with Onlookers
Dolphin XRD-1, Tail Number 1,000
B-45 Tornado Production Line
Women Covering the Douglas World Cruiser Fuselage
V-2 Rocket in Front of WAC Corporal (RTV-G-1) Gantry
XTBD-1 Devastator Wood Mock Up
B-29s at Tinker AFB Modification Center
Proud "Rosies" Prepare the 2000th C-47 Skytrain for its Rollout
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Dolphin at Catalina Airport
The success of the Dolphin, a military amphibian, helped Douglas survive the Great Depression. It began as the twin-engine Sinbad, intended to be a luxury air yacht. It was a high-wing monoplane, with its engines mounted above the wing. Its six to eight passengers looked out picture windows, and their baggage was stored in a 30-cubic-foot area. Sinbad had no market during the luxury-deprived era. However, 59 of the next version, the Dolphin, were built between 1931 and 1934. The Dolphin retracted its landing gear for water landings and was adapted to meet customer requirements, both military and civilian. It evolved into 17 variants. among the first purchasers were the Wilmington - Calantina Airline and Standard Oil of New Jersey. The U.S. Army, Navy and Coast Guard bought the Dolphin in quantities. Some military Dolphin remained in service until World War II. The wealthy Vanderbilt family bought two. One, called Rover, was sold to William Boeing, who took delivery of his Dolphin in 1934, just before he left the company he founded. Still flying in 1977 it was the last known survivor of the Dolphin series.
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Unique identifier
BI2134
Boeing ID
sm3871
Type
Image
Size
5996px × 4662px 26MB
License type
RM
Keywords
1930s
adults
airplanes
day
ground crews
ground shots
historic production status
interiors
maintenance
male
military
military livery
monoplanes
occupations and work
patrol
photos
propeller planes
right front views
seaplanes
several/groups
stairs, lifts and ladders
sunshine
tarmac
text
three-quarter length views
vintage / retro
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