Bach Super Transport

Super Transport
Role Airliner
National origin United States
Manufacturer Bach Aircraft
Designer L. Morton Bach
Status Concept only
Developed from Bach Air Yacht

The Bach "Super Transport" was a design for a four-engined transport aircraft that was never built.[1]

Design and development

The Bach Aircraft Company was founded by L. Morton Bach in the early 1940s.[2] Following in the footsteps of Fokker with the Fokker F.VII Trimotor, and the metal Ford Trimotor, the Bach Air Yacht was developed as a commercial trimotor transport.[3] In 1928, Bach filed a patent for a four-engined design. The aircraft was similar to the trimotor as a metal-covered, strut-braced biplane, with conventional landing gear. It also featured semi-circular windows like the Stout 2-AT Pullman. The aircraft design featured an unusual modification of the trimotor arrangement with two nose-mounted engines stacked above each other with cockpit windows between them. The fuselage carried a double-decker seating arrangement. The Bach company was reorganized and dissolved during the Great Depression without any examples built.[4]

Specifications (Super Transport)

Data from Patent 79061

General characteristics

See also

Related development
Aircraft of comparable role, configuration and era

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bach Aircraft.
  1. "U.S. Patent 79061 for Super Transport". Retrieved 16 October 2013.
  2. "L. Morton Bach". Retrieved 16 October 2013.
  3. "The Bach Air Yacht". Flight. 9 August 1928.
  4. "U.S. Patent 79061 for Super Transport". Retrieved 16 October 2013.
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