Convair C-131 Samaritan
The Convair C-131 Samaritan is an American twin-engined military transport produced from 1954 to 1956 by Convair. It is the military version of the Convair CV-240 family of airliners.
Design and development
The design began life in a production requirement by American Airlines for a pressurized airliner to replace the classic Douglas DC-3. Convair's original design had two engines and 40 seats, and thus it was designated the CV-240. The first CV-240 flew on March 16, 1947, and production aircraft were first delivered to American on February 28, 1948. Seventy-five were delivered to American, with another fifty going to Western Airlines, Continental Airlines, Pan American Airways, KLM, Sabena, Swissair and Trans Australia Airlines.Operational history
The CV-240/340/440 series was used by the United States Air Force for medical evacuation and VIP transport and was designated as C-131 Samaritan. The first model Samaritan, the C-131A, was derived from the CV-240 model, and was delivered to the USAF in 1954.The earlier trainer model, designated the T-29, was also based on the Convair 240 and was used to instruct USAF navigators for all USAF aircraft and those USN Naval Flight Officers selected to fly land-based naval aircraft. First deliveries to the USAF were made in 1950 followed by large production quantities until early 1955. The USAF and the USN operated T-29s in separate units at separate locations until 1976. In 1974, the USAF T-29s with the 323d Flying Training Wing at Mather AFB, California began to be replaced by the Boeing 737-derived T-43. In 1975, the Navy retired all of its T-29s assigned to Training Squadron Twenty-Nine at NAS Corpus Christi, Texas, deactivated VT-29, and merged their advanced navigator training program for land-based NFOs with the Air Force's program at Mather AFB.
A planned bomber training version of the T-29 was never built. The CV-340 model was used for most C-131Ds.
In addition to T-29 variants, the United States Navy used the Samaritan, initially designated as the R4Y until 1962, at which point the naval aircraft were also redesignated as C-131s.
Nearly all of the C-131s left the active USAF inventory in the late 1970s, but the U.S. Coast Guard operated the aircraft until 1983, while the Air National Guard and U.S. Navy units operated additional C-131 airframes, primarily as Operational Support Aircraft for Air National Guard flying wings and as naval air station "station aircraft" until 1990. The C-131 was primarily replaced by the C-9 Nightingale in regular USAF service, with the Air National Guard replacing their OSA with C-130 Hercules aircraft and the Navy with C-12 Hurons.
In 1959, a C-131 was the first aircraft to be used as a reduced-gravity aircraft or 'vomit comet', for astronaut training as part of Project Mercury.
A Samaritan was the first aircraft used as a flying gunship testbed in mid-1963, in a program known as "Project Tailchaser". A C-131B was given a gunsight for the side window, but instead of guns it had cameras in the cargo area. Eventually the C-131 was ferried to Eglin AFB in Florida and a General Electric SUU-11A/A 7.62 mm Gatling-style Minigun was installed. Live ammunition was used and both over-water and overland tests were successful.
Accidents and incidents
On 17 December 1960, a C-131D Samaritan crashed at Munich in what is the largest loss of life in an accident in the Bavarian capital. Shortly after takeoff one engine failed and the pilot tried to get back to Riem in heavy fog over Munich. Due to the limited visibility the aircraft struck the tip of St. Paul's church close to the Theresienwiese, and crashed onto a streetcar, killing all 20 people on board the plane, and 32 on the tram.On 8 February 2019, a C-131 operating Conquest Air Cargo Flight 504 from Nassau to Miami Opa-Locka, FL lost power in both engines and ditched about 9 NM off the coast of Florida, breaking apart on touchdown. One of the two pilots on board was rescued and the other remained missing.
Variants
;C-131A;HC-131A
;MC-131A
;VC-131A
;C-131B
;JC-131B
;NC-131B
;VC-131B
;YC-131C
;C-131D
;VC-131D
;C-131E
;TC-131E
;C-131F
;RC-131F
;VC-131F
;C-131G
;EC-131G
;RC-131G
;VC-131G
;C-131H
;NC-131H
;R4Y-1
;R4Y-1Z
;R4Y-2
;R4Y-2Q
;R4Y-2S
;XT-29
;T-29A
;VT-29A
;T-29B
;NT-29B
;VT-29B
;T-29C
;AT-29C
;ET-29C
;VT-29C
;T-29D
;ET-29D
;VT-29D
;XT-29E
;YT-32
Operators
- Paraguayan Air Force operated one former USAF Convair C-131D
- United States Air Force operated T-29 and C-131 aircraft.
- United States Navy operated R4Y/C-131 and T-29 aircraft.
- United States Coast Guard operated R4Y/C-131 aircraft.
- NASA
Surviving aircraft
- 52-5794 – On display at the Pueblo Weisbrod Aircraft Museum in Pueblo, Colorado.
- 55-4757 – On display at the Minnesota Air National Guard Museum in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
- 53-7811 – Last registered to Tatonduk Outfitters Limited in Fairbanks, Alaska. This aircraft was previously on display at the Kelly Field Heritage Museum, Lackland AFB, Texas.
- 53-7819 - Active - in private ownership with Airborne Resources Inc, Midlothian TX.
- 53-7821 – On display at the Air Force Armament Museum, Eglin AFB, Florida.
- 54-2806 – On display at the Jimmy Doolittle Air & Space Museum, Travis AFB, California.
- 54-2808 – On display at the March Field Air Museum, March ARB, Riverside, California.
- 54-2810 – Stored at Burlington Air National Guard Base in Burlington, Vermont.
- 54-2822 – On display at the Aerospace Museum of California, former McClellan AFB, California.
- 55-0292 – On display at the South Dakota Air and Space Museum, Ellsworth AFB, South Dakota.
- 55-0293 – On display at the Selfridge Military Air Museum, Selfridge Air National Guard Base, Michigan.
- 55-0294 – On display at The Leonardo Salt Lake City, UT.
- 55-0295 – On display at the Air Mobility Command Museum, Dover AFB, Delaware.
- 55-0300 – On display at the Hill Aerospace Museum, Hill AFB, Utah.
- 55-0301 – Cockpit only with unknown owner in Kenosha, Wisconsin. This airframe was previously on display at the National Museum of the United States Air Force, but was scrapped before 2009.
- 140996 – In active service as N351FL. Flying nightly from Phoenix Sky Harbor International to California and back, as of January 2017 with GULF & CARIBBEAN CARGO INC.
- 141008 – In active service as N345GS. Flying frequently in the Bahamas and Florida region with CONQUEST AIR INC. This company operates 4 additional C-131F aircraft.
- 141013 – On display at the Yanks Air Museum in Chino, California.
- 141015 – On display at the National Museum of Naval Aviation, NAS Pensacola, Florida.
- 141017 – On display at the Pima Air & Space Museum in Tucson, Arizona.
- 141025 – In storage at the Pima Air & Space Museum in Tucson, Arizona.
- 53-7793 – On display at the National Museum of the United States Air Force in Dayton, Ohio.
- 49-1934 – On display at Sheppard AFB, Texas.
- 50-0190 – On display at the Strategic Air and Space Museum in Ashland, Nebraska.
- 51-7906 – On display at the Pima Air & Space Museum in Tucson, Arizona.
- 53-3489 – On display at the 12th Flying Training Wing area, Randolph AFB, Texas.
- 52-2275 - On display at the Dyess Air Force Base Linear Air Park, Abilene, Texas. This aircraft was originally delivered to the United States Air Force on October 26, 1954 serving as a navigation trainer at Harlingen Air Force Base, Harlingen, Texas, and then it was reassigned to Connally Air Force Base, Texas. It served at these two bases from March 1960 to October 1965, Then was transferred to the U.S. Navy. The aircraft was retired from U.S. Navy service in March 1975. SEE: ref: Pg. 199, "The History of Dyess Air Force Base - 1941 to the present", by Lt. Colonel George F. Larsen, USAF Schiffer Publishing Company,,4880 Lower Valley Road, Atglen, PA. 19310, printing date:2016.
Specifications (C-131B)