Kinner Airplane & Motor Corporation
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Industry | Aerospace |
---|---|
Founders | Bert Kinner |
Defunct | 1937 |
Fate | Bankrupt in 1937 |
Successor | O.W. Timm Aircraft Company |
Key people | Max B. Harlow |
Kinner Airplane & Motor Corp was an airplane and engine manufacturer, founded in Glendale, California, United States by Bert Kinner in the mid-1920s. Kinner's chief engineer was Max B. Harlow who later founded the Harlow Aircraft Company.[1] It went bankrupt in 1937, and the aircraft rights were sold to O.W. Timm Aircraft Company. The engine department was rearranged as Kinner Motor Inc in 1938, but collapsed in 1946. Kinner became the West Coast's largest producer of aircraft engines in 1941.[2]
Products[]
Aircraft[]
Model name | First flight | Number built | Type |
---|---|---|---|
Kinner Airster | 1920 | Single engine biplane | |
Kinner Sportster | 1932 | Single engine sport monoplane | |
Kinner Sportwing | 1933 | Single engine sport monoplane | |
Kinner Playboy | 1933 | 13 | Single engine sport monoplane |
Kinner Envoy | 1934 | 8 | Single engine cabin monoplane |
Engines[]
(in chronological order)
- Kinner K-5
- 100 hp (75 kW) radial engine
- Kinner B-5
- 125 hp (93 kW) radial engine
- Kinner R-5
- 160 hp (119 kW) radial engine
- Kinner C-5
- 245 hp (183 kW) radial engine, military designation R-720.
- 340 hp (254 kW) radial engine, military designation R-1045-2.
References[]
External links[]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kinner Airplane & Motor Corporation. |
- Aerofiles
- Enthusiasts' page
- Vintage engines
- "Wings Of Airplane Fold Up In Three Minutes" Kinner K-5 Sportster with optional wing fold, Popular Mechanics, March 1934
- "Air Riddles and The Answers" Kinner Courier, Popular Mechanics, February 1930 page 277
Categories:
- Defunct aircraft manufacturers of the United States
- Defunct aircraft engine manufacturers of the United States
- Companies based in Glendale, California