Flying boat
A flying boat is a aircraft that is designed to take off and land on water. It is a seaplane which uses its fuselage as a floating hull.
Curtiss Flying Boat "NC-3" taxis on water before takeoff, 1919
The flying boat NC-4 was the first airplane to fly across the Atlantic Ocean in 1919. In the 1920s and 1930s, flying boats made it possible to have regular air transport between the U.S and Europe, opening up new air travel routes to South America, Africa, and Asia. Where land-based aircraft lacked the range to travel great distances and required airfields to land, flying boats could stop at small island, river, lake or coastal stations to refuel and resupply. The Pan Am Clipper planes brought exotic destinations like the Far East in reach of air travelers and came to represent the romance of flight. BOAC and Imperial Airways provided flying boat passenger and mail transport links between Britain and South Africa, Australia and New Zealand using aircraft such as the Short Empire and the Short S.8 Calcutta.
The military value of flying boats was quickly recognized, and they were utilized by various nations in tasks from anti-submarine patrol to maritime search and rescue. Aircraft such as the PBY Catalina and Short Sunderland recovered downed airmen and operated as scout aircraft over the vast distances of the Pacific Theater and Battle of the Atlantic during World War II. The largest flying boat of the war was the Blohm und Voss Bv 238 which was also the heaviest plane to fly during WW2.
The Hughes H-4 Hercules in development in the U.S. during the war was even larger than the Bv238, but it did not fly until 1947. Largely considered the pinnacle of flying boat design, the "Spruce Goose", as the H-4 was nicknamed, was the largest flying boat ever to fly. That single 1947 flight of the 'Flying Lumberyard' was to be its last however, a victim of post-war cutbacks and the disappearance of its intended mission as a transatlantic tranport. Indeed it would have been able to carry 750 troops or two Sherman tanks to Europe while remaining immune to U-boat attack.
The demise of the H-4 was a signal that the age of the flying boats was largely at an end. Several factors contributed to the decline of flying boats. As the speed and range of land-based aircraft increased, the need for flying boats diminished. Their design compromised aerodynamic efficiency and speed to accomplish the feat of waterborne takeoff and landing. Competing with new civilian jet aircraft like the De Havilland Comet and Boeing 707 was impossible. Helicopters overtook the flying boats in their air rescue role. The land-based P-3 Orion and carrier-based S-3 Viking became the US Navy's fixed-wing anti-submarine patrol aircraft.
The shape of the 'Spruce Goose' had a been a harbinger of the shape of larger aircraft yet to come, and the type also contributed much to the designs of later ekranoplans. However, true flying boats have largely been replaced by seaplanes and amphibian aircraft. The Beriev Be-200 twin-jet amphibious aircraft is one of the closest 'living' descendents of the flying-boats of old, a fate it shares with the larger amphibious planes used for fighting forest fires.
See also: Saunders-Roe Princess, List of flying boats and seaplanes, Seaplane
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