Curtiss JN-4 "Jenny"
Nicknamed "The Jenny," the Curtiss JN-4 has been USA's most famous World War I airplane. Assembled at the Buffalo (New-York) factory, it was combining the best features of the Curtiss "J" and Curtiss "N" models but its performance remained poor and it was assigned the trainer role. Many American pilots learned to fly in the JN-4.
The Canadian version was the JN-4 (Can), also known as the "Canuck", and was built with a control stick instead of the Deperdussin control wheel used in the regular JN-4 model, as well as usually having a somewhat more rounded rudder outline that the American version.
A seaplane version was built for the US Navy which was so modified that it was essentially a different airframe. This was designated the N-9.
When America entered into World War I on April 6, 1917, the Signal Corps began ordering large quantities of JN-4's, and when production ended after the Armistice, 6,813 aircraft had been delivered, the majority as JN-4D's.
The final version of the aircraft was the JN-6. In U.S. Army Air Service usage the JN-4's and JN-6s were configured to the JNS ("S" for "standardized") model.
Most Jennies were unarmed, although some had machine guns and bomb racks for advanced training. None saw active service. After World War I, hundreds were sold on the civilian market, one to Charles Lindbergh as his first aircraft. The plane's slow speed and stability made it ideal for stunt flying and aerobatic displays. Some were still flying into the 1930's.
— — — = = — — —
This text stays momentarily aircraftube.com©´s property, before its full or partial integration to Wikipedia.