Industry | Aerospace |
---|---|
Fate | Operations shut down |
Predecessor |
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Founded | 1943 |
Defunct | 1996 |
Headquarters | San Diego, California , |
Parent |
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Subsidiaries | Consairway |
Convair, previously Consolidated Vultee, was an American aircraft-manufacturing company that later expanded into rockets and spacecraft. The company was formed in 1943 by the merger of Consolidated Aircraft and Vultee Aircraft. In 1953, it was purchased by General Dynamics, and operated as their Convair Division for most of its corporate history.
Convair is best known for its military aircraft; it produced aircraft such as the Convair B-36 Peacemaker and Convair B-58 Hustler strategic bombers, and the Convair F-102 Delta Dagger and Convair F-106 Delta Dart interceptors. It also manufactured the first Atlas rockets, including the rockets that were used for the crewed orbital flights of Project Mercury. The company's subsequent Atlas-Centaur design continued this success and derivatives of the design remain in use as of 2023.
The company also entered the jet airliner business with its Convair 880 and Convair 990 designs. These were smaller than contemporary aircraft like the Boeing 707 and Douglas DC-8, but somewhat faster than both. This combination of features failed to find a profitable niche and the company exited the airliner design business. However, the manufacturing capability built up for these projects proved very profitable and the company became a major subcontractor for airliner fuselages.
In 1994, most of the company's divisions were sold by General Dynamics to McDonnell Douglas and Lockheed, with the remaining components deactivated in 1996.[1]
Consolidated produced important aircraft in the early years of World War II, especially the B-24 Liberator heavy bomber and the PBY Catalina seaplane for the U.S. armed forces and their allies. The Catalina remained in production through May 1945, and more than 4,000 were built. What was soon called "Convair" (first unofficially, and then officially), was created in 1943 by the merger of the Consolidated Aircraft Company and the Vultee Aircraft Company. This merger produced a large airplane company, ranked fourth among United States corporations by value of wartime production contracts, higher than the giants Douglas Aircraft, Boeing, and Lockheed.[2] Convair always had most of its research, design, and manufacturing operations in San Diego County in Southern California, though surrounding counties participated as well, mostly as contractors to Convair.
In March 1953, all of the Convair company was bought by the General Dynamics Corporation, a conglomerate of military and high-technology companies, and it became officially the Convair Division within General Dynamics.[3]
After the beginning of the Jet Age[citation needed] of military fighters and bombers, Convair was a pioneer of the delta-winged aircraft design, along with the French Dassault aircraft company, which designed and built the Mirage fighter planes.
One of Convair's most famous products was the ten-engined Convair B-36 strategic bomber, burning four turbojets and turning six pusher propellers driven by Pratt & Whitney R-4360 Wasp Major radial piston engines. The Convair B-36 was the largest landbased piston engined bomber in the world. The Atlas missile, the F-102 Delta Dagger and F-106 Delta Dart delta-winged interceptors, and the delta-winged B-58 Hustler supersonic intercontinental nuclear bomber were all Convair products. For a period of time in the 1960s, Convair manufactured its own line of jet commercial airliners, the Convair 880 and Convair 990 Coronado, but this did not turn out to be profitable. However, Convair found that it was profitable to be an aviation subcontractor and manufacture large subsections of airliners — such as fuselages — for the larger airliner companies, McDonnell Douglas, Boeing, and Lockheed.
In the 1950s, Convair shifted money and effort to its missile and rocket projects, producing the Terrier missile ship-launched surface-to-air system for the U.S. Navy during the 1960s and 1970s. Convair's Atlas rocket, originally proposed in 1945 with a unique pressurized cylinder airframe, was revived in the 1950's as an ICBM for the United States Air Force using V-2 technology motors in response to the Soviet missile threat.[4] It was first launched in 1957 but its use as an ICBM was soon replaced in 1962 by the room-temperature liquid-fueled Titan II missile, and later by the solid-fueled Minuteman missile. The Atlas rocket transitioned into a civilian launch vehicle and was used for the first orbital crewed U.S. space flights during Project Mercury in 1962 and 1963.
The Atlas rocket became a very reliable booster for launching of satellites and continued to evolve, remaining in use into the 21st century, when combined with the Centaur upper stage to form the Atlas-Centaur launch vehicle for launching geosynchronous communication satellites and space probes. The Centaur rocket was also designed, developed, and produced by Convair, and it was the first widely used outer space rocket to use the all-cryogenic fuel-oxidizer combination of liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen. The use of this liquid hydrogen – liquid oxygen combination in the Centaur was an important direct precursor to the use of the same fuel-oxidizer combination in the Saturn S-II second stage and the Saturn S-IVB third stage of the gigantic Saturn V Moon rocket of the Apollo program. The S-IVB had earlier also been used as the second stage of the smaller Saturn IB rocket, such as the one used to launch Apollo 7. The Centaur upper stage was first designed and developed for launching the Surveyor lunar landers, beginning in 1966, to augment the delta-V of the Atlas rockets and give them enough payload capability to deliver the required mass of the Surveyors to the Moon.
More than 100 Convair-produced Atlas-Centaur rockets (including those with their successor designations) were used to successfully launch over 100 satellites, and among their many other outer-space missions, they launched the Pioneer 10 and Pioneer 11 space probes, the first two to be launched on trajectories that carried them out of the Solar System.
In addition to aircraft, missiles, and space vehicles, Convair developed the large Charactron vacuum tubes, a form of cathode-ray tube (CRT) computer display with a shaped mask to form characters,[5] and to give an example of a minor product, the CORDIC algorithms, which is widely used today to calculate trigonometric functions in calculators, field-programmable gate arrays, and other small electronic systems.
General Dynamics announced the sale of the Missile Systems Division segment of Convair to Hughes Aircraft Company in May 1992[6] and the Space Systems Division segment to Martin Marietta in 1994.[7] In July 1994, General Dynamics and McDonnell Douglas mutually agreed to terminate Convair's contract to provide fuselages for the 300-seat MD-11 airliner.[8] Manufacturing responsibility was to be transferred to McDonnell Douglas, which said it would not preserve the operation in San Diego. General Dynamics had tried for two years to sell the Aircraft structures segment of Convair unit, but the effort ultimately failed.
The termination of the contract meant the end of the Convair Division and of General Dynamics' presence in San Diego, as well as the city's long aircraft-building tradition. The defense contractor once employed 18,000 people there, but after selling its divisions, that number is now zero. General Dynamics closed its complex in Kearny Mesa, demolishing the facility between 1994 and 1996. Homes and offices now occupy the site. The Lindbergh Field plant that produced B-24s during World War II was also demolished and the consolidated rental car facility now occupies this space.
The Fort Worth, Texas factory, constructed to build the B-24s, and its associated engineering locations and laboratories — all previously used to make hundreds of Consolidated B-24s, General Dynamics F-111 Aardvark fighter-bombers and General Dynamics F-16 Fighting Falcons, along with dozens of smaller projects — were sold, along with all intellectual property and the legal rights to the products designed and built within, to the Lockheed Corporation.[9] In 1996, General Dynamics deactivated all of the remaining legal entities of the Convair Division.
Model name | First flight | Number built | Type |
---|---|---|---|
Vultee XA-41 | 1944 | 1 | Prototype single-engine (28-cyl. radial) ground attack aircraft |
Consolidated Vultee XP-81 | 1945 | 2 | Prototype combined turboprop/turbojet engine escort fighter |
Convair 106 Skycoach | 1946 | 1 | Prototype single-engine (6-cyl. opposed-piston) general aviation aircraft |
Stinson 108 | 1944 | 5,135 | Single-engine (4-cyl. opposed-piston) general aviation aircraft |
Convair Model 110 | 1946 | 1 | Prototype twin-engine (18-cyl. radial) airliner |
Convair Model 111 | 1940s | 1 | Prototype single-engine utility airplane |
Convair Model 116 | 1946 | 1 | Roadable aircraft |
Convair B-36 | 1946 | 384 | Combined piston/jet engine strategic bomber |
Convair CV-240 | 1947 | Twin-engine (18-cyl. radial) airliner | |
Convair XB-46 | 1947 | 1 | Prototype four jet-engine medium bomber |
Convair Model 118 | 1947 | 2 | Roadable aircraft |
Convair XC-99 | 1947 | 1 | Prototype transport aircraft |
Convair XF-92 | 1948 | 1 | Experimental single jet engine interceptor aircraft |
Convair C-131 Samaritan | 1949 | 512 | Twin-engine (18-cyl. radial) cargo aircraft |
Convair CV-340 | 1951 | Twin-engine (radial) airliner | |
Convair YB-60 | 1952 | 1 | Prototype eight-engine jet strategic bomber |
Convair F2Y Sea Dart | 1953 | 5 | Twin jet-engine fighter seaplane |
Convair F-102 Delta Dagger | 1953 | 1,000 | Single jet-engine interceptor |
Convair R3Y Tradewind | 1954 | 13 | Four turboprop-engine transport flying boat |
Convair NC-131H TIFS | 1970 | 1 | In-Flight Simulation testbed aircraft |
Convair NB-36H | 1955 | 1 | Experimental nuclear powered bomber |
Convair XFY Pogo | 1954 | 1 | Experimental vertical takeoff and landing fighter |
Convair CV-440 Metropolitan | 1955 | Twin-engine (radial) airliner | |
Convair B-58 Hustler | 1956 | 116 | Four jet-engine strategic bomber |
Convair F-106 Delta Dart | 1956 | 342 | Single jet-engine interceptor |
Convair 880 | 1959 | 65 | Four jet-engine airliner |
Convair 990 Coronado | 1961 | 37 | Four jet-engine airliner |
Convair Model 48 Charger | 1964 | 1 | Prototype twin turboprop-engine light attack aircraft |
Convair CV-600 | 1965 | Twin turboprop-engine airliner | |
Convair CV-640 | 1965 | Twin turboprop-engine airliner | |
Convair XB-53 | N/A | 0 | Unbuilt triple jet-engine medium bomber |
Convair X-6 | N/A | 0 | Unbuilt experimental nuclear powered aircraft |
Convair XP6Y | N/A | 0 | Unbuilt combined piston/jet engine anti-submarine flying boat |
Convair Kingfish | N/A | 0 | Unbuilt twin jet-engine reconnaissance aircraft |
Convair Model 23 | N/A | 0 | Unbuilt twin jet-engine seaplane bomber |
Convair Model 58-9 | N/A | 0 | Unbuilt supersonic transport aircraft |
Convair Model 49 | N/A | 0 | Unbuilt three turboprop-engine coleopter |
Convair 660 | N/A | 0 | Unbuilt twin jet-engine airliner[17] |
Convair Model 200 | N/A | 0 | Unbuilt single jet-engine VTOL fighter aircraft |
Convair Heritage: History of General Dynamics/Consolidated/Convair |
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Convair.
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