PropertyValue
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Savoia-Marchetti SM.75
rdfs:comment
  • The Savoia-Marchetti SM.75 Marsupiale (Marsupial) was an Italian passenger and military transport aircraft of the 1930s and 1940s. It was a low-wing, trimotor monoplane of mixed metal and wood construction with a retractable tailwheel undercarriage. It was the last of a line of transport aeroplanes that Alessandro Marchetti began building in the early 1930s. The SM.75 was fast, robust, capable of long-range flight and could carry up to 24 passengers for 1,000 miles.
owl:sameAs
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:military/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
eng1 note
  • **or 3 x 1,000 hp Piaggio P.XI R.C.40 14-cyl radial engines
ceiling ft
  • 22960
time to altitude
  • 1182.0
range miles
  • 1416
eng1 type
  • 9
empty weight note
  • **
length in
  • 10.187500
Introduced
  • 1938
ceiling note
  • **On two engines service ceiling was **With Piaggio engines
primary user
  • Italy
Type
  • Civil airliner & military transport
max speed note
  • at
  • **On two engines maximum speed was **With Piaggio engines
wing area sqft
  • 1276.100000
Height in
  • 8.750000
gross weight note
  • **
climb rate ms
  • 3.700000
Manufacturer
empty weight lb
  • 20900
Capacity
  • 24
max speed mph
  • 229
cruise speed note
  • **
length ft
  • 70
Height ft
  • 16
First Flight
  • 1937
more users
  • Hungary
span ft
  • 97
range note
  • maximum **With Piaggio engines
cruise speed mph
  • 202
gross weight lb
  • 31900
span in
  • 5
prime units?
  • met
Crew
  • 4
Number Built
  • 95
eng1 name
eng1 hp
  • 750
Designer
ref
  • Italian Civil and Military aircraft 1930-1945
eng1 number
  • 3
abstract
  • The Savoia-Marchetti SM.75 Marsupiale (Marsupial) was an Italian passenger and military transport aircraft of the 1930s and 1940s. It was a low-wing, trimotor monoplane of mixed metal and wood construction with a retractable tailwheel undercarriage. It was the last of a line of transport aeroplanes that Alessandro Marchetti began building in the early 1930s. The SM.75 was fast, robust, capable of long-range flight and could carry up to 24 passengers for 1,000 miles.
is Developed From of