| TW-5 | |
|---|---|
![]()  | |
| AT-1s | |
| Role | Trainer | 
| Manufacturer | Huff-Daland | 
| Primary users | United States Army Air Service United States Navy  | 
| Produced | 1923 | 
| Number built | 26 | 
The Huff-Daland Type XV Training Water-Cooled TW-5 was a biplane trainer designed by the Huff-Daland Aero Corporation in the early 1920s for the United States Army Air Service.
Design and development
It was a development of the TA-6 (which itself was a one-off redesigned TA-2 with a 220 hp Lawrance J-1 air-cooled engine) but powered by a 190 hp Wright-Hispano E2. In 1924, the letter-and-number system was revised, and the TW-5 became an Advanced Trainer AT-1. In 1927, Huff-Daland Aero Corporation became a division of Keystone Aircraft Corporation.
Operational history
Versions of the AT-1 were built for the United States Navy as training and observation aircraft.
Variants

HN-1
The
- TA-6 (Trainer, Air-cooled type 6)
 - Powered by the 200 hp Lawrance J-1 air-cooled engine, 1 built
 - TW-5 (Trainer, Water-cooled type 5)
 - Powered by the 150-hp (112-kW) Wright-Hispano I engine, 5 built.
 - AT-1
 - U.S. Army Advanced Trainer, 10 built.
 - AT-2
 - One aircraft tested in a number of single-seat and two-seat versions
 - HN-1
 - United States Navy version of the AT-1 powered by a 180hp Wright-Hispano E2 engine, 3 built.
 - HN-2
 - United States Navy version of the AT-1 powered by a 200hp Lawrance J-1, 3 built.
 - HO-1
 - United States Navy observation version of the HN-1 powered by a 180hp Wright-Hispano E2 engine with interchangeable wheel or float undercarriage, 3 built
 
Operators
Specifications (AT-1)
General characteristics
- Crew: 2
 - Length: 24 ft 7 in (7.5 m)
 - Wingspan: 31 ft 2 in (9.5 m)
 - Gross weight: 2,358 lb (1,070 kg)
 - Powerplant: 1 × Wright Hisso I V-8 water-cooled piston engine, 150 hp (110 kW)
 
Performance
- Maximum speed: 112 mph (180 km/h, 97 kn)
 
See also
Related development
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Huff-Daland TW-5.
- "United States Military Aircraft Since 1908" by Gordon Swanborough & Peter M. Bowers, 1977, 675 pp.
 
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