Good morning, guys!
Four vintage aircraft from different countries.
First, an American high wing monoplane, Ryan Brougham was the model that served as the starting line (and sharing the same Whirlwind J-5 radial engine) for the much more known "Spirit of St. Louis" and the first and celebrated first NY-Paris Atlantic crossing by C. Lindbergh.
Arado Ar.95 was an all-metal German biplane with a BMW radial engine. An advanced aircraft of the second half of the 1930s, but was not selected by Germany`s armed forces. Six were used in Spain during the SCW 1936-39, 9 were exported to Chile in 1939, a further order was made by Turkey, but due the war, the 12 aircraft were used by the Luftwaffe in the Baltic Sea from 1941 to 1944.
An interesting seaplane biplane made by Fleet (the Canadian division of Consolidated Aircraft), Fleet 50 Freighter, in Canada during the late 1930s. Intended as a bush (a rather big one) aircraft, able to tansport cargo and passengers, and intended to be used in the Canadian rivers and lakes. Unfortunatelly, Freighter twin Jacobs radial engines were undepowered, and the airplane was unable to keep level flight with only one engine. Only 5 were built.
Finally, Levasseur PL-107/-108, a French prototype for a biplane torpedo bomber, equiped with a 9-cylinder Gnome & Rhone radial engine, it was of all-metal construction, presented an enclosed cabin, and was able to carry a 16 inch aerial torpedo. Only 2 (and one of the very similiar PL-108) were built, and none selected by the French military.
Cheers.
NB: Levasseur PL-107 is already in the bucket, unfortunatelly is severly JPEGed.