The Columbia flew Non-stop from Roosevelt Field to Eisleben, Germany, in just under
43 hours, establishing a new flight distance record in the process.
Not only did the Columbia fly further than the Spirit of St. Louis, but it carried a passenger. It also had a windshield so the pilot could see ahead. This design set a standard for the modern aircraft. Bellanca appeared on the cover of Time magazine, in recognition of this achievement.
Another ironic
coincidence Time magazine's man of the year for 1927
..... you guessed it Charles Lindbergh.
A Bellanca aircraft, in 1931, "Miss Veedol" made the first trans-Pacific flight, from Japan to the state of Washington, with Clyde Pangborn at the controls. Pangborn belly-landed outside of Seattle because Pangborn ditched the landing gear to lessen the airplane's weight.
Over the next five years, Bellanca aircraft set record after record for endurance and distance, including his Pathfinder which made the second Atlantic crossing from America to Spain, continuing on to Rome. Bellanca aircraft blazed the trail for international commercial air transportation. He was known mostly for his long range aircraft but he also built racing planes such as the 28-92 tri-motor racer which placed second in the 1938 Bendix races. The Bellanca Flash racer model 28-90 set a speed record across the Atlantic in 13 hours in 1936.