
Of 1932 and the largest aircraft then built in Britain. The Sarafand was built as a transport.
Engines: 6 x Rolls-Royce Buzzards, 820 hp
Weight: 31 tons
Cruise: 1450 miles @ 150 mph

Of 1932 and the largest aircraft then built in Britain. The Sarafand was built as a transport.
Engines: 6 x Rolls-Royce Buzzards, 820 hp
Weight: 31 tons
Cruise: 1450 miles @ 150 mph

Circa 1927.

The British Air Ministry issued its Specification R.24/31 for a “General Purpose Open Sea Patrol Flying Boat” in 1931 and ordered one prototype from each of Saunders-Roe, Supermarine and Shorts. The contract specified the use of the experimental Rolls-Royce Goshawk engine. Whereas the other two companies opted for traditional biplane designs, Shorts decided to produce a more modern, all-metal monoplane aircraft with the experimental steam-cooled, cast block Rolls-Royce Goshawk engine, itself a development of the smaller Kestrel engine.
Designed by Arthur Gouge, the Knuckleduster’s straight-sided hull was of all-metal (Alclad) box-section construction, from the bow as far as the pointed main step at the rear of the planing bottom; aft of the main step the fuselage was of monocoque construction. The central section of the hull was boxed and braced by diagonal frames to bear the loads from the wing-root attachments.
The wing sections inboard of the engines were attached at a 30° dihedral angle, thus providing sufficient clearance for the airscrews from water-spray during takeoff. The wings were designed for high torsional stiffness, each comprising a box-spar with four tapered stainless steel tubular booms. Fuel tanks were mounted within the wings; sprung and braced wingtip floats were fitted. The wing surfaces were of fabric.
The experimental 720hp Rolls-Royce Goshawk steam-cooled engine was specified for the “Knuckleduster,” which led to many problems due to the engine’s unreliability. The engines, with conspicuous condensers protruding vertically from the nacelles, were mounted at the “knuckle” between the dihedral inner and the horizontal outer wing sections.
The tail unit comprised a horizontal plane braced by struts with two vertical fins and rudders, also supported by diagonal bracing to the fuselage. As a result of early test results, fin area was increased; a major redesign of the tail unit was requested by John Parker and implemented at considerable cost.
In addition to the enclosed cockpit in which the pilot and the navigator sat side by side, there was a gunner’s cockpit in the bow, stations for the engineer and radio operator and a navigator station with a chart-table, sighting ports and two folding bunks. A third folding bunk and two fixed bunks were mounted in the crew’s living quarters, which also included a galley and, further aft, stowage space for drogues and a lavatory.
Further armament was provided by a midships gun mounting and a rear gunner’s cockpit in the tail; bombs could be mounted in underwing bomb racks and there was also provision for a torpedo to be transported (but not launched). All guns mountings carried a single Lewis Gun.

First launched the previous day, the first flight of the prosaically named R.24/31 (serial K3574) took place on 30 November 1933, piloted by Shorts’ Chief Test Pilot John Lankester Parker and crewed by George Cotton and W. Howard Bell. Parker noted that the fins were flexing so he landed immediately. After the fins had stiffening added the aircraft flew again successfully on the 15 December. Other problems found during testing were that the boat could not be trimmed straight and level, the fin area was increased by 18% and the tail was re-designed including fitting a cupola over the tail gun position.
On 12 June 1934 at the conclusion of test flying the Knuckleduster was flown to Felixstowe for official trials with the Marine Aircraft Experimental Establishment (MAEE). The aircraft was judged not to meet the specification particularly regarding top speed and range even though these were not a priority in the specification. In October 1934 the boat was returned to Rochester for repair following an accident, a collision with another flying-boat. It was repaired and several modification incorporated before it returned to Felixstowe in March 1935.
In April the Knuckleduster joined 209 Squadron at RAF Mount Batten, Plymouth for service trials alongside the Stranraer and London. This included an appearance at the Royal Air Force display at Hendon. It was returned to the MAEE in October 1935. Despite suffering engine problems it continued to carry out trial flights until September 1938, when it was retired from flying duties and assigned to No. 2 School of Technical Training at RAF Cosford for instructional purposes.
Although it was not ordered into production mainly hindered by the unreliable engines, a new Air Ministry Specification R.2/33 was released before it flew which would lead to the Short Sunderland. The Sunderland was another large monoplane flying-boat that had benefited from the work on the R.24/31.
Engine: 2 × Rolls-Royce Goshawk VIII, 775 hp (578 kW)
Wingspan: 90 ft 0 in ft (27.4 m)
Airfoil: Göttingen 436 (outer wing sections)
Wing area: 1,147 ft² (106.5 m²)
Length: 63 ft 3 in (19.3 m)
Height: 19 ft 6 in [6] (5.95 m)
Empty weight: 11,720 lb (5,320 kg)
Loaded weight: 18,500 lb (8,395 kg)
Maximum speed: 150 mph (130 knots, 240 km/h)
Range: 1,040 miles (904 NM, 1,675 km)
Service ceiling: 15,500 ft (5,030 m)
Armament: 3 x Lewis Guns
Crew: 5

The closure of Italian and Italian colonial seaports to Imperial Airways in the Mediterranean in 1929 brought a need for a longer range flying boat, with mail carriage a priority. The Kent biplane flying boat was Short’s response, and three were built. Imperial Airways also persuaded Short to produce a landplane version of the L.12 Kent – the Scylla.

Short L.12 Kent
Engines: 4 x 555hp Bristol Jupiter XFBM nine-cylinder radial
Max take-off weight: 14515 kg / 32000 lb
Wingspan: 34.44 m / 113 ft 0 in
Length: 23.90 m / 78 ft 5 in
Height: 8.53 m / 28 ft 0 in
Max. speed: 220 km/h / 137 mph
Ceiling: 5335 m / 17500 ft
Range: 724 km / 450 miles
Crew: 2
Passengers: 16

1930

1921
Cromarty
Crew: 4
Engines: 2 x 600hp Rolls-Royce Condor I
Max take-off weight: 8165 kg / 18001 lb
Empty weight: 5543 kg / 12220 lb
Wingspan: 34.59 m / 114 ft 6 in
Length: 17.98 m / 59 ft 0 in
Wing area: 208.38 sq.m / 2242.98 sq ft
Max. speed: 153 km/h / 95 mph
Cruise speed: 131 km/h / 81 mph
Ceiling: 4800 m / 15750 ft
Range: 1500 km / 932 miles
Armament: 1 x 37mm, 1 x 7.9mm

The 1928 15 passenger Calcutta biplane flying boat originated from an Imperial Airways requirement to service the Mediterranean legs of its services from and to India. The Calcutta itself was derived from the Short Singapore military flying boat. It was the first stressed skin, metal-hulled flying boat.
The Calcutta first flew on 15 February 1928 Imperial Airways operated five of the seven Calcuttas produced, and a single sale to the French government was followed by the French company Breguet licence-building four Calcuttas as the Bizerte. In 1931 Breguet secured a licence to build the Short Calcutta, and this was used as the basis for the company’s Bre.521 submission to meet a 1932 French Navy requirement for a long-range reconnaissance flying-boat.

From the Calcutta Short developed the Rangoon as a long-range reconnaissance type for the RAF. Six were produced and went into service in 1931. These were basically similar to the Calcutta, except that the pilots were accommodated in an enclosed cockpit, in the nose was an open cockpit with Scarff gun-ring and aft of the biplane wings were staggered cockpits for two gunners. Maximum level speed of the Rangoon was 185km/h.

Engines: 3 x Bristol Jupiter XI F, 390kW
Wingspan: 28.3 m / 93 ft 10 in
Length: 20.4 m / 67 ft 11 in
Height: 7.2 m / 24 ft 7 in
Wing area: 171.0 sq.m / 1840.63 sq ft
Max take-off weight: 10200 kg / 22487 lb
Empty weight: 6280 kg / 13845 lb
Max. speed: 190 km/h / 118 mph
Cruise speed: 156 km/h / 97 mph
Ceiling: 4000 m / 13100 ft
Range w/max.fuel: 1040 km / 646 miles
Crew: 4-5
Passengers: 12-15


The Singapore III reconnaissance and coastal patrol flying-boat was basically the production version of the earlier Singapore II, itself developed from the twin Buzzard-engined Singapore I of 1926.

The huge biplaned Singapores entered service with the RAF in 1934. Built with a deep, well faired beamy hull constructed of duralium, the boat had a good seaworthy reputation and was quite maneouvrable on the water. While the book claimed a cruise of 105 knots, RNZAF crews seldom watched the wave tops go past at more than 80 knots. The endurance was some six and half hours at around a thousand feet, the low altitudes being little hindrance as the primary observation device in those early days was the Mark One eyeball.

Thirty-seven Singapore IIIs were delivered to the RAF, entering service in the spring of 1935. The last few aircraft were withdrawn in late 1941, when they were transferred to the Royal New Zealand Air Force. Powered by four 730 hp Roll Royce Kestrel VIII/IX glycol cooled engines mounted in two tandem pairs between the fabric covered wings.

Short S 19 Singapore III
Engines: 4 x Rolls-Royce Kestrel VIII/IX, 418kW/ 560 hp
Wingspan: 27.43 m / 90 ft 0 in
Length: 23.16 m / 76 ft 0 in
Height: 7.19 m / 24 ft 7 in
Wing area: 170.38 sq.m / 1833.95 sq ft
Max take-off weight: 12475 kg / 27503 lb
Empty weight: 8355 kg / 18420 lb
Max. speed: 126 kt / 233 km/h / 145 mph
Cruising speed: 91 kt / 169 km/h Ceiling: 4570 m / 15000 ft
Range: 869 nm / 1610 km / 1000 miles
Crew: 6
Bomb load: 2000 lb / 907kg
Armament: 3 x .303 MG (7,7mm) Lewis mg


Public pressure resulted in the British government’s return to funding Schneider trophy entries from the public purse, and the 1927 entries were sponsored around two different engine types. The Bristol Mercury engine design was placed under the guidance of Colonel W.A. Bristow, who subsequently subcontracted airframe detail design of this low-wing, wooden racing floatplane to Short. The Crusader was not as fast as its Supermarine S.5 counterparts that won the race in Italy, but it travelled to the event as a back-up aircraft. Unfortunately, it was written off in an accident. Although not a landmark aircraft, the Crusader was important in developing the Mercury engine, a key component of 1930s British flying boats.

Engine: 1 x 810hp Bristol Mercury 9-cylinder air-cooled radial
Wingspan: 8.07 m / 27 ft 6 in
Length: 7.62 m / 25 ft 0 in
Max take-off weight: 1227 kg / 2705 lb
Max. speed: 435 km/h / 270 mph
Crew: 1
Passengers: 1

The Herring-Burgess airplane was sold to Joseph C. Shoemaker sometime in 1910 or early 1911. Shoemaker, along with Fred C. Chanonhouse, modified the Herring-Burgess design by eliminating the fins on the upper wing and removing the forward elevator. The landing gear was also rebuilt.
Shoemaker soloed his modified Herring-Burgess Model A on June 3, 1911, and by August the airplane was capable of executing basic flight manoeuvres, including circles and figure 8s, in addition to achieving distances up to 14.5 km (9 mi), altitudes up to 30 m (100 ft), and flight durations of ten minutes.
After a crash on September 2, 1911, which resulted in slight damage, the airplane does not appear to have been flown again. The Herring-Burgess biplane was donated to the Smithsonian Institution by the Shoemaker estate in February 1961.