Supermarine Seagull

RAAF Seagull III

The Supermarine Seagull was a flying boat produced by the British aircraft manufacturer Supermarine. It was developed by Supermarine’s chief designer R.J. Mitchell from the experimental Supermarine Seal II.

Development of the Seagull started during 1920. In June 1921 it was evaluated for military applications but was rejected, and so Supermarine developed the aircraft as a private venture. During February 1922, an initial order for two aircraft was placed by the Air Ministry; subsequent production of the Seagull is believed to have assisted Supermarine to survive during a period when the aircraft industry struggled to attract customers.

The Seagull was used by the British Fleet Air Arm for gunnery spotting and reconnaissance duties. It was operated by the Royal Australian Air Force for similar purposes. During the early 1930s, when the type was being replaced by the more successful Supermarine Walrus, a number of Seagulls were re-used for civilian purposes.

The origins of the Seagull are heavily interconnected with the Supermarine Seal and the Supermarine Commercial Amphibian. Work on the Seal, which started in 1920, sought to build upon the Commercial Amphibian. A range of alterations and improvements were incorporated, many of which were drawn from the Commercial’s official review. The Commercial Amphibian was later designated as the Seal Mk I—and the new design, initially known as the Seal Mk II, later became the Seagull.

N158, the prototype of the Seagull, flew for the first time in May 1921. On 2 June 1921, having completed manufacturer’s trials, it was handed over for service trials with the Royal Air Force. Attention was paid to the aircraft’s seaworthiness and handling characteristics at low speeds, including its relatively low landing speed. Trials revealed that the rudder gave poor yaw characteristics. New designs were tested until a fin extension was found to solve the issues, which was incorporated into the prototype. Having been sufficiently impressed by the aircraft’s performance, two aircraft were ordered by the Air Ministry in February 1922. The prototype was shown at the 1922 RAF Display at Hendon Aerodrome.

The Supermarine Seagull was an amphibian flying boat, powered by a single Napier Lion engine. This engine was mounted in a nacelle slung from the aircraft’s upper wing and powered a four-blade propeller in a tractor configuration. The Seagull employed gravity feed to supply fuel for the engine, and was the first single-engined flying boat to use this method.

The lower wing was set in the shoulder position and had two bays. The floats were attached to the lower wing near the wingtips via struts, their positioning maximised buoyancy. For land operations, the Seagull was equipped with a retractable undercarriage; pilots lacked aids such as indicators or alarms, thus were reliant on training and memory to deploy the undercarriage when applicable. For easier stowage on board ships, the wings were designed to be folded, which necessitated mounting the wings in a relatively forward position on the fuselage.

The fuselage had an oval cross-section and had a planing bottom with two steps. The interior of the fuselage was divided into several watertight compartments. The three-man crew—pilot, observer, and radio-operator—each had an open cockpit. The pilot was seated in a relatively forward position, at a distance from the other crew members, being directly ahead of the fuel tanks; the cockpit was provisioned with a single retractable machine gun. The radio operator was located just behind the wing, while the rear gunner position was further back still. The majority of the aircraft was constructed from wood.[9] Previous Supermarine aircraft had incorporated the fuel tanks into the hull; with their removal to the upper wing, the Seagull’s crew gained full access within the interior of the aircraft.

On 4 July 1922, the name Seagull was adopted for the type. The prototype was designated as the Mk I; the subsequent production aircraft were given the designation Seagull Mk II. The two versions were similar, although an alternative powerplant in the form of a single more powerful Napier Lion III engine, a reduced wingspan, and a larger fin were used in the Mk II. Production of the Seagull (with serial numbers in and around N9642–N9647) began in 1922. In total, 25 aircraft were built for the Air Ministry and the Royal Navy; their production has been seen as critical to the survival of Supermarine at this time, and the first orders were intentionally built in small batches to ensure that the firm received enough business to stay operational.

In 1925, construction of the improved Mk III began for the Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF), following an order being placed in January of that year. This type featured a more powerful Napier Lion V engine, and the radiators were redesigned so as to be able to operate in tropical regions. The RAAF received six Mk IIIs were between 1926 and 1927. In 1928, one of the Seagull Mk IIs (the so-called Mk IV) was rebuilt with Handley-Page leading edge slots and twin fins and rudders.

Seagull III were delivered to the RAAF in 1926-27 to replace Fairey IIID. They were flown by No 101 Fleet Co-operation Flight, an RAAF unit under the operational control of the RAN. They flew briefly from the RAN seaplane carrier HMAS Albatross and subsequently from cruisers. Under-powered, incapable of catapult launch the Seagulls were withdrawn from service in 1934.

Powerplant: 1 × Napier Lion IIB W-12, 492 hp (367 kW)
Wingspan: 46 ft 0 in (14.02 m)
Length: 37 ft 9 in (11.51 m)
Height: 14 ft 0 in (4.27 m)
Wing area: 593 sq ft (55.1 sq.m)
Empty weight: 3,820 lb (1,733 kg)
Gross weight: 5,691 lb (2,581 kg)
Maximum speed: 98 mph (158 km/h, 85 kn) at 3,000 ft (914 m)
92 mph (80 kn; 148 km/h) at 6,500 ft (1,981 m)
Endurance: four hours, 30 minutes
Service ceiling: 9,150 ft (2,790 m)
Time to altitude: 3,000 ft (914 m) in7 minutes 43 seconds
Armament: Guns: One × .303 in (7.7 mm) Lewis gun
Crew: 3 (pilot, wireless operator & observer)

Boeing C-204

The Boeing Model 204 was an American biplane, pusher configuration flying-boat aircraft built by Boeing in 1929. Externally, the 204 looked identical to the Boeing Model 6E, but a number of internal changes, including increasing the passenger capacity to four, gave it a new type certificate and model number.

Construction was started on five aircraft, but only two were completed. The first, designated 204 and the second 204A. A third aircraft was built by a private owner who had bought the three incomplete machines. The 204A was a dual-control version which was later owned by Peter Barnes, who flew it on his private Seattle-Victoria, British Columbia main run.

The C-204 Thunderbird, a modified 204, was the first type produced by Boeing Aircraft of Canada. These had altered wing and tailplane incidence and a reduction in upper wing area. The prototype was first flown on 30 March 1930, the first of a batch of four. They failed to sell readily, though they were sometimes leased for work. Eventually three were sold. All worked in British Columbia, remaining active until 1939.

William “Bill” McCluskey stands atop a Boeing Canada C-204 Thunderbird flying boat.

204
Four-seat variant of the Model 6E, one built.
Crew: one pilot
Capacity: four passengers
Length: 32 ft 7 in (9.93 m)
Wingspan: 39 ft 8.25 in (12.10 m)
Height: 12 ft 0 in (3.66 m)
Wing area: 470 sq ft (43.66 sq.m)
Empty weight: 3,298 lb (1,496 kg)
Gross weight: 4,940 lb (2,240 kg)
Powerplant: 1 × Pratt & Whitney R-1340 Wasp , 410 hp (305 kW)
Maximum speed: 115 mph (185 km/h, 100 kn)
Cruise speed: 95 mph (153 km/h, 83 kn)
Range: 350 mi (563 km, 300 nmi)
Service ceiling: 9,000 ft (2,743 m)
Rate of climb: 1,000 ft/min (5.1 m/s)

204A
As the Model 204 with dual-control, one built.

C-204 Thunderbird
Four 204s built by Boeing Canada.

Bristol X.2

The Bristol X.2 project of 1912 featured a hydroped undercarriage designed by Sir Dennistoun Burney. This consisted of three legs carrying a series of hydrofoils and a water propeller.

At rest, the X.2 floated on its boat-shaped hull. For take-off its engine first drove the water propellor. As it gathered speed, the hydroped undercarriage was supposed to raise te hull clear of the water, until the pilot could switch to the flying propeller and take-off.

When towed behind a destroyer, the X.2 became airborne like a kite, before crashing.

Volk Brothers

Bert Volk started life as an engineer making cars in 1910.

A year later the first airplane landed in Brighton on the beach, a Bleriot monoplane. Volk became fascinated with aviation and he thought he would have a go.

In 1911, he started making parts for engines, wings, floats, and fabric bodies that would be fitted into planes, and two years later pleasure flights began being launched.

Bert Volk’s elder brother, Herman, invented a collapsible, portable hanger on the edge of the water from where pleasure flights started.

They were all built in bits and taken down to the seafront next to the Banjo Groyne, put together and launched into the sea.”

There was a ramp down into the water and planes were launched into the sea.

Seaplane pleasure flights began in Brighton in 1913

A year after flights started, the outbreak of World War One meant the hanger was requisitioned by the government and the project ended.
Herman Volk went off to manufacture planes for the war effort.
He also contributed to the development of Shoreham Airport – one of the first aerodromes in England.
After the war he took over the running of Volk’s Electric Railway on the seafront.
Bert went off to South Africa where he spent most of the rest of his life.

Zeppelin-Staaken Rs III

The giant seaplane Rs III was a high-wing monoplane of all-metal design with fabric covering of the wing and empennage.
The intrinsically stable hull was a monocoque design made of duraluminium with traverse and longitudinal steps. The hull housed the gun station, the flight deck for two pilots, the engineer’s station and the fuel system.
The four Maybach engines were arranged in tandem in two nacelles and installed between the hull and the wing. The tail boom was mounted on the wing and had a box-type horizontal tail assembly with split elevator without compensating surfaces; the rudders and tail fins were divided into halves by the fuselage.
First flight took place on November 4, 1917. On 19 February 1918, a 7-hour non stop flight was made from Friedrichshafen to Norderney for further testing by the Seaplane Test Command Warnemonde.

Rs III
Engine: 4 x Maybach HS, 180kW
Take-off weight: 10670 kg / 23523 lb
Empty weight: 7865 kg / 17339 lb
Wingspan: 37 m / 121 ft 5 in
Length: 22.70 m / 74 ft 6 in
Height: 8.10 m / 26 ft 7 in
Wing area: 238 sq.m / 2561.81 sq ft
Max. speed: 136 km/h / 85 mph
Ceiling: 2700 m / 8850 ft
Range: 1380 km / 858 miles

Yokosuka H5Y Cherry

In 1934 the staff of the Yokosuka Navy Arsenal turned their hand to the design of a twin-engined flying-boat, the Yokosuka H5Y powered by two 895kW Mitsubishi Shinten 21 radial engines. Although built to a total of 20 during 1936-40 as the Navy Type 99 Flying-Boat, its performance was disappointing and, consequently, was deployed only on second-line duties.

Early in the war an unidentified twin-engined flying boat was spotted on non-combat duty around Japanese Naval bases. The allied code name ‘Cherry’ permitted identification before the manufacturer’s name and designation was discovered through prisoner interrogation over a year later.

H5Y1
Engine: 2 x Mitsubishi Shinten-21, 895kW
Max take-off weight: 12500 kg / 27558 lb
Wingspan: 31.57 m / 104 ft 7 in
Length: 20.52 m / 67 ft 4 in
Max. speed: 305 km/h / 190 mph
Ceiling: 5200 m / 17050 ft
Range: 4700 km / 2921 miles
Crew: 6
Armament: 3 x 7.9mm machine-guns
Bombload: 500kg

Yokosuka H5Y Cherry