Short S.42

Short No. 42 converted to a landplane. This machine commenced its career in the Naval Wing of the R.F.C. (as it was then known) at the Seaplane Station, Leven, Fifeshire, in July 1913 under Maj. R. Gordon, R.M.L.I., and was converted to a landplane at Dundee in the summer of 1914 and flown from a small strip at the Seaplane Station, Dundee, by.Maj. Gordon.

A small party left Eastchurch in July 1913 to open the seaplane base at Leven, the complement of machines being Short seaplane No. 42, one Borel monoplane on floats and later one Henri Farman seaplane.

Short S.39 / Triple-Twin

The Short Brothers designed and built a variant of the S.27-type with two engines which could be shut down independently; this biplane, S.39, could maintain flight on either one of its two engines and was thus the first example in the world of twin engines being used to enhance safety.

The S.39 was structurally the same as the improved Farman-Sommer-type Short biplane of 1911 apart from the nacelle and power plant arrangement; it had a stronger chassis laterally braced by struts, three rudders below the tailplane and a front elevator carried on inset pivots by booms pitched closer together than normal. The nacelle contained a cockpit with two seats side-by-side and carried a 50 hp Gnome engine and propeller on a standard overhung pusher mounting at the back; another 50 hp Gnome was mounted at the front, rotating in the opposite direction so that gyroscopic moments cancelled out when both engines were running. The forward engine drove two wing-mounted tractor airscrews through Wright-type Renold chain gears, the port chain being crossed to obtain counter-rotation, and the ‘bent-end’ airscrews were exactly like those made for the Short-Wright biplanes.

S.39, known as the Triple-Twin, was first flown on 18 September, 1911, by Frank McClean; he made a brief solo flight, then, with Samson as passenger, flew eight wide circuits of Eastchurch aerodrome, throttling back each engine in turn and experiencing for the first time the luxury of an ample speed range while flying a level course. The effect of the outboard slipstream on lateral control was not up to Horace Short’s expectations, but he was pleased with the Triple-Twin’s overall performance and next decided to try the effect of co-axial counter-rotation on stability. The first step was to convert Cecil Grace’s old S.27 to a similar twin-engined layout, but with the front engine direct-coupled to an airscrew, as shown in patent No. 22,675 of 1911.

This version was called the Tandem-Twin, or, less formally, the Gnome Sandwich, and retained the original S.27 wings and cambered tail unit unchanged except for the addition of two extra top rudders. The chassis was strengthened in the same way as for S.39, and the existing front elevator and booms were retained, since they allowed adequate clearance for the central airscrew. The Tandem-Twin was flown by McClean on 29 October, 1911, without any preliminary taxying; after a short flight at 100 ft he landed and expressed even more satisfaction than with the Triple-Twin; he spent the rest of the day taking up various passengers to test their reactions to the slipstream and to the location of the rear propeller only 10 in behind their heads. The draught in the cockpit was quite powerful and the Tandem-Twin soon acquired yet another soubriquet – The Vacuum Cleaner – and was credited with the ability ‘to pull the hairs out of a fur coat’; this was mainly due to the open hole in the floor, which was the only means of access. The Tandem-Twin could maintain height with either engine throttled back, but was unstable in every direction, due to insufficient aileron power and to unpredictable variations in torque reaction with the rear propeller working in the wake of the front one. Horace Short investigated this effect very thoroughly and deduced design rules for the relative diameters and pitches of tandem airscrews which were still valid 20 years later.

He also designed a larger biplane with two central engines of 120 hp each, driving four propellers arranged in tandem pairs in the wings, with independent chain gears for the front and rear engines. He obtained a number of patents (Nos. 8,108, 8,394 and 22,750 of 1911) for co-axial and interconnected airscrews, but the four-screw aeroplane was never built; however, Maurice Egerton apparently had his S.35 biplane converted into a Triple-Twin and flew it regularly from April 1912 onwards. Both S.39 and S.27 were flown at first without wing extensions, and on 21 November, 1911, they were raced by Longmore and Gerrard respectively; both did better than 55 mph, but S.39 seemed to have the edge over S.27. In December, S.39 was fitted with extensions and double fuel capacity; in February 1912, S.39’s extensions were removed and fitted to S.27, and in October 1912, S.39 was temporarily given equally extended upper and lower wings of 50 ft span, which further top extensions later increased to 64 ft. S.39 was purchased by the Admiralty in June 1912 and given serial T3, later simplified to 3; in the spring of 1913 it was returned to the works for overhaul and completely remodelled as a two-seat tandem pusher with new wings and no front elevator, as already described. The Admiralty declined to buy the Tandem-Twin, which remained McClean’s property (it was No. 11 in his private fleet list), but he lent it to the Naval Flying School without charge, and it was eventually crashed by Samson; Egerton’s S.35 appears to have been dismantled and probably formed the basis of one of the Sociables of early 1914. The final development of the triple-twin theme was the Triple-Tractor S.47.

Two other types of pusher biplane deserve notice. One was a startling metamorphosis of the original Triple-Twin, S.39, which reappeared on test by Sydney Pickles on 24 July, 1913, as a neat two-seat tandem pusher without a front elevator. It had constant-chord wings of improved profile with struts of oval steel tube and the landing gear and tail unit of a late production S.38-type, with balanced rounded rudders; it still retained its original serial 3, which was almost its only link with the past. Lighter in weight than a standard S.38-type, it had a very lively performance, with a top speed of 65 mph and the then exceptional rate of climb of over 600 ft/min; its ceiling was better than 9,000 ft. It was a favourite mount of Samson’s, and he used to fly it at night; he took Winston Churchill up in it during his visit to Eastchurch on 24-25 October, 1913. Finally, it joined the scratch squadron which Samson took to Flanders early in the war and was based at Poperinghe in October 1914, but was never armed and only used as a communications hack.

Triple-Twin
Span 34 ft (103 m), later 50 ft (15-3 m)
Length 45 ft (13-7 m)
Wing area 435 sq ft (40-4 sq,m), later 500 sq ft (46-5 sq.m)
Empty weight 1,800 lb (816 kg)
Loaded weight 2,100 lb (953 kg)
Speed 55 mph (88-6 km/h).

Tandem-Twin
Span 34 ft 2 in (10-4 m), later 50 ft (15-3 m)
Wing area 480 sq ft (44-6 sq.m), later 517 sq ft (48 sq.m)

S.39 (rebuilt)
Span 52 ft (15-84 m)
Length 29 ft (8-85 m)
Wing area 500 sq ft (46-5 sq.m)
Empty weight 1,000 lb (454 kg)
Loaded weight 1,500 lb (680 kg)
Speed 65 mph (104-6 km/h).

Short S.27

In 1912 Cdr. Samson made the first flight from a moving ship in a Shorts S.38. The S.38 was fitted with air-bags so that it could alight on the water, if necessary.

Cdr. C.R. Samson flew a Short biplane from a platform on HMS Africa in 1912

The Admiralty erected a runway on HMS Hibernia in 1912 and Cdr. Samson made the first flight from a moving vessel while steaming at 10.5 knots.

Cdr. Samson on HMS Hibernia in 1912

The S.27 was fitted with air-bags so it could land on water, if necessary. Samson landed ashore at Lodmoor.

Frank McClean caused a sensation on 10 August 1912 by flying his Short biplane through the Tower Bridge, and then hopping and taxying under the remaining bridges to Westminster, where he alighted. Reprimanded by the Police, he promised not to leave the water again until he had taxied down-river, past Tower Bridge. When he attempted to take off, he crashed.

Short No.2

The Short Brothers moved their factory from Battersea to Leysdown in 1909 and completed a tailess biplane of their own design. The biplane was for Frank McClean. The No.2 resembled the Wright biplane but had improved controls and a 60 hp Green engine.

The biplane No. 2 flew for the first time in 1909.

1909 Short No. 2 biplane

It was with this plane Moore-Brabazon won the Daily Mail prize for a circular flight of 1 mile.

Engine: Green, 60 hp
Span: 48’4″
Length: 32′
Weight allup: 1485 lb
Speed: 45 mph.

Shoemaker No. 3 flying boat

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.

Shober Willie II

Marshall Collins N602CB, Lycoming O-320 150 hp

The Shober Willie II is an American two-seat sporting or aerobatic aircraft designed and built by Shober Aircraft Enterprises.

The Willie II is a braced single-bay biplane with a fabric covered welded steel fuselage. The two-spar wooden wings are fabric covered with wide-span ailerons on the lower wing and a fabric covered wired-braced welded steel tail unit. The prototype is powered by a 180 hp (134 kW) Lycoming O-360-A3A engine. It has two open cockpits in tandem and a fixed conventional landing gear with a tailwheel.

First flying in 1971, the aircraft was designed to be sold as plans for amateur construction.

Suited for engines in the 150 to 200 hp range, at least four further aircraft were completed. Further development was halted in 1976 when the type was withdrawn from the market.

The Willie II has the M-6 airfoil and two ailerons. The Skybolt Biplane with symmetrical airfoils and four ailerons came out shortly after the Willie II, possibly that is why the Willie II plans were withdrawn from the market.

There appears to have been five Willie II biplanes built;

N7919 – the prototype built by William Shober

N113BT

N113BT Lycoming O-360 engine

N—- built by Richard Fox in Frederick Maryland.

N602CB

N6RB

N5RB

Willie II Prototype N7919
Engine: 1 × Lycoming O-360-A3A, 180 hp (134 kW)
Wingspan: 6.10 m (20 ft 0 in)
Wing area: 13.75 sq.m (148 sq ft)
Length: 5.79 m (19 ft 0 in)
Empty weight: 388 kg (856 lb)
Gross weight: 612 kg (1,350 lb)
Cruise speed: 241 km/h (150 mph, 130 kn)
Stall speed: 96 km/h (60 mph, 52 kn)
Range: 603 km (375 mi, 326 nmi)
Service ceiling: 4,570 m (15,000 ft)
g limits: +9 -9g
Rate of climb: 15 m/s (3,000 ft/min)
Seats: 2

Willie II N602CB
Engine: 1 × Lycoming O-320 150 hp
Wingspan: 6.10 m (20 ft 0 in)
Wing area: 13.75 sq.m (148 sq ft)
Gross weight: 1276 lb
Empty weight: 907 lb
g limits: +6 -5g

Shneider I / II

The 1909 Shneider I and II were direct copies of Wright A for exhibition work. The were two-place, open biplanes powered by a 30hp 3-cyl Eldbridge with two chain-driven pusher propellers.

The Model I was destroyed in a crash on 12 July 1909. Following the subsequent crash of Model II, Shneider concentrated on building Curtiss pushers.