France
A light monoplane flying-boat designated SCAN 20, was built secretly in 1941. Tested in October 1945. Delivery of 23 to French Navy under way 1951.
Also built Grumman Widgeon for French Navy as SCAN 30.
France
A light monoplane flying-boat designated SCAN 20, was built secretly in 1941. Tested in October 1945. Delivery of 23 to French Navy under way 1951.
Also built Grumman Widgeon for French Navy as SCAN 30.

Sawyer’s objective for constructing this vehicle, N7317, was to prove the stability, controllability and capability of such a radical, low-aspect-ratio aircraft. The size for this type of aircraft is unlimited due to the nature of its lifting body design. The Skyjacker is cheap to build because there are no compound curves, highly stressed areas or complex control systems. The design will not stall or spin and has no rudders.

First flying on 3 July 1975, the Skyjacker was not marketed as a sporting aircraft, but is, a two-seat experimental research vehicle of all-metal construction.

Engine Lycoming IO-360-A1B6D, 200-hp
Wingspan 18 ft
Length 17 ft 6 in
Gross Wt. 2250 lbs
Empty Wt. 1650 lb
Fuel capacity 50 USG
Top speed 130 mph
Cruise 105 mph
Stall 45 mph
Climb rate 400 fpm
Takeoff run 1200 ft
Landing roll 1000 ft
Range 525 sm
Seats: 2

The Diamond was a 1976 development of the Swallow by Savoie Delta.
Wing area: 17.5 m²
Wing span: 9.2 m
Aspect ratio: 4.8
Hang glider weight: 20 kg
Nose angle: 102°

In November 1957 when Saunders-Roe Ltd. began its design of a private venture for a Skeeter development and replacement. Two prototypes of the aircraft, then known as the Saro P.531, were begun early in 1958, the first (G-APNU) flying on 20 July and the second (G-APNV) on 30 September 1958. Several Skeeter components were used in their construction, including the tailboom, short-legged tricycle undercarriage and rotor blades (the P.531 having a 4-blade assembly). Both prototypes were powered by Blackburn-built 400shp Turmo 603 shaft turbines, derated to 325shp.

Westland, after acquiring Saunders-Roe in 1959, took development an important stage further by completing two more prototypes with double the power and various other changes including a skid undercarriage. The first with a 1050shp Bristol Siddeley Nimbus engine derated to 635shp, and the other with a de Havilland Gnome H.1000 turbine derated to 685shp. Subsequently developing the P.531 as the Scout AH.Mk 1 for the British Army and Wasp HAS.Mk 1 for the Royal Navy.
Engine: Blackburn A.129 free-turbine
Seats: 5-6

The Saunders Roe Princess was intended as a flagship for British Overseas Airways Corporation; weighed 152 tonnes (150 tons) and was to have carried 105 passengers in its two deck, pressurized hull. The three prototypes were, ordered in May 1946, were intended for non-stop transatlantic service. The Princess was powered by ten Bristol Proteus turboprop engines. Eight of the engines coupled in pairs driving contra-rotating propellers. The flight deck crew consisted of two pilots, two flight engineers, a radio operator and a navigator. Two decks carried 105 passengers in first and tourist class. By the time the first example flew, years behind schedule, on 22 August 1952 the programme cost had nearly quadrupled to £11,000,000.
Meanwhile BOAC had given up flying boat operations. Instead, the boats were to be completed as long-range military transports for the RAF, but the lack of a suitable powerplant brought even these optimistic hopes to an end. Larger than the Martin Mars and heavier than the Bristol Brabazon I, the Princess prototype was flown for the first time on 22 August 1952 and spanned 66.90m with its wingtip floats retracted, weighed 156,492kg on take-off. It could attain a maximum speed of 579km/h on the power of its 10 2386kW Bristol Proteus 600 turboprop engines.
Development problems with the gearboxes of the inboard engines contributed to the decision to end development. No one wanted the Princess or her two sisterships which had been completed at Saunders -Roe’s Isle of Wight factory, and the three Princesses sat cocooned at Calshot for 15 years before the cutters’ torches finally destroyed them. The second and third Princesses did not fly.
Saunders-Roe SR.45 Princess
Engines: 10 x Bristol Proteus 2 turboprop, 3780hp
Span: 210 ft 6 in / 66.90 m
Length: 148 ft / 45.11 m
Height: 17.37 m / 57 ft 0 in
Max take-off weight: 156500 kg / 345025 lb
Max. speed: 612 km/h / 380 mph
Cruise speed: 579 km/h / 360 mph
Range: 8484 km / 5272 miles
Pax cap: 105
Crew: 6

By 1952 Saunders-Roe produced the SR.53 design for a single-seat target defence interceptor combining a liquid-fuel rocket motor with an auxiliary turbojet. Submitted to the Ministry of Supply (MoS) the design based on the pairing of the de Havilland Engines DGJ.1OR Gyron junior turbojet and Spectre rocket motor, to meet the requirements of Specification F.124T. This was accepted with high regard, and Specification F.177D was written around it to meet Operational Requirement (OR) 337. Furthermore, naval requirement NR/AA7 was combined in the specification, the designation SR.177R being applied to the RAF aircraft and SR. 177N to those for the Fleet Air Arm (FAA). The SR.53 was recipient of a three-prototype contract in October 1952. Armament proposed was a Red Top missile on each wingtip.
On September 4, 1956, Saro received an initial order for nine aircraft, and West Germany expressed enough interest for the eventual figure of 600 production aircraft to be mooted. Production was to be shared among Saro and other companies, and German companies were to manufacture that nation’s variant, so the whole programme would benefit a large European workforce.
With one 8,0001b-thrust de Havilland Spectre rocket engine and one 1,6401b-thrust Armstrong Siddeley Viper turbojet. Of clipped delta wing configuration with a specified armament of two wingtip-mounted Blue Jay (de Havilland Firestreak) AAMs, the SR.53 was powered by an 3629kg de Havilland Spectre HTP rocket and a 744kg Armstrong Siddeley Viper turbojet superimposed one above the other in the rear fuselage.
In the event, only two of the SR.53s were to be completed (XD145 and XD151), these making their initial flights on 16 May and 8 December 1957, prior to which, in April 1957, all rocket-powered fighter development in the UK had been cancelled.

Duncan Sandys’ Defence the White Paper of 1957 resulted in the cancellation of the whole project. When a British request to the USA for funding under the Mutual Weapons Development Program (MWDP) was turned down, West Germany dropped out and turned to the Lockheed F-104 Starfighter.
Nonetheless, the two SR.53s performed 42 test flights before, on 15 June 1958, the second aircraft crashed, the surviving aircraft then being permanently grounded.
SR.53
Max take-off weight: 8618 kg / 19000 lb
Empty weight: 3357 kg / 7401 lb
Wingspan: 7.65 m / 25 ft 1 in
Length: 13.72 m / 45 ft 0 in
Height: 3.29 m / 11 ft 10 in
Wing area: 25.45 sq.m / 273.94 sq ft
Max. speed: 2135 km/h / 1327 mph


Following discussions between Hugh Francis of the Marine Aircraft Experimental Establishment (MAEE) and Henry Knowler, chief designer of Saunders Roe, the idea of a flying boat fighter was generated. It was then schemed and serious work was started at the beginning of 1944 in Beaumaris, Anglesey, where Saunders Roe had their Design Office. The official specification was E.6/44 and the aircraft’s designation SR A/1 followed the then new nomenclature of the SBAC for the drawing system for each company, A/1 signifying the first aircraft of Saunders Roe under that system.
The new aircraft was designed around two Metropolitan Vickers F2/4 Beryl turbojets designed under the direction of Dr D. M. Smith, chief engineer of that company’s Gas Turbine Department. These engines, the first British axial flow engines, delivered 3,3001b thrust initially, raised later to 3,8501b following successful type tests. They were small in diameter by comparison with the centrifugal type compressors favoured at that time by other engine makers. Two could therefore be installed side by side without making the hull’s beam unduly great. The intake was provided with an extendable lip which was intended to overcome water ingestion troubles, should they occur. In the event, they did not and, although the lip was used on test, it was pot normally needed, as the SR A/1 was intended for operation from sheltered or inland waters. Both engines shared the oval shaped intake. The hull shape was of faired vee form, entirely of metal construction, made up of strong keel members, closely spaced frames, light upper longitudinals and carefully filled skin rivetting. The engine exhausts were toed out five degrees each side of the centre line. The pilot’s cockpit was pressurised and air conditioned by air tapped from both power unit compressors. Provision was also made for a “G” suit.
Another “first” was the Martin Baker ejector seat, which was the first to be delivered to an aircraft manufacturer from the works. The pilot had four 20mm Hispano cannon mounted immediately ahead of him in the nose, each gun having 240 rounds. In addition, two 1,000 lb bombs or eight rockets could be carried.
The wing was a single spar structure, fitted with dive brakes and dive recovery flaps, as well as ailerons and landing flaps. The tail unit was of similar construction to the wing. The aircraft had a Mach Number of 0.81. The uniqueness of the controls lay in the, combined use of geared and spring tabs, allowing a simple and neat type of manual control without fine balance or trailing edge troubles.
Control on the water was by means of a small rudder integral with the rear step. It could be locked centrally when in flight or, when on the water, linked to the rudder pedals. Lateral support was by means of hydraulically retractable floats which were rotated mechanically as they retracted inwards so as to lie inverted in the under surface of the wing, thus creating minimum drag. The four main wing fuel tanks together with two overload drop tanks gave an endurance of around 212 hours.

When it was agreed that construction of the SR A/1 should proceed, three prototypes were authorised. These were allocated the serials TG263, TG267 and TG271. The design was completed at the Beaumaris Works and the components were made there. They were transported to Cowes for assembly and test flying.

Geoffrey Tyson undertook the flight testing of the new flying boat. He first taxied TG263 on July 16, 1947 and, finding everything in order, took it off.
The SRA/1 was improved later by the fitting of an “acorn” at the intersection of the fin and tailplane to cure a slight buffet. The first take off had taken only twelve seconds and the rate of climb was exceptional. Apart from this, the only other visible alteration was the fitting of a metal cockpit canopy following the loss of a transparent hood in the course of a test flight. This was one of the earliest sliding hoods to be pressurised as high as 6.75 lb/sq ft.
So well did the flight testing go that Tyson was able to demonstrate the prototype at the SBAC Show at Farnborough two months after its first flight. Testing continued steadily through 1948 and the prototype was joined by TG267 and TG271. The second flew on 30 April 1948 with 1587kg Beryls and the third followed on 17 August 1948 with fully rated Beryls of 1746kg. The second to be built, TG267, was lost with its pilot at the Marine Aircraft Experimental Establishment at Felixstowe on 17 September 1949. He had been practising for a local air display in conditions of poor visibility and crashed into the sea. Squadron Leader ‘Pete’ Major took TG267 up that morning to prepare for the aerobatic routine he planned to perform for the public that afternoon. During a slow roll, he let the nose slip down while inverted, then instinctively pulled on the stick rather than pushing out from his upside-down position. The aircraft broke up on impact, and no trace of Major was found; much of the aircraft was salvaged over the next ten days.
Engine development continued on the other two with simulated failures (and one or two genuine ones), re-lighting sometimes being a problem. On one occasion Tyson suffered a double flame out at about 20,000ft and was unable to relight either engine. He had been some 20 miles South of the Isle of Wight and managed to glide home.
Chief Naval Test Pilot Lt Cmdr Eric “Winkle” Brown flew the third SR A/1, TG271, for the first and only time on 12 Aug 1949 at the behest of Saunders-Roe. He wrung out the tubby little ‘boat, reaching Mach .82, pretty much the top speed of the SR A/1, in a dive. approaching to land at Cowes and, at the very last moment when he was committed to the touch down, he saw a half submerged baulk of timber. The log tore a 4 5ft gash in the starboard front hull and ripped off the starboard stabilizing float. Despite his best efforts, Brown could not keep the starboard wing from digging in and cartwheeling TG271 onto its back. Struggling free underwater, Brown almost succumbed, but was held up by Geoffrey Tyson, the Saro test pilot responsible for the majority of the SR A/1 testing, who had leapt off the supporting launch when he saw Brown in trouble. Despite extensive searching, the sunken third SR A/1 prototype was never located, such are the peculiarities of the Solent tides.
Although the design of the SR A/1 was begun before the end of World War 2, its construction was authorised after hostilities ended. Export orders were hoped for. It became clear that exports were unlikely and this, together with the loss of the two aircraft brought the development programme to a halt.
Tests were resumed for a short period beginning in November, 1950, after a brief revival of interest during the Korean War.
The last public appearance of a SR A/1 was in June, 1951, when Geoffrey Tyson took the remaining prototype to London for display at the Festival of Britain. He landed on the Thames in Woolwich Reach and was towed to a mooring opposite where the Royal Festival Hall now stands. The aircraft, TG263, then bearing the registration G 12 1, remained for three days and was then towed back to Woolwich Reach.
The last remaining SR A/1 came to the end of its working life in June 1951 and it was presented to the College of Aeronautics at Cranfield. Its engines were removed and given elsewhere for a speed record attempt. Some time later, it passed to the Skyfame Museum at Staverton, near Cheltenham, and into the care of Mr Peter Thomas, its founder.
The completely restored first prototype, TG263, resides today at the Southampton Hall of Aviation, along with an example of its ejection seat (the first delivered by Martin-Baker to an aircraft manufacturer) and a MetroVick Beryl powerplant, both exhibited outside the airframe.

SR.A/1
Engines: 2 x Metropolitan-Vickers F2/4 Beryl turbojets, 1474-1746kg
Wingspan: 14.02 m / 46 ft 0 in
Length: 15.24 m / 50 ft 0 in
Height: 5.11 m / 17 ft 9 in
Wing area: 38.60 sq.m / 415.49 sq ft
Max take-off weight: 8633 kg / 19033 lb
Empty weight: 5108 kg / 11261 lb
Max. speed: 824 km/h / 512 mph
Crew: 1

In 1928 pioneer pilot/constructor A. V. Roe (later Sir) acquired an interest in S. E. Saunders Ltd and firm was reconstituted as Saunders-Roe. First new product was Cutty Sark flying-boat, with Fokker-type wing, built in small numbers; also larger Cloud (1931) of which RAF had 16.
Most successful product was twin-engined London biplane flying-boat of 1934 which served with RAF until 1941. Shrimp two-seat four-engined aircraft was built to serve as research vehicle for larger types. Company built the Supermarine Walrus and Sea Otter in quantity. SR/A1 of 1947 was world’s first jet-propelled flying-boat fighter, but was not ordered into service. Princess ten-turboprop commercial flying-boat of 1952 was a great technical achievement, but never entered service. SR.53, first flown in 1957, was experimental turbojet/rocket interceptor which demonstrated climb of about 15,240m/min.

Cierva joined Saunders-Roe in 1957.
Promising SR.177 development was abandoned despite international interest. Company entered helicopter field in early 1950s with small Skeeter (originally Cierva), though in 1928 S.E. Saunders had made Isaaco Helicogyre (which never flew) for the Air Ministry. Five-seat P.531 built 1958, but in 1959 company was acquired by Westland Aircraft, which developed the P.531 as the Wasp/Scout.

Don R. Saunders tried in the 70s and 80s to offer a homebuilt propeller jet utlising a blower driven by an internal combustion engine located inside the fuselage.
The engine was a Mazda 300 hp which resulted in a five-bladed fan ejecting air at the rear of the fuselage.
Saunders Aircraft Corporation produced 13 completed ST 27s and was beginning work on its all new ST 28, a commuter/taxi aircraft designed to meet FAR 25 for the U.S. market. In December 1975, the first production airplane flew; almost at the same time, Manitoba withdrew funding.