The Short Admiralty Type 74 was a single-engined biplane tractor seaplane with non-folding wings, which saw service with the Royal Naval Air Service during the First World War.
Admiralty Type 74 | |
---|---|
General information | |
Type | Military reconnaissance biplane seaplane |
Manufacturer | Short Brothers |
Designer | |
Primary user | Royal Navy |
Number built | 7 |
History | |
Manufactured | Eastchurch |
Introduction date | 1914 |
First flight | 4 January 1914 |
Developed from | Short Admiralty Type 42 |
Design and development
editThe Type 74 incorporated some of the innovations Horace Short had introduced to the Short Admiralty Type 42, including manganese-steel tube struts instead of wood. In addition to the two main rubber-sprung floats below the fuselage and the single tail float, it also had smaller floats attached below the lower wingtips. Ailerons were mounted on the upper wing only, the latter extending beyond the span of the lower wing. The extensions were braced by diagonal struts to the lower wingtips.
Since it was intended for use as a coastal patrol seaplane operating from coastal stations, there was no requirement for the Type 74 to have folding wings.[1]
The Type 74 was powered by a 100 hp (74.6 kW) Gnome double Omega engine, which provided a maximum flight duration of five hours.[2]
Operational history
editIn 1913 the Royal Navy ordered seven 100 hp biplane seaplanes from Shorts, which were assigned the company's serial numbers 69-75. The first of these flew on 4 January 1914, piloted by Gordon Bell, Chief Test Pilot at Shorts. He was accompanied on this first flight by Charles Richard Fairey (later Sir Richard Fairey), who left Shorts in 1915 to found the Fairey Aviation company. When this first aircraft was delivered to the Royal Navy air station on the Isle of Grain it received the Navy's serial number 74, so this and the remaining six aircraft from the batch (Navy numbers 74-80) were therefore known as the Admiralty Type 74 according to the rules in use at the time.
Of the seven aircraft, four (including Naval nos. 75 and 79) were dispatched to the air station at Dundee, the other three remaining at the Grain air station. The Dundee aircraft took part in the 1914 Royal Fleet Review off Spithead as part of a contingent of 17 seaplanes and four airships.[3]
Operators
editSpecifications
editData from Shorts Aircraft since 1900[4]
General characteristics
- Crew: 2
- Length: 39 ft 0 in (11.89 m)
- Wingspan: 57 ft 0 in (17.37 m)
- Wing area: 580 sq ft (54 m2)
- Empty weight: 2,100 lb (953 kg)
- Gross weight: 2,700 lb (1,225 kg)
- Powerplant: 1 × Gnome Monosoupape 9 Type B-2 9-cylinder air-cooled rotary piston engine, 100 hp (75 kW)
- Propellers: 2-bladed fixed-pitch propeller
Performance
- Maximum speed: 65 mph (105 km/h, 56 kn)
- Endurance: 5 hours
References
edit- ^ The aircraft sometimes referred to by the Admiralty as the "Short Improved Type 74" was in fact a folder version of the prototype Short Type 135; three such aircraft took part in the Cuxhaven Raid.
- ^ Barnes and James, p.99.
- ^ "British Military Aviation in 1914 - Part 1". www.rafmuseum.org.uk. Archived from the original on 3 September 2007. Retrieved 3 July 2020.
- ^ Barnes, C.H.; James, D.N (1989). Shorts Aircraft since 1900. London: Putnam. pp. 88–99. ISBN 0-85177-819-4.
Further reading
edit- Lewis, Peter (1962). British Aircraft 1809-1914. London: Putnam. p. 458.
- Mason, Francis K. (19 May 2003). The British bomber since 1914 (1st (large format) ed.). London: Putnam. p. 18. ISBN 978-0851778617.
- Thetford, Owen (1991). British naval aircraft since 1912 (6th rev. ed.). London: Naval Institute Press. p. 457. ISBN 1-55750-076-2.
- Tagg, Michael H. (2001). British aircraft before the Great War. Atglen, PA: Schiffer Pub. p. 273. ISBN 978-0764312076.