Short Brothers Aircraft
There is a separate entry for the history of Short Brothers
Short Brothers Aircraft | ||
Model | Date | Detail |
No.1 Biplane | 1909 | Experimental aircraft |
No.2 Biplane | 1909 | Experimental aircraft |
No. 3 Biplane | - | - |
Dunne: D.5 | 1910 | Experimental Aircraft. |
Dunne: D.6 | 1911 | Experimental Monoplane. |
S.27 | 1910 | |
Tandem-Twin | 1911 | Variant of S.27 |
S.34 | 1911 | Long range version of S.27 |
S.36 | 1912 | Sports Aircraft. |
S.38 | 1912 | Coastal Patrol Trainer. |
Short S.39 Triple-Twin | 1911 | Based on S.27 |
S.41 | 1912 | Floatplane. |
S.42 | Monoplane | |
S.45 | 1912 | Seaplane |
S.46 | 1912 | Nicknamed the Double Dirty |
S.47 Triple Tractor | 1912 | Experimental Aircraft. |
Short Folder | 1913 | Generic name applied to many Short aircraft. |
Short Admiralty Type 3 | 1913 | Version of the Short Triple-Twin |
Short Admiralty Type 42 | Version of the S.41. | |
Short Admiralty Type 74 | 1914 | Biplane Tractor Seaplane. |
Short Admiralty Type 81 | 1913 | Floatplane |
S.80 | 1913 | Seaplane |
S.81 | 1914 | Gun-Carrying Seaplane |
Short Admiralty Type 135 | 1914 | Folding-wing Floatplane |
Type 827 | 1914 | Two-seat reconnaissance floatplane |
Type 184 | 1915 | Patrol seaplane; Torpedo bomber. Two crew. Powered by 225 hp [Sunbeam]]; 240 hp Sunbeam; 260 hp Sunbeam; 175 hp Sunbeam Maori III; 250 hp Eagle or 240 hp Renault. At least 650 were built. |
Short Bomber | 1915 | Night bomber with two crew. Single engined biplane. Powered by 225 hp Sunbeam or 250 hp Rolls-Royce engine |
Short Admiralty Type 166 | 1916 | Bombing Folding Seaplane. |
Type 320 | 1916 | Patrol seaplane; Torpedo bomber. Two crew. Partner to the 184 for maritime role. Powered by 310 hp Sunbeam Cossack or 320 hp Sunbeam Cossack. 137 aircraft produced. |
F3 Felixstowe | 1917 | Military Flying Boat. |
F5 Felixstowe | 1918 | Military Flying Boat. |
Short N.1B Shirl | 1918 | Single Seat Biplane. |
N.2B | 1917 | Reconnaissance Aircraft |
R31-class airship | 1918 | Airship |
Short Sporting Type | 1919 | Commercial folder biplane seaplane - Short Shrimp. |
Short Silver Streak | 1920 | All-metal aircraft |
N.3 Cromarty | 1921 | Twin-engined biplane flying boat |
Gnosspelius Gull | 1923 | Ultra-light monoplane. |
S.1 Cockle | 1924 | Single-seat sport monoplane flying boat, with a novel monocoque duralumin hull. |
Springbok | 1923 | Two-seater biplane |
S.4 Satellite | 1924 | Two-seater sporting monoplane |
Singapore I | 1926. | Twin engined biplane flying boat. Used by Alan Cobham for his 1927-8 round Africa flight. |
S.3b Chamois | 1927 | Version of Springbok |
S.6 Sturgeon | 1927 | Prototype naval reconnaissance aircraft. |
S.7 Mussel | 1926 | Experimental and trainer. |
Crusader | 1927 | Racing seaplane |
Calcutta | 1928. | Flying boat with slotted wings. |
Short S.10 Gurnard | 1929 | Fleet Fighter. |
Singapore II | 1930 | Did not enter production. Four built but all converted to Singapore III. |
Rangoon | 1930 | Three-engine general reconnaissance biplane flying boat. Six built. |
Valetta. | 1930 | Three-engined Monoplane Seaplane. |
Short-Kawanishi S.15 KF1 | 1930 | Military flying boat |
S.17 Kent | 1931 | Biplane Flying Boat Airliner |
S.14 Sarafand | 1932 | Very large biplane flying boat. Powered by six Rolls-Royce Buzzard engines mounted in tandem pairs. Crew of ten and capable of 1,450 mile range. Only one built. |
Scion | 1933 | Twin Engined Passenger Monoplane. |
Short S.18 / Short R.24/31 Knuckleduster | 1933 | General purpose flying-boat |
L.17 Scylla | 1934 | Biplane Airliner |
Singapore III | 1934 | General reconnaissance flying boat. Four tractor / pusher 730 hp Rolls-Royce Kestrel VIII or IX engines mounted on twin nacelles. Other sources say two 560 hp Rolls-Royce Kestrel IIIMS engines (tractor) and two 560 hp Rolls-Royce Kestrel IIMS engines (pusher) mounted in tandem pairs. 37 aircraft built. |
Short Mayo Composite | 1937 | Piggy-back long-range seaplane/flying boat combination of S.20 Mercury and S.21 Maia. |
Scion Senior | 1935 | 10-seater seaplane. |
Short S.23 Empire Flying Boat | 1936 | Flying boat mail and passenger carrier |
Short S.26 G-Class Flying Boat | 1936 | Development of the S.23, a flying boat mail and passenger carrier |
Short S.30 Empire Flying Boat | 1936 | Flying boat mail and passenger carrier |
S.25 Sunderland | 1937 | Military version of the 'C' class Empire flying boat. Used for maritime patrol and reconnaissance duties. Powered by 915 hp Bristol Pegasus XXII engines. 75 (MkI) aircraft built. |
Short S.25 Sandringham | 1937 | Civil flying boat |
Short S.26 G-Class | 1939 | Transport Flying Boat |
S.29 Stirling | 1939 | Four-engine heavy bomber. |
S.32 | - | Long-range transport monoplane (3 built and none completed). |
Short S.31 (Half-scale Stirling) | 1939 | - |
Short S.33 Empire Flying Boat | 1940 | Flying boat mail and passenger carrier. |
Short S.35 Shetland 1 | 1944 | Reconnaissance flying-boat |
Short S.45 Seaford | 1944 | Flying boat. |
Short S.45 Solent | 1946 | Passenger flying boat |
Short S.38 SA1 Sturgeon | 1946 | Reconnaissance Bomber |
Short S.39 SA2 Sturgeon | 1946 | Reconnaissance Bomber |
Short Brothers: Nimbus | 1947 | 2-seater civilian glider trainer |
Short S.40 Shetland 2 | 1947 | Reconnaissance flying-boat |
Short SB3 Sturgeon | - | Torpedo bomber |
Short Sealand | 1948 | |
Short SA4 Sperrin | 1951 | Experimental aircraft |
Short Brothers: SA5 | - | Project only |
Short Brothers: SA9 | - | Project only - Glider |
Short SB.1 | 1951 | Experimental glider |
Short SB.5 | 1952 | Experimental glider |
Short SB.4 Sherpa | 1953 | Experimental glider |
SB.6 Seamew | 1955 | Anti-submarine aircraft |
Short SB7 Sealand III | - | - |
Short SC1 | 1957 | Experimental aircraft |
Short SC9 / SD1 Canberra | 1961 | - |
Short SC7 Skyvan | 1963 | Cargo aircraft. |
Short SC5 Belfast | 1964 | Heavy airfreighter. |
Short 330 | 1974 | Transport aircraft. |
Short 360 | 1981 | Transport aircraft. |
Short C-23 Sherpa | 1984 | Transport aircraft. |
Short Tucano | 1986 | Trainer Aircraft. |
Short Brothers Aircraft |
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Sources of Information
- [1] Wikipedia
- The Aeroplanes of the Royal Flying Corps (Military Wing) by J. M. Bruce. Published in 1982. ISBN 0-370-30084-x
- The Encyclopedia of British Military Aircraft by Chaz Bowyer. Published in 1982. ISBN 1-85841-031-2
- Warplanes of the World 1918-1939 by Michael J. H. Taylor. Published 1981. ISBN 0-7110-1078-1