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Short Sporting Type

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Sporting Type Seaplane
Role Commercial folder biplane seaplane
National origin United Kingdom
Manufacturer Short Brothers
Designer Francis Webber
First flight 1919-12-10
Introduction 1920
Retired 1924
Number built 3

The Short Sporting Type Seaplane was a single-engined folder biplane which first flew in 1919, Shorts' first post-World War I aircraft.[1] Originally designed to an RAF specification (RAF XXXII)[1] issued during the war for two training seaplanes, three aircraft were produced as a commercial venture. Only the first was sold, the other two being cannabalised for parts and then scrapped in 1924.

Note: Frequent references to the Short Shrimp refer to this aircraft type, although this name was applied to the first Sporting Type only.

Design

The Sporting Type was a four-seat, single-engined biplane with twin wooden floats mounted on wire-braced struts below the fuselage. It had two cockpits, the forward cockpit for the pilot and a passenger sitting in tandem, the other for two passengers sitting abreast; the rear cockpit could also function as cargo room, increasing the aircraft's operational flexibility. The fuselage was of semi-monocoque plywood construction with a fabric fairing.

The upper and lower wings were of equal span and chord; on the first aircraft (named Shrimp) the lower wing had a slight dihedral, while the upper wing was flat. On the two later aircraft both wings had equal dihedral. All three were fitted with folding wings[2] (which Shorts had developed and patented in the years 1913 -1915[3]).

In plan view the twin main floats, like those of the Short N.2B, were square-fronted with a slight increase in beam from front to rear, while the stern tapered to a point like a mitred arch. They had a concave bottom (the edges were protected by metal strips[4]) and a sharp step at approximately 3/4 length; a tail-float was fitted to the fuselage below the conventional tailplane. Attached to the rear of the tail-float was a taxying rudder, with an additional drop-plate which improved steering on water and which, thanks to the hinged mounting at the forward end, would rise up into its recess in the tail-float on contact with the ground when beaching. Wingtip floats were deemed unnecessary. A detail drawing, which appeared in Flight Magazine in 1920, shows the empennage and tail-float assembly, including the hinged rudder drop-plate.[5]

There was also provision for the attachment of beaching wheels: Each float had a watertight tranverse tube to which a main wheel could be fitted and there was a socket for a detachable swivelling tailwheel at the rear of the tail-float, just foward of the taxying rudder. A side-view photograph of the Sporting Type (taken at Olympia in July 1920), showing the port beaching-wheel in place, was published in Flight Magazine.[6]

Development

The first of the three Sporting Types (Shrimp) was powered by a Beardmore 160 hp (119 kW) engine.[1] Registered G-EAPZ, it was first flown on the 10 December 1919 by test pilot J.L. Parker.[7] Shortly afterwards it was bought by the Australian Lebbeus Hordern, who learned to fly in it. Having had the Beardmore engine replaced by the 230 hp (172 kw) Siddeley Puma, he shipped it to Australia in 1921, where it was re-registered as G-AUPZ in June 1922 (and later VH-UPZ). The Shrimp was used in two surveys of the coast of New Guinea, during which a film was made which was later shown in the UK under the name "Pearls and Savages". It crashed in Sidney Harbour in January 1923 and was written off.[2][8]

The two further Sporting Types remained unnamed. The second was fitted first with the Puma engine and flew for the first time on 28-07-1920, after having been displayed in the same month at London's Olympia exhibition centre.[6] It was found by Parker to have greater lateral stability than the Shrimp, due to the dihedral on both wings. Following an accident in September of the same year, the Puma was replaced by a 300 hp (224 kw) Hispano-Suiza engine.[2] The third aircraft, which first flew on 21-01-1921, was fitted with the Puma engine. Neither aircraft was sold and both were taken out of service and cannibalised for engines and instruments before being scrapped in 1924.[9]

Specifications (with Siddeley Puma engine)

Data from Barnes & James 1989, pp.159-162.

General characteristics

  • Crew: 1
  • Capacity: 4

Performance

See also

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era
Short N.2B

References

Notes

  1. ^ a b c Barnes & James 1989, p.159.
  2. ^ a b c Barnes & James 1989, p.161.
  3. ^ Patents secured by Short Brothers including patents nos. 1792/13, 15727/13 and 28610/13, 5290/14, 20537/14 and 9276/15, see Barnes & James, 1989, pp. 92, 110
  4. ^ Flight Magazine, Olympia report 1920, p.798.
  5. ^ Flight Magazine, Olympia report 1920, p.796.
  6. ^ a b Flight Magazine, Olympia report 1920, p.797.
  7. ^ Barnes & James 1989, p.160.
  8. ^ "Civil Aircraft Register of Great Britain between WWI and WWII" (html). Retrieved 2-10-2009. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  9. ^ Barnes & James 1989, p.162.

Bibliography

Barnes C.H. & James D.N (1989). Shorts Aircraft since 1900. London: Putnam. p. 159-162. ISBN 0-85177-819-4. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help) "Olympia 1920" (PDF). Flight Magazine. Vol. XII (30). London: Reed Business Information: 796–798. 1920-07-22. Retrieved 2009-10-02. {{cite journal}}: |volume= has extra text (help); Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)