Camel | |
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Role | Single-seat glider |
National origin | United Kingdom |
Manufacturer | Scott Light Aircraft |
First flight | 1939 |
Number built | 1 |
The Sproule-Ivanoff Camel was a 1930s British single-seat medium performance glider designed by J.S Sproule and Alexander Ivanoff and built by Scott Light Aircraft of Dunstable, Bedfordshire.[1][2]
At the end of 1937 Sproule and Ivanoff decided to design a glider that would be cheap, be easy to control and have a good speed range. It would also have wing-folding for quick assembly.[1] The glider was a high wing strut-supported single-spar monoplane with no flaps of airbrakes and an enclosed single-seat cockpit.[1] The Camel first flew at Ratcliffe in Leicestershire in 1939.[2] In 1949 the Camel was registered to Alexander Ivanoff as G-ALLL.[3]
On the 19 August 1951 the Camel was destroyed in a fatal mid-air collision with another glider over Dunstable.[4][5] The pilot, an instructor with the London Gliding Club, was killed when the Camel suddenly descended on top of an EoN Olympia glider.[5] The pilot of the Olympia, from the South Downs Gliding Club, took evasive action when he saw the Camel descend; the glider lost four foot of wing tip but landed safely.[5] The Camel did not have a certificate of airworthiness, which was not a compulsory requirement. The Deputy Coroner recorded a verdict of accidental death, saying "there was no evidence that either glider was anything but airworthy".[6]
Data from VGC News[2]
General characteristics
Performance
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