Saunders-Roe Duchess

Duchess
Role Flying boat airliner
Manufacturer Saunders-Roe
Status cancelled



The Saunders-Roe Duchess also known as the model P.131 was a British design for a large jet-powered flying boat from Saunders-Roe, based in Cowes on the Isle of Wight. The Duchess was designed to follow the propeller-driven Princess. The Duchess would have been a high-wing cantiliver monoplane with a conventional tail and a full-length planing bottom. It also had retractable stabiliser floats at each wingtip. It was to have had a pressurised and air-conditioned cabin for 74 passengers in two compartments with a freight hold in the centre. The six de Havilland Ghost turbojets were to have been mounted inside the wing roots. The company displayed a model of the aircraft at the 1950 Farnborough Air Show. Tasman Empire Airways considered ordering the aircraft for journeys between Australia and New Zealand but the aircraft was cancelled.

Specifications

Data from Saunders and Saro Aircraft since 1917[1]

General characteristics

Performance

See also


Related lists

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Saunders-Roe.
  1. London 1988, p. 316.