Bristol Type 110A

Type 110A
At the Olympia show of July 1929 with mock-up Neptune engine
Role Civil transport
National origin United Kingdom
Manufacturer Bristol Aeroplane Company
Designer Frank Barnwell
First flight 25 October 1929
Retired February 1930
Number built 1


The Bristol Type 110A was a single-engine biplane, accommodating four passengers in comfort for charter work. Designed by Frank Barnwell and built at Filton Aerodrome by the Bristol Aeroplane Company. No orders were obtained and only one aircraft was built.

Development

The Bristol 110A[1] was a four-passenger biplane aimed at the charter market, a slightly enlarged version of a projected Type 110 three-passenger aeroplane. It was a single-engine, single-bay biplane that could be powered by one of two smaller relatives of the nine-cylinder Bristol Jupiter radial engine: the five-cylinder, 220 hp (164 kW) Titan or the seven-cylinder 315 hp (235 kW) Neptune. The wings were unswept, unstaggered and of almost equal span, but the lower plane was of much narrower chord than the upper. Frise-type ailerons were fitted only on the upper wing. The Type 110A was an all-metal, fabric-covered aircraft with a flat-sided fuselage, a horn-balanced rudder and an unbraced horizontal tail carrying unbalanced elevators. The passenger cabin, located between the wings, had three windows on each side, one of which was in the starboard side door.[2] The pilot sat high ahead of the leading edge of the upper wing in a glazed cockpit behind the completely cowled engine. The undercarriage was of the divided type, with wide track main wheels and a tailskid.[1]

The Type 110A, registered G-AAFG,[3] first flew with the Titan engine, piloted by Cyril Uwins on 25 October 1929,[4] after its appearance with a mock-up Neptune engine at the Olympia Aero Show in July that year,[5] where its well-appointed cabin impressed visitors but gained no orders. The Neptune was installed in January 1930 and testing proceeded satisfactorily until the aircraft was damaged in a landing accident in early February; as there were no orders in sight, it was decide to abandon the project and the aircraft was scrapped.[6][7]

Specifications

Data from Barnes 1970, p. 238 Barnes does not say whether these specifications apply to the Titan of Neptune variant. Dimensions will not be much affected, weights and performance more so, They are more likely to refer to the Titan powered 110A as this was tested for longer.

General characteristics

Performance


References

Notes
Bibliography
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