Bristol Boxkite

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Bristol Boxkite

1963 Replica of the Bristol Boxkite, now hanging in the Bristol City Museum and Art Gallery

Type two-seat trainer
Manufacturer British and Colonial Aeroplane Company
Maiden flight 29 July 1910
Introduced 1911
Primary users Royal Flying Corps
Royal Naval Air Service
South African Army
Australian Flying Corps
Number built 78
Developed from Henri Farman biplane

The Bristol Boxkite was an improved version of the early Henri Farman biplane, built in 1910 by the British and Colonial Aeroplane Company (later to be known as the Bristol Aeroplane Company).

Contents

[edit] History

The Boxkite was developed in 1910 at Britain's first aircraft factory in Filton, Bristol [1]. In spite of its name, it owed no more to the box kite principles developed by Lawrence Hargrave than other biplanes. It was powered by a 70 horsepower "Le Rhone" rotary engine. The aircraft first flew on the 29 July 1910 and went on to become Bristol's first successful production aeroplane. 76 were built, 61 of which were the extended military version, in the years building up to the First World War. Four of these planes constituted the first order placed by the British War Office when it was set up in 1911. Production was at the Filton factory, which was set up within a tramworks.

Being such an early aeroplane, it holds a number of "first" records:

Flight Lieutenant Pizey (born 1 April 1883 Clevedon, Bristol; died 11 June 1915 Athens, Greece) was one of the early pioneers of British flying, having gained his certificate No 61 in a Bristol Boxkite on Salisbury Plain on 14 February 1911 - he also took place in the Daily Mail Air Race that year [4]

It was also the first aeroplane to land upside down in Brooklands Sewerage farm - Flight Lieutenant Frederick Warren Merriam was the first to enact the scene from the film Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines[5]

No original Bristol Boxkites aeroplanes survive today, although three authentic flyable reproductions were created for the film Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines. One was sent to Australia, one to the Bristol City Museum and Art Gallery, and one to the Shuttleworth Collection in Bedfordshire

[edit] Specifications

General characteristics

  • Crew: 2
  • Length: 38 ft 6 in (11.73 m)
  • Wingspan: 46 ft 6 in (14.17 m)
  • Height: 11 ft 0 in (3.61 m)
  • Wing area: 517.0 ft² (48.03 m²)
  • Empty weight: 900 lb (408 kg)
  • Max takeoff weight: 1150 lb (522 kg)
  • Powerplant:Gnome rotary piston engine, 50 hp (37 kW)

Performance


[edit] Military Operators

Flag of Australia Australia
Flag of Bulgaria Bulgaria
Flag of Russia Russia
Flag of South Africa South Africa
Flag of Spain Kingdom of Spain
Flag of the United Kingdom United Kingdom

[edit] References

  1. ^ eccentrica
  2. ^ Point Cook may take off as big tourist attraction - National - www.theage.com.au
  3. ^ They Mounted up as Eagles - South African Military History Society - Journal
  4. ^ Clevedon Civic Society Military History Records
  5. ^ BBC NEWS | Magazine | My grandad was an aviation pioneer

[edit] External links

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