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词条 Bristol Coanda Monoplanes
释义

  1. Design and development

  2. Operational history

  3. Variants

  4. Operators

  5. Aircraft on display

  6. Specifications (Military)

  7. See also

  8. References

  9. External links

{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2016}}{{Use British English|date=December 2016}}
name = Bristol-Coanda Monoplanesimage = Bristol Coanda.jpgcaption =

}}{{Infobox Aircraft Type

type = Trainermanufacturer = Bristol Aeroplane Companydesigner = Henri Coandăfirst flight = 1912introduced = introduction= retired = status = primary user = more users = produced = number built = 37unit cost =developed from = variants with their own articles = Bristol TB.8
}}

The Bristol Coanda Monoplanes were a series of monoplane trainers designed by the Romanian designer Henri Coandă for the British company British and Colonial Aeroplane Company.

Several versions of the plane were built from 1912 onwards with both tandem and side-by-side cockpits. Several were purchased by the War Office for use as trainers by the Royal Flying Corps. International purchases were by Italy and Romania. One example survives in the Gianni Caproni Museum of Aeronautics, Trento, Italy.

Design and development

The Romanian aircraft designer Henri Coandă joined Bristol in January 1912. His first design for Bristol was a two-seat monoplane trainer, a development of the Bristol Prier Monoplane, controlled by wing warping. The first prototype flew in March 1912.[1] A series of similar aircraft followed with both tandem and side-by-side cockpits, known as the School Monoplane and the Side by Side Monoplane.

A more powerful derivative was built for a competition to provide aircraft for the British War Office. Two aircraft, known as Competition Monoplanes were built and entered into the competition, together with two Bristol Gordon England biplanes. The aircraft were flown by Harry Busteed, Bristol's test pilot and James Valentine.[1]

These did well in the competition, rated equal fifth and were described at the time as "well-designed and well-constructed" though criticised as "heavy for the wing area" and lacking in power.[2] This resulted in their being purchased by the War Office for use as trainers by the Royal Flying Corps.[1] These two aircraft formed the basis for a revised military trainer, the Military Monoplane, which had increased wingspan.

The Military Monoplane later formed the basis for the Bristol TB.8, several being rebuilt into TB8s.

Operational history

The first School and Side by Side monoplanes entered service with flying schools operated by Bristol at Larkhill and Brooklands. One tandem and two side-by-side machines were sold to Italy, with four tandem and three side-by-side aircraft being sold to Romania.

The two Competition Monoplanes were bought by the War Office after the Military Aircraft Competition, being used as trainers for the RFC. However, on 10 September 1912, one of the Competition Monoplanes crashed, killing Lieutenants Edward Hotchkiss and Claude Bettington.[3] While this was traced to one of the bracing wires becoming detached, it resulted in a five-month ban of flying of all monoplanes by the military wing of the RFC.[1]

Despite this ban, Military Monoplanes were purchased by Romania and Italy, with a production license being granted to Caproni (although this license was later cancelled, only two being built by Caproni).[1]

Variants

School Monoplane

Trainer aircraft with tandem cockpits. Powered by 50 hp (40 kW) Gnome engine. Six built.

Side by Side Monoplane

Trainer aircraft with side-by-side cockpit. Powered by 50 hp (40 kW) Gnome engine. Six built.

Competition Monoplane

Two aircraft built for War Office Military Aeroplane Competition. Powered by 80 hp (60 kW) Gnome engine.

Daimler Monoplane

Single aircraft powered by 70 hp (50 kW) Daimler engine. Overweight and unsuccessful.

Military Monoplane

Improved development of Competition Monoplane with increased wingspan. Powered by 80 hp (60 kW) Gnome engine. 21 built.

Operators

{{flag|Kingdom of Italy}}
  • Corpo Aeronautico Militare
{{ROM}}
  • Royal Romanian Air Force
{{UK}}
  • Royal Flying Corps

Aircraft on display

A single Bristol Coanda Monoplane survives, in the Gianni Caproni Museum of Aeronautics, Trento, Italy, being the oldest surviving Bristol aircraft still in existence. This aircraft was a pattern aircraft sent to Caproni as a basis for their licensed production.,[4] never being flown, but was restored to a complete example for display at the museum[5]

Specifications (Military)

{{aircraft specifications
|plane or copter?=plane
|jet or prop?=prop
|ref=Bristol Aircraft Since 1910[6]
|crew=two
|capacity=
|length main= 29 ft 3 in
|length alt= 8.92 m
|span main= 37 ft 8 in
|span alt= 11.48 m
|height main=
|height alt=
|area main= 450 ft²
|area alt= 41.8 m²
|airfoil=
|empty weight main= 970lb
|empty weight alt= 441 kg
|loaded weight main=
|loaded weight alt=
|useful load main=
|useful load alt=
|max takeoff weight main= 1,665 lb
|max takeoff weight alt= 757 kg
|more general=
|engine (prop)=Gnome
|type of prop=Rotary engine
|number of props=1
|power main= 50, 80, 100hp (different versions of the Gnome rotary)
|power alt=
|power original=
|max speed main= 56–61 knots
|max speed alt= 65–70 mph, 105–113 km/h
|cruise speed main=
|cruise speed alt=
|never exceed speed main=
|never exceed speed alt=
|stall speed main=
|stall speed alt=
|range main=
|range alt=
|ceiling main=
|ceiling alt=
|climb rate main=
|climb rate alt=
|loading main=
|loading alt=
|thrust/weight=
|power/mass main=
|power/mass alt=
|more performance=*Endurance: 5 hours
  • Climb to 3000 ft (915 m): 11 min

|armament=*12 x 10 lb (4.5 kg) light bombs
  • Some were equipped with a 7.92 machine gun

|avionics=
}}

See also

{{aircontent
|related=*Bristol TB.8
|similar aircraft=
|lists=
|see also=
}}

References

1. ^{{ cite web |url= http://www.flightglobal.com/pdfarchive/view/1912/1912%20-%200698.html |title=The Military Competition Machines |work=Flight |publisher=Flightglobal |date=1912-08-03 |accessdate=2013-10-13}}
2. ^{{cite web |url= http://www.flightglobal.com/pdfarchive/view/1912/1912%20-%200988.html |title=Military Trials |work=Flight |date=1912-11-02 |page=988}}
3. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.rafmuseum.org.uk/milestones-of-flight/british_military/1912.html |title=RAF Museum |accessdate=2007-07-19 |work= |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20070704135346/http://www.rafmuseum.org.uk/milestones-of-flight/british_military/1912.html |archivedate=2007-07-04 |deadurl=yes |df= }}
4. ^{{cite web |url= http://www.ctie.monash.edu.au/hargrave/bristol.html |title=The Pioneers: An Anthology: Sir Stanley White and his Bristol Aeroplanes 1910–1918 |accessdate=2007-07-19 |work= }}
5. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.mtsn.tn.it/caproni/velivoli/caproni-bristol.html |title=Museo G. Caproni – aeronautica, scienza e innovazione |accessdate=2007-07-19 |language=Italian |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20070927224653/http://www.mtsn.tn.it/caproni/velivoli/caproni-bristol.html |archivedate=2007-09-27 |deadurl=yes |df= }}
6. ^{{Cite book |last=Barnes |first=CH |title=Bristol Aircraft Since 1910 |edition=First |year=1964 |place=London |publisher=Putnam |page=}}{{page needed|date=August 2016}}

External links

{{commons category|Bristol-Coanda Monoplanes}}
  • {{ cite web |url= http://www.flightglobal.com/pdfarchive/view/1912/1912%20-%200698.html |title=The Military Competition Machines |work=Flight |publisher=Flightglobal |date=1912-08-03}} – contemporary photographs
{{Bristol aircraft}}

6 : Bristol Aeroplane Company aircraft|British military trainer aircraft 1910–1919|Henri Coandă|Single-engined tractor aircraft|Mid-wing aircraft|Rotary-engined aircraft

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