- Cierva C.24
-
C.24 de Havilland C.24 at the de Havilland Aircraft Heritage Centre Role Utility autogyro Manufacturer de Havilland Designer Juan de la Cierva First flight September 1931[1] Status Museum exhibit Produced 1931 Number built 1 The de Havilland C.24 was a two seat autogiro built by de Havilland at its Stag Lane works in England in 1931, using a Cierva rotor head coupled to the cabin of a de Havilland DH.80A Puss Moth, and driven by a 120hp Gipsy III engine. It was withdrawn from use by December 1934[2].
A single example (G-ABLM) was produced and is part of the Science Museum collection. In 2008 it was on loan to the Mosquito Aircraft Museum at Salisbury Hall, near London Colney in Hertfordshire. In flight, it had a maximum speed of approx 105 knots.
Specifications
Data from Jackson 1978 p.524
General characteristics
- Crew: 2
- Length: 20 ft 0 in (6.10 m)
- Main rotor diameter: 34 ft 0 in (10.36 m)
- Empty weight: 1,280 lb (955 kg)
- Gross weight: 1,800 lb (1,343 kg)
- Powerplant: 1 × de Havilland Gipsy III 4-cylinder inverted aircooled inline, 120 hp (90 kW)
Performance
- Maximum speed: 115 mph (185 km/h)
- Cruise speed: 100 mph (164 km/h)
- Range: 350 miles (563 km)
References
Citations
- ^ Jackson 1978, pp. 524
- ^ "UK Certificate of Registration No. 3138, 22 April 1931" (in English). UK Civil Aviation Authority. http://www.caa.co.uk/docs/HistoricalMaterial/G-ABLM.pdf. Retrieved 2009-01-11.
Bibliography
- Jackson, A.J. (1978). de Havilland Aircraft since 1909. London: Putnam Publishing. ISBN 0 370 30022 X.
External Links
- "This Autogyro Equals Speed Of Ordinary Airplane" Popular Mechanics, March 1932 bottom of page
de Havilland and Airco aircraft By manufacturer
designationBiplane No.1 · Biplane No.2
DH.1 · DH.2 · DH.3 · DH.4 · DH.5 · DH.6 · DH.9 / DH.9A / DH.9C · DH.10 · DH.11 · DH.12 · DH.14 · DH.15 · DH.16 · DH.17 · DH.18 · DH.19 · DH.20 · DH.21 · DH.22 · DH.23 · DH.24 · DH.25 · DH.26 · DH.27 · DH.28 · DH.29 · DH.30 · DH.31 · DH.32 · DH.33 · DH.34 · DH.35 · DH.36 · DH.37 · DH.38 · DH.39 · DH.40 · DH.41 · DH.42 · DH.43 · DH.44 · DH.45 · DH.46 · DH.47 · DH.48 · DH.49 · DH.50 · DH.51 · DH.52 · DH.53 · DH.54 · DH.55 · DH.56 · DH.57 · DH.58 · DH.59 · DH.60 · DH.61 · DH.62 · DH.63 · DH.64 · DH.65 · DH.66 · DH.67 · DH.68 · DH.69 · DH.70 · DH.71 · DH.72 · DH.73 · DH.74 · DH.75 · DH.76 · DH.77 · DH.78 · DH.79 · DH.80 · DH.81 · DH.82 · DH.83 · DH.84 · DH.85 · DH.86 · DH.87 · DH.88 · DH.89 · DH.90 · DH.91 · DH.92 · DH.93 · DH.94 · DH.95 · DH.96 · DH.97 · DH.98 · DH.99 · DH.100 · DH.101 · DH.102 · DH.103 · DH.104 · DH.105 · DH.106 · DH.107 · DH.108 · DH.109 · DH.110 · DH.111 · DH.112 · DH.113 · DH.114 · DH.115 · DH.116 · DH.117 · DH.118 · DH.119 · DH.120 · DH.121 · DH.122 · DH.123 · DH.124 · DH.125 · DH.126 · DH.127 · DH.128 · DH.129 · DH.130By role FightersBombersPassengerSportsDH.51 · Hawk Moth · Humming Bird · Moth · Puss Moth · Leopard Moth · Hornet Moth
TrainersTiger Moth · Don · Moth Minor
RacersTechnical School Aircraft produced by Cierva/Cierva Autogiro Company/Weir Lists relating to aviation General Aircraft (manufacturers) · Aircraft engines (manufacturers) · Airlines (defunct) · Airports · Civil authorities · Museums · Registration prefixes · Rotorcraft (manufacturers) · TimelineMilitary Accidents/incidents Records Categories:- De Havilland aircraft
- British civil utility aircraft 1930–1939
- Autogyros
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