Bristol Brabazon

Bristol Brabazon

Infobox Aircraft
name= Brabazon


caption= Bristol Brabazon model
type= Airliner
manufacturer= Bristol Aeroplane Company
designer=
first flight= 4 September 1949
introduced=
retired= 1953
status= Only example scrapped in 1953
primary user=
more users=
produced=
number built= 1
unit cost=
variants with their own articles=

The Bristol Type 167 Brabazon was a large airliner, designed by the Bristol Aeroplane Company to fly transatlantic routes from the United Kingdom to the United States. The prototype was delivered in 1949, only to prove a commercial failure when airlines felt the plane was too large and expensive to be useful. Despite its size, comparable to a Boeing 747, it was designed to carry only 100 passengers, albeit in roomy conditions not generally found on modern aircraft. In the end only a single prototype was flown; it was broken up in 1953 for scrap, along with an uncompleted second fuselage.

Development

In 1943, a British government committee met under the leadership of Lord Brabazon of Tara to investigate the needs of the British civilian airliner market.

The Brabazon Committee delivered a report, known as the "Brabazon Report", calling for the construction of four of five designs they had studied. Type I was a large transatlantic airliner, Type III a smaller airliner for the Empire air routes, and Type IV a jet powered 500 mph (800 km/h) airliner. The Type I and IV were considered to be very important to the industry, notably the jet powered Type IV which would give the UK a commanding lead in jet transports.

Bristol had already studied a large bomber design starting as early as 1937, but nothing had come of this. In 1942 the Air Ministry published a tender for a new super-heavy bomber design, and Bristol dusted off their original work and updated it for their newer and much more powerful Bristol Centaurus engines. This led to a design with a range of 5,000 miles (8,000 km), 225 foot (69 m) wing span, eight engines buried in the wings driving four pusher propellers, and enough fuel for transatlantic range. This "100 ton bomber" and designs from the other major manufacturers were in many ways the British analogues to the American Convair B-36. However the Air Ministry later changed their mind and decided to continue development of the Avro Lancaster, (leading to the Avro Lincoln) instead.

A year later the Brabazon Report was published and Bristol was able to respond with a slightly modified version of their bomber to fill the needs for the Type I requirement. Their earlier work was the sort of performance the Brabazon committee was looking for, and they were given a contract for two prototype aircraft. After further work on the design a final concept was published in November 1944. It was for a 177 ft (53.9 m) fuselage with 230 ft (70.1 m) wingspan (35 ft (11 m) more than a Boeing 747) powered by eight Bristol Centaurus 18-cylinder radial engines nested in pairs in the wing. These drove eight paired contra-rotating propellers on four forward-facing nacelles.

The Brabazon Report was backward-thinking in one aspect however. When considering the people who would fly in the aircraft they designed, they thought in the context of wealthy people or those on governmental work as being the only ones able to afford air travel at that point. The idea that a larger aircraft would make flying less expensive, and thereby open the market to a wider clientele, never appears to have occurred to them.Fact|date=July 2007 Instead they assumed that the wealthy flying the plane would consider a long trip by air to be uncomfortable, and they designed the Type I for luxury, demanding 6 m³ (200 ft³) of room for every passenger, and 8 m³ (270 ft³) for luxury. This is about three times the interior room of a small car.

To meet these requirements the Type 167 specified a huge 25 foot (7.6 m) diameter fuselage, which is about 5 ft (1.5 m) greater than a 747, with full-length upper and lower decks. This enclosed sleeping berths for 80 passengers, a dining room, 37 seat cinema, promenade and bar; or day seats for 150 people. The Committee recommended a narrower fuselage designed for 50 passengers. BOAC agreed, but preferred a design for only 25 passengers. An agreement with the airline eventually led to an interior layout housing a forward area with six compartments, each for six passengers and a seventh for just three; a mid-section above the wing with 38 seats arranged around tables in groups of four with a pantry and galley; and a rear area with 23 seats in an aft-facing movie theatre with a cocktail bar and lounge. Like the Saunders-Roe Princess, the Brabazon concept was a fusion of pre-war and post-war thinking, using highly advanced design and engineering to build an aircraft that was no longer required in the post-war world.

A tremendous effort was put into saving weight. The Type 167 used a number of non-standard gauges of skinning in order to tailor every panel to the strength required, thereby saving several tonnes of metal. The large span and mounting of the engines close inboard, together with structural weight economies, demanded some new measure to prevent bending of wing surfaces in turbulence. A system of gust alleviation was developed for the Brabazon, using servos triggered from a probe in the aircraft's nose. Hydraulic power units were also designed to operate the giant control surfaces. The Brabazon was the first aircraft with 100% powered flying controls, the first with electric engine controls, and the first with high-pressure hydraulics.

Building the aircraft was a challenge. Bristol's existing factory in Filton was too small to handle what was one of the largest aircraft in the world, and the 2,000 ft (610 m) runway was too short to launch it. Construction of the first prototype's fuselage started in October 1945 in another hangar while a gigantic hall for final assembly was built, whose designer, T. P. O'Sullivan, was awarded the Telford Premium. The runway was lengthened to 8,000 ft (2,440 m).

In 1946 it was decided to make the second prototype based on the Bristol Coupled Proteus turboprop engines instead of the less powerful Centaurus, increasing cruising speed from 260 to 330 mph (420 to 530 km/h) while reducing the empty weight by about 10,000 lb (4.5 t). This would be known as the Brabazon Mark II, which would be able to cross the Atlantic in a reduced time of 12 hours.

The Mk.I aircraft, registration G-AGPW, rolled out for engine runs in December 1948, and flew for the first time, over Avonmouth for 25 minutes, on 4 September 1949 captained by Bristol Chief Test Pilot Bill Pegg. It flew to about 3,000 feet at 160 miles per hour and landed at 100kts, throttling back at 50 feet. Four days later it was presented at the Farnborough Airshow before starting testing in earnest. It was demonstrated at the 1950 Farborough Airshow with a take-off, clean configuration fly-past and a landing. During June 1950 she visited London's Heathrow Airport, making a number of successful takeoffs and landings, and was demonstrated at the 1951 Paris Air Show. By this point BOAC had lost any interest in the design, if it ever really had any, and although some interest was shown by BEA on flying the prototype itself, various problems that would be expected of a prototype meant it never received an airworthiness certificate.

By 1952 about £3.4m had been spent on development (£53.4m year in year-2000 pounds) and it showed no signs of being purchased by any airline. In March the British government announced that work on the second prototype had been postponed. In October 1953, after less than 400 hours flying time, the first prototype was broken up, along with the uncompleted Mk.II prototype. All that remains are a few parts at the Bristol Industrial Museum and Scotland's Museum of Flight.

Although considered a failure and a white elephant, the record of the Brabazon is not entirely unfavourable. At least half of the large sums spent on the project was put into infrastructure, including the large hangars and runway at Filton. This meant that Bristol was now in an excellent position to continue production of other designs. In addition, many of the techniques developed as a part of the Brabazon project were applicable to any aircraft, not just airliners.

Bristol had also won the contract for the "unimportant" Type III aircraft, which they delivered as the Bristol Britannia. Using all of the advancements of the Brabazon meant the Britannia had the best payload fraction of any aircraft up to that point, and it kept that record for a number of years. Although the Britannia was delayed after problems with the Type IV, the de Havilland Comet, it went on to be a workhorse for many airlines into the 1970s. The Britannia is still considered by many to be the ultimate propeller driven airliner.

pecifications

aircraft specifications

plane or copter?=plane
jet or prop?=prop

crew=
capacity= 100 passengers (ref. Bristol's Brabazon brochure)
length main=177 ft
length alt=54.0 m
span main=230 ft
span alt=70 m
height main=50 ft
height alt=15 m
area main=5,317 ft²
area alt=494.0 m²
empty weight main=145,100 lb
empty weight alt=65,820 kg
loaded weight main=
loaded weight alt=
max takeoff weight main=290,000 lb
max takeoff weight alt=130,000 kg
engine (prop)=Bristol Centaurus
type of prop=radial engines
number of props=8
power main=2,650 hp
power alt=1,860 kW
max speed main=300 mph
max speed alt=260 knots, 480 km/h
cruise speed main=250 mph
cruise speed alt=220 knots, 400 km/h
range main=5,500 mi
range alt=4,800 nm, 8,900 km
ceiling main=25,000 ft
ceiling alt=7,600 m
climb rate main=
climb rate alt=
max loading main=54 lb/ft²
max loading alt=270 kg/m²
max power/mass main=0.073 hp/lb
max power/mass alt=120 W/kg

External links

* [http://www.aviationarchive.org.uk/stories/pages.php?enum=GE121&pnum=0&maxp=9 The Bristol Brabazon - Engineering masterpiece or Great White Elephant]
* [http://www.unrealaircraft.com/classics/brab.php Bristol Brabazon profile]
*cite news| url=http://www.damninteresting.com/?p=939#more-939| author=Matt Castle| date=2008-02-01| title=The Plane That Flew Too Soon| work=Damn Interesting

ee also

*Saunders-Roe Princess
*Hughes H-4 Hercules
*Convair XC-99

aircontent
related=
similar aircraft=
see also=
lists=
* List of airliners


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