- Avro Canada Jetliner
infobox Aircraft
name = C102 Jetliner
type = jet airliner
manufacturer = Avro Canada
caption = Model of an Avro Canada C102
designer = James C. Floyd
first flight =10 August 1949
introduced = prototype only
retired =
status =
primary user =Trans Canada Airlines (intended)
more users =
produced =
number built = one (second prototype cancelled while in production)
unit cost =
variants with their own articles =The Avro C102 "Jetliner" was a Canadian prototype medium-range jet
airliner built byAvro Canada in 1949. It was beaten into the air by only 13 days by thede Havilland Comet , thereby becoming the secondjetliner in the world, yet the name "Jetliner" was more catchy and for many years all such aircraft were colloquially given that name. The aircraft was considered suitable for busy routes along the US eastern seaboard and garnered intense interest, notably fromHoward Hughes who even offered to start production under license. However continued delays in Avro's all-weather interceptor project, theAvro CF-100 , led to an order to stop working on the project in 1951, with the prototype Jetliner later cut up for scrap.Design and development
The C102 had been designed by Chief Designer
James C. Floyd for theTrans Canada Airlines (TCA) requirement of 1946. The requirement called for a 36-seat aircraft with a cruising speed of 425 miles per hour (684 km/h), a range of 1,200 miles (1,900 km), an average distance between stops of 250 miles (400 km) and longest single flight of 500 miles (800 km). The difference between the range and maximum airport distances was to allow for the required 45 minutes stacking and flight to get to a 120 mile (190 km) distant alternate airport in a 20 mph (30 km/h) headwind. The aircraft also needed to be able to operate from existing 4,000 ft (1,200 m) runways.Although bearing some resemblance to the
Avro Tudor 8 and 9 (which spawned the experimentalAvro Ashton ) [ Winchester 2005, p. 68.] , from the outset, Floyd's design was conceived as a commercial jet airliner. Initially it was planned that the plane was to be powered by twoRolls-Royce Avon engines, then still in early testing and known as the AJ65. Due to civil certification uncertainties with the Avon, the decision was made to replace the two engines with four less powerful engines. This, in turn, led to TCA pulling out of the program due to the increased maintenance costs, leaving it without an initial customer. Nevertheless, Avro continued with its plan to build the jet, selectingRolls-Royce Derwent s to replace the Avons.Testing
Two years later, the first prototype, CF-EJD (-X), started making taxiing tests, and first flew
10 August 1949 , only 25 months after the design had started, and only 13 days after the first flight of the DH Comet. On its second flight, on16 August , the landing gear failed to extend, and the plane had to make a belly-landing. However, the damage was minor, and the plane was in the air again in three weeks.In April 1950, the Jetliner carried the world's first jet airmail from
Toronto toNew York in 58 minutes– half the previous record (c.340 miles, 352mph). The flight was highly publicized and the crew was welcomed with a ticker tape parade through the streets of Manhattan. So new was the concept of jet power that the plane was made to park far from the terminal, and pans were placed under the engines in case they dripped any "self-igniting fuel." The Jetliner suffered a mysterious "cracking" sound on the trip and was forced to stay on, as the pilots refused to fly it back. This delay allowed it to be presented to a number of potential customers, where it was competing against considerably slower designs like the DC-6 and war-surplus DC-3s. On its return, (on the back of a train), the "cracking" problem was traced to the spar area around the engines, which was made much stronger. It was later learned the problem was actually too-close tolerances between the engine nacelle and the spar, simply making a looser fit would have had the same effect.At the time, in the mid-1950s, the
Cold War was starting and the Canadian authorities were in the midst of expanding the military. Avro was involved in designing the first dedicated jet-poweredall weather fighter for the RCAF at the time, theAvro CF-100 "Canuck." The project was somewhat delayed, although the company's continuing work on the Jetliner caused some controversy. After the plane returned, it still had no immediate sales prospects, thereforeC.D. Howe , (the "minister of everything"), ordered the program stopped in December 1951. The second prototype Jetliner, well on its way in the main assembly hangar, was broken up at that time.Nevertheless, only a few months later, the enigmatic
Howard Hughes first learned of the design and leased the Jetliner prototype for testing, flying it for a few circuits when it arrived in Culver City, California. He became a believer, imagining TWA and National delivering passengers fromNew York to vacation spots inFlorida in half the time of the competition. He became desperate to buy 30 Jetliners, but Avro had to repeatedly turn him down due to limited manufacturing capabilities and overwork on the CF-100 project. Hughes then started looking at US companies to build it for them;Convair proved interested and started studies on gearing up a production line. C.D. Howe again stepped in and insisted that Avro concentrate on its Orenda turbojet and CF-100 jet fighter programs.The project was almost restarted in 1953, when CF-100 production was in full swing, but this never happened. In 1955, TCA ordered 51
Vickers Viscount turboprop aircraft from Vickers-Armstrong in England. These were the first turbine-powered aircraft in regular service in North America. They continued in service until 1974.Cancellation
The Jetliner was later used as the aerial photo platform for the CF-100 project. On
10 December 1956 , the Jetliner was ordered surplused, and although it was donated to the National Research Council, they had no room for it in storage and took only the nose section for cockpit layout design. The rest of the Jetliner was cut up on13 December 1956 . The only surviving parts are the nose and cockpit section in theCanada Aviation Museum inOttawa .pecifications Avro C102 Jetliner
aircraft specifications
plane or copter?=plane
jet or prop?=jet
ref=
crew=
capacity=
payload main=
payload alt=
length main=82 ft 5 in
length alt=25.1 m
span main=98 ft
span alt=29.9 m
span sweep=
height main=26 ft 5 1/2 in
height alt=8.1 m
area main=
area alt=
airfoil=
empty weight main= 37,000 lb
empty weight alt= 16,783 kg
loaded weight main=
loaded weight alt=
useful load main=
useful load alt=
max takeoff weight main= 65,000 lb
max takeoff weight alt= 29,484 kg
more general=
engine (jet)=Rolls-Royce Derwent 5/17
type of jet=turbojet
number of jets=4
thrust main= 3,600 lbf
thrust alt= 16 kN
thrust original=
afterburning thrust main=
afterburning thrust alt=
engine (prop)=1
type of prop=
number of props=1
power main=
power alt=
power original=
max speed main= 500 mph
max speed alt= 805 km/h
cruise speed main=420 mph
cruise speed alt= 676 km/h
stall speed main=
stall speed alt=
never exceed speed main=
never exceed speed alt=
range main= 1,250 miles
range alt=2000 km
ceiling main= 40,300 ft
ceiling alt= 12,300 m
climb rate main=2,220 ft/min
climb rate alt= 677 m/min
loading main=
loading alt=
thrust/weight=
power/mass main=
power/mass alt=
more performance=
armament=
avionics=ee also
aircontent
related=
similar aircraft=
*Avro Ashton
*de Havilland Comet
see also=
*Vickers VC.1 Viking - Nene VikingReferences
Notes
Bibliography
* Floyd, Jim. "The Avro Canada C102 Jetliner." Erin, Ontario: Boston Mills Press, 1986. ISBN 0-919783-66-X.
* Milberry, Larry. "Aviation In Canada". Toronto: McGraw-Hill Ryerson Ltd., 1979. ISBN 0-07-082778-8.
* Winchester, Jim. "X-Planes and Prototypes". London: Amber Books Ltd., 2005. ISBN 1-904687-40-7.External links
* [http://www.avroland.ca/al-c102.html Avroland: The Avro C.102 Jetliner]
* [http://www.avroarrow.org/Jetliner/JetlinerIntro.html Arrow Recovery Canada: Avro Jetliner]
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