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Not What You Meant?  There are 57 definitions for Vulcan.

Vickers Vulcan

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Vickers Vulcan
Type Airliner
Manufacturer Vickers
Designed by Rex Pierson
Maiden flight April 1922
Introduced 1 June 1922
Retired July 1928
Primary users Instone Air Line
Imperial Airways
Produced 1922–1925
Number built 8
This article is about a 1920's passenger aircraft. For the nuclear bomber, see Avro Vulcan

The Vickers Vulcan was a British single-engined biplane airliner of the 1920s built by Vickers Limited at Brooklands Aerodrome, Surrey. It carried 8 passengers and a pilot.

Contents

Development

The Vickers Vulcan was designed by Rex Pierson of Vickers and it first flew in May 1922 at the hands of the chief test pilot, S. Cockerell, at the Brooklands Aerodrome in Surrey, UK. The Vulcan was based on Vickers Vimy Commercial, but featured many changes, including a much larger fuselage (taller) and one, instead of two, Rolls Royce Eagle VIII engines. The intention beiung to get low operating costs. The shape of its fuselage, as well as its flying characteristics, earned it the nickname "Flying Pig". The first delivery took place in August 1922, to Instone Air Line Ltd. Other operators included Imperial Airways and Qantas (however, the latter returned the aircraft as their performance was too poor for the company's needs). The last Vulcan flying was a Type 74 with Imperial Airways. It crashed in July 1928.

Variants

  • Type 61 - first production version
  • Type 63 - cargo version based on the Type 61
  • Type 74 - upgraded to 450 hp Napier Lion engine

Operators

Users

  1. G-EBBL; Type 61 - Prototype, first flew in April 1922, delivered to Instone Air Line in June 1922 as "City of Antwerp", sold to Imperial Airways, scrapped at Croydon Airport in May 1924.
  2. G-EBDH; Type 61 - Delivered to Instone Air Line in July 1922, accident at Oxted, Surrey, in 1922. returned to Vickers at Brooklands and withdrawn from use in 1923.
  3. G-EBEA; Type 61 - Delivered to Instone Air Line in July 1922 as "City of Brussels", returned to Vickers at Brooklands and withdrawn from use in 1923.
  4. G-EBEK; Type 63 - Delivered to Air Ministry at Martlesham Heath in November 1922 with Eagle IX for freighter trials, converted to passenger layout in 1925, scrapped in 1926.
  5. G-EBEM; Type 61 - Delivered to Douglas Vickers MP in September 1922, competed in King's Cup Air Race in September 1922, taking 7th place, disappeared of the coast of Italy in May 1926.
  6. G-EBES; Type 61 - Intended for Qantas, scrapped before completion.
  7. G-EBET; Type 61 - Delivered to Qantas in November 1922, returned, fate unknown but probably scrapped.
  8. G-EBFC; Type 74 - Delivered to Douglas Vickers MP January 1923, competed in King's Cup Air Race in 1923 (retired from the race), sold to Imperial Airways in January 1925, withdrawn from service in December 1925 and scrapped at Croydon in 1927.
  9. G-EBLB; Type 74 - Delivered to Imperial Airways in May 1925, crashed at Purley July 1928.

There are no Vulcans believed to still be in existence today.

Specifications (Vulcan Type 74)

Data from Vickers Aircraft Since 1908[1]

General characteristics

  • Crew: 1
  • Capacity: 6-8 passengers
  • Length: 38 ft (11.58 m)
  • Wingspan: 49 ft (14.94 m)
  • Height: 14 ft 3 in (4.34 m)
  • Wing area: 840 square feet ()
  • Airfoil: High lift T64
  • Empty weight: 4,400 lb ()
  • Max takeoff weight: 6,750 lb (3,062 kg)
  • Powerplant:Napier Lion engine, 450 hp (336 kW)

Performance

References

  1. ^ Vickers Aircraft since 1908 Andrews, Putnam

Related content

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Comparable aircraft

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Vickers Vulcan from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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