Gloster III | |
---|---|
Gloster IIIA at 1925 Schneider Trophy | |
Role | Racing seaplane |
National origin | United Kingdom |
Manufacturer | Gloster Aircraft Company |
Designer | Henry Folland |
First flight | 29 August 1925 |
Introduction | 1925 |
Primary user | Royal Air Force |
Number built | 2 |
The Gloster III was a British racing floatplane of the 1920s intended to compete for the Schneider Trophy air race. A single-engined, single-seat biplane, two were built, with one finishing second in the 1925 race.
In 1924, the Gloster Aircraft Company designed and built the Gloster II, a development of the Gloster I racing aircraft to compete in that year's Schneider Trophy air race. The first aircraft was written off during trials, however, and as there were no other competitors, the American Aero Club postponed the competition to 1925. [1]
In order to compete in the 1925 race, the British Air Ministry placed an order with Gloster for the design and build of two examples of a new racing seaplane in February 1925. [a] The resulting design, the Gloster III, like the Gloster II, was a wooden biplane with single bay wings, powered by a 700 hp (522 kW) Napier Lion VII engine. The aircraft was fitted with Lamblin radiators on the leading edge of the lower wings. [2] With a 20 ft (6.1 m) wingspan, the Gloster was the smallest British aircraft ever built with that power at that time. [3]
The first prototype, with the serial number N194 was flown by Hubert Broad on 29 August 1925, with the second aircraft (with the civil registration G-EBLJ and the military serial N195) being flown a few days later by Bert Hinkler. [4]
The pilots had little time to practice flying the Gloster IIIs, with N194 only flying four times and N195 flying once before departing for America. [5] When the Supermarine S.4 crashed during navigation trials on 23 October 1925, N195, which was brought as a reserve was prepared to take part in the race instead of the Supermarine monoplane, to be flown by Hinkler. [6] On the morning of the race, however, N195 was damaged during taxiing tests, leaving Broad in N194 to carry British hopes in the afternoon's race.
When the race took place, the Gloster III was outclassed by the Curtiss R3Cs of the United States, with the race being won by Lieutenant James Doolittle, flying a Curtiss R3C at an average speed of 232.573 mph (374.443 km/h), [7] 33 mph (53 km/h) faster than Broad, who recorded a speed of 199.091 mph (320.537 km/h), [8] with De Briganti in the Macchi M.33 finishing third and the remaining two Curtiss R3Cs failing to finish. [8]
Following the race, the two Gloster IIIs were returned to the United Kingdom. After modification, they were used for training pilots of the RAFs High Speed Flight in preparation for the 1927 race. [9]
Data from Gloster Aircraft since 1917 [9]
General characteristics
Performance
Related development
Aircraft of comparable role, configuration and era
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The RAF High Speed Flight, sometimes known as 'The Flight' , was a small flight of the Royal Air Force (RAF) formed for the purpose of competing in the Schneider Trophy contest for racing seaplanes during the 1920s. The Flight was together only until the Trophy was won outright, after which it was disbanded.
The Gloster II was a British racing floatplane of the 1920s. A single-engined biplane, two were built to compete in the 1924 Schneider Trophy air race. However the crash of the first prototype during testing meant that it could not be made ready for the race, which was postponed. The second aircraft was also lost in a crash.
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The Blackburn Pellet was a single-engined, single-seater biplane flying boat designed as a contender for the 1923 Schneider Trophy competition. It was destroyed while taking off for the trials of the contest.
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