Marendaz Trainer

Last updated

Trainer
Role Trainer
National origin United Kingdom
ManufacturerMarendaz Aircraft Ltd, Barton-in-the-Clay, Bedfordshire
DesignerDonald Marendaz? [1]
First flightNovember 1939
Number built1

The Marendaz Trainer was a two-seat low-wing training aircraft built in the UK just before World War II. Only one was completed.

Contents

Development

In 1939 the newly established Marendaz Aircraft Ltd. [2] built a two-seat, single-engined low wing cantilever monoplane called the Marendaz Trainer. [3] Donald Marendaz, the company's founder, claimed to have designed it though this has been disputed, not least because Marendaz had claimed the work of others as his own before. [1] If it was not his, the true designer is unknown.

The Trainer was in most respects a conventional open cockpit two seater of its time. Its fuselage and wings were wooden structures skinned with plywood. Only the control surfaces were fabric covered. [3] The wings were built around two box spars and consisted of a constant chord centre section, integral with the fuselage and carrying no dihedral, plus bolt-on outer panels with marked dihedral and slight taper on the trailing edge. [3] The outer panels carried both ailerons and built-in leading edge slots with no moving parts. [4]

The fuselage was flat sided, with a conventional rounded decking running forward as far as the engine cowling. It tapered to the rear, more in plan than elevation and carried a tailplane with a sharply swept leading edge mounted on top of the fuselage and externally braced from below. The elevators were more rounded, and well separated to allow rudder movement. The fin and horn balanced rudder together were almost triangular, with the latter rounded at tip and base. The rear cockpit was over the trailing edge of the wing and the front cockpit at the leading edge. The Trainer was powered by a 90 hp (67 kW) Blackburn Cirrus Minor four cylinder inverted in-line engine, driving a two-bladed propeller. [3]

The Trainer's undercarriage was unusual [4] and possibly vulnerable. [3] Each wheel was mounted on a stub axle, independent of the other and swung on a V member formed from heavy duty square tubing, with its ends hinged to front and rear spar towards the outer end of the centre section, so the assembly could swing laterally. Each V plus wheel was restrained by a radius arm hinged on the front spar near the fuselage, allowing a small amount of upwards and outward travel for the wheel. The radius arms were sprung inside the fuselage. [4] In order to get the very wide track of 93 in (2.36 m), both the V and radius arms were heavily splayed and the angle between them was much smaller than normal, a cause for some concern. [3] The tailskid was mounted without a fuselage aperture, to avoid the trapping of grass and dirt. [4]

The sole Trainer, registered G-AFZX [5] first flew in November 1939 with R.A. Wyndham at the controls. It seems to have flown well, though it is not known if the front seat was ever occupied or ballasted. By this time the UK was at war, so the aircraft went to the RAF Halton Squadron of the Air Training Corps in 1940 and no more was heard of it. [3]

Specifications

Data from Ord-Hume 2000, p. 408 These figures are the designer's estimates

General characteristics

Performance

Related Research Articles

The Beardmore Wee Bee was a single-engined monoplane built only once and specifically for the Lympne two-seat light aircraft trials held in the United Kingdom in 1924. This plane won the major prize.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cranwell CLA.3</span> Type of aircraft

The Cranwell CLA.3 was a parasol winged single-engined, single-seat British aircraft built to compete in the Lympne air races of 1925. It was designed and built by an amateur group drawn from staff and pupils at the RAF College Cranwell. Though it won one prize and set a Class record, only one CLA.3 was made.

The RAE Hurricane was a single-seat, single-engined light monoplane designed and built by the Aero Club of the Royal Aircraft Establishment for the 1923 Lympne Motor Glider Competition. It was underpowered with an unreliable engine. Re-engined, it flew in many races, with first place in the 1926 Grosvenor Challenge Cup its greatest success.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Handasyde Monoplane</span> Type of aircraft

The Handasyde monoplane was a single-seat light aircraft built for the 1923 Lympne motor glider competition. It competed there but won no prizes.

The Shackleton-Murray SM.1 was a single-engined two-seat light aircraft designed in Britain and flying in 1933. It was a pusher driven parasol winged monoplane. Only one was built.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Carden-Baynes Bee</span> Type of aircraft

The Carden-Baynes Bee was a 1930s British two-seat aircraft, with twin engines in pusher configuration buried in the wings. The wings rotated for storage. Financial problems limited the Bee to a single flight.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Willoughby Delta 8</span> Type of aircraft

The Willoughby Delta 8, or Delta F was a small twin-engined aerodynamic test bed for a proposed flying wing airliner - the Delta 9. The Delta 8 flew in the United Kingdom for a few months during 1939 before crashing; there were no developments.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Comper Streak</span> Type of aircraft

The Comper Streak was a single-engined, single-seat racing monoplane built in the UK in the mid-1930s. It was not successful as a racer and only one was produced.

The Comper Kite was a single-engined, two-seat touring monoplane built in the UK, derived from the contemporary Comper Streak racer. Only one was built.

The Surrey Flying Services AL.1 was a single-engined side-by-side two-seat training biplane, built at a UK flying club in 1929. Only one was built, but it was flying until the outbreak of war in 1939 and remains in storage.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tipsy B</span> Type of aircraft

The Tipsy B was a small sports two-seat monoplane designed by Ernest Oscar Tips, and built in both Belgium and the UK. A total of 42 was built, and a few are still flying.

The Gordon Dove was a British low powered, low wing single seat monoplane, built for the ultralight sports market in competition with aircraft like the Belgian designed Tipsy S. There was little enthusiasm for such machines in England in the late 1930s and only three were constructed.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Caproni Ca.95</span> Type of aircraft

The Caproni Ca.95 was a large, three engine, long range, heavy bomber prototype built in Italy in 1929. It could carry a 1,600 kg (3,500 lb) bomb load and had three defensive gun positions. Only one was built.

The Weymann W-100, Weymann CTW-100 or Weymann W-100 RBL was a French three seat observation aircraft with a position for the observer within its partially glazed fuselage. Only one was built.

The Leduc RL-12 was a French low power, economical, parasol wing, single seat aircraft. First flown in July 1939, its development was halted by World War II.

The Poite 3 was a one-off, all metal touring aircraft which seated two in tandem. It was built and flown in France in 1931.

The Ostrovia II or Moryson II was a 1930s Polish club trainer aircraft, a development of the Ostrovia I. Only one was built and was used by the Poznań flying club for five years.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sido S.1</span> Type of aircraft

The Sido S.1 was a Polish two seat, parasol wing trainer aircraft, first flown in 1930.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Rubik R-03 Szittya I</span> Type of aircraft

The Rubik R-03 Szittya I was a Hungarian single-seat sailplane flown in the late 1930s. The design was developed through three improving variants. though only one of each was built.

The Mulot AM-20 was a Belgian single seat aerobatic trainer displayed at the 1937 Brussels Salon. Two were built.

References

Citations

Cited sources

  • Ord-Hume, Arthur W.J.G. (2000). British Light Aeroplanes. Peterborough: GMS Enterprises. ISBN   978-1-870384-76-6.
  • "The new Marendaz". Flight . No. 23 November 1939. pp. 418–9.