Prefect | |
---|---|
![]() | |
Second production Prefect TX.1 WE980 in 1950. | |
Role | Intermediate training glider |
National origin | United Kingdom |
Manufacturer | Slingsby Sailplanes Ltd |
First flight | June 1948 |
Primary user | Royal Air Force |
Number built | c.53 |
Developed from | Grunau Baby |
The Slingsby T.30 Prefect is a 1948 British modernisation of the 1932 single-seat Grunau Baby glider. About 53 were built for civil and military training purposes.
In 1948, Slingsby Sailplanes developed the 1932 Grunau Baby, which it had built under licence before World War II, into the Slingsby T.30 Prefect, an intermediate-level semi-aerobatic glider suitable for civil or military use. In the same year, Elliotts of Newbury introduced its version of the Grunau Baby, the Baby Eon; all three types were visually very similar, but differed slightly in dimensions, undercarriage, airbrakes, equipment and performance. [1]
The Prefect, like the Grunau Baby, was a single-seat fabric-covered wooden glider. It had high-mounted semi-cantilever straight-tapered wings, with a single wing bracing strut on each side, from the base of the fuselage to the wing spar. The span was 150 mm (6 in) greater than that of the Grunau Baby, and the tips enclosed the outer ends of the ailerons. Mid-chord airbrakes were fitted just outboard of the wing strut ends, extending above and below the wing. The fuselage was flat sided, and tapered from the trailing edge of the wing to a very small fin bearing a large, aerodynamically-balanced and slightly reshaped rudder that extended down to the keel. The straight-tipped tailplane, mounted on the top of the fuselage and braced from below, had a strongly swept leading edge and was placed with its trailing edge at the fin's leading edge, so that the elevators lacked the large cut out for rudder movement seen on the earlier glider. The open cockpit was better enclosed at the sides and had a small windscreen; for access, the cockpit sides and windscreen were removed as a single piece. [2] Slingsby also added a single-wheel undercarriage in addition to the earlier nose skid, placed below mid-chord. [3] [4]
In June 1948, the Prefect made its first flight. [3] It was about 20 kg heavier than its predecessor, but despite a higher wing loading had a significantly better lift to drag ratio, 21 compared with 17. [1]
The Prefect was sold both on the civil market, including the Royal Air Force Gliding & Soaring Association (RAFGSA), and to the Air Training Corps (ATC) as the Prefect TX.Mk.1. 46 Prefects were built by Slingsby, with sales in Belgium, the Netherlands, Egypt, Israel and New Zealand. [5] The Royal Netherlands Aero Club had 9 of them. [6] The ATC had 15 Prefects. [5] In addition, Bedek Aircraft Ltd built about seven aircraft under licence in Israel. [7] Some surviving ATC aircraft, originally bearing RAF serials, transferred to civil registry.
At least fourteen Prefects still fly In 2019. These include the prototype in the UK (G-ALLF at Lasham heritage centre) and five other T30As in the Netherlands (PH-192,193,194,196,198). At Pentecost 4-6 june 2022 the dutch prefects were all at a meeting at gliding site Nistelrode(Netherlands), to celebrate their 70th anniversary, the dutch prefects are all build in 1951, and are flying in the Netherlands since 1952. Originally 8 planes, 5 are still surviving an airworthy.
The rest are mostly ex-RAF production T30Bs, six in the UK, two in Germany and one in the Czech Republic. Another T30B is "extant" in Sweden but it is not known if it is airworthy. [7]
Prefects are on display at the South Yorkshire Aircraft Museum, [8] at the old RAF Doncaster site, Gliding Heritage Centre and at Queenstown Airport, New Zealand. [7]
Data from Ellison 1971, pp. 200, The World's Sailplanes:Die Segelflugzeuge der Welt:Les Planeurs du Monde [4] [9]
General characteristics
Performance
Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era
Related lists
The Aer-Pegaso M-100 was a single-seat glider designed and built in Italy from 1957.
The Schneider ES-59 Arrow is a sailplane designed and manufactured in Adelaide, South Australia in the early 1960s. The Arrow was manufactured with a one-piece wing of 13.23 metres span. It was the first Australian-built sailplane to compete in the World Gliding Championships, 1963 in Argentina. The Arrow has wood/fabric wings and tail and a wood fuselage. It has a fixed main wheel and a nose skid.
The Schneider Grunau Baby was a single-seat sailplane first built in Germany in 1931, with some 6,000 examples constructed in some 20 countries. It was relatively easy to build from plans, it flew well, and the aircraft was strong enough to handle mild aerobatics and the occasional hard landing. When the Baby first appeared, it was accepted wisdom that the pilot should feel as much unimpeded airflow as possible, to better sense rising and falling currents of air and temperature changes etc.
The Slingsby T.21 is an open-cockpit, side-by-side two-seat glider, built by Slingsby Sailplanes Ltd and first flown in 1944. It was widely used by the Royal Air Force, Sri Lanka Air Force and by civilian gliding clubs.
The Slingsby T.41 Skylark 2 was a sailplane produced from 1953 by Slingsby Sailplanes at Kirkbymoorside, Yorkshire.
The Slingsby Type 42 Eagle was a two-seat glider designed in England from 1952.
The Slingsby T.37 Skylark 1 was a small low-cost sailplane built during 1952-3 at Kirbymoorside, Yorkshire by Slingsby Sailplanes.
The Slingsby T.6/T.23 Kirby Kite was a single-seat sport glider produced from 1935, by Fred Slingsby in Kirbymoorside, Yorkshire.
The Slingsby T.8 Kirby Tutor was a single-seat sport glider produced from 1937, by Fred Slingsby in Kirbymoorside, Yorkshire.
The Slingsby T.25 Gull 4 is a British glider designed and built by Slingsby that first flew in 1947.
The Eon Olympia was a glider produced from 1947 by Elliotts of Newbury.
The IS-5 Kaczka was a single-seat canard research glider designed and built in Poland from 1948.
The Slingsby Type 34 Sky is a high performance single seat competition sailplane built in the United Kingdom. It was successful in major events, particularly in the World Gliding Championships of 1952.
The Slingsby Type 45 Swallow was designed as a club sailplane of reasonable performance and price. One of the most successful of Slingsby's gliders in sales terms, over 100 had been built when production was ended by a 1968 factory fire.
The Slingsby T.13 Petrel was a British single-seat competition glider built by Slingsby Sailplanes just before World War II.
The Slingsby T.50 Skylark 4 was a British single seat competition glider built by Slingsby Sailplanes in the early 1960s. It sold in numbers and had success at national, though not world level competition.
The Kometa-Standard was a Standard Class glider, designed and built in Bulgaria in the early 1960s. Thirty were flown by local gliding clubs.
The UTG-1 Loudon was an intermediate glider designed and built at the University of Toronto in Canada during the late 1940s.
The IS-2 was an intermediate training glider designed by Iosif Şilimon and built in Romania in the 1950s at the URMV-3 factory at Brașov.
The IS-4 was a high performance glider designed by Iosif Şilimon and built in Romania in the late 1950s at the URMV-3 factory at Braşov.