Short Mayo Composite

Short Mayo Composite
S.20 Mercury
Image from a contemporary newspaper article, depicting Mercury atop Maia
Role Transport seaplane carried to flight altitude by Short S.21 Maia
National origin United Kingdom
Manufacturer Short Brothers
Designer R. H. Mayo
First flight 5 September 1937
Introduction 14 July 1938
Retired 1941
Primary users Imperial Airways
RAF
Number built 1
S.21 Maia
Role Flying-boat, launch aircraft for S.20 Mercury
National origin United Kingdom
Manufacturer Short Brothers
Designer R. H. Mayo
First flight 27 July 1937
Introduction 14 July 1938
Status destroyed by enemy bombing 11 May 1941
Primary user Imperial Airways
Number built 1

The Short Mayo Composite was a piggy-back long-range seaplane/flying boat combination produced by Short Brothers to provide a reliable long-range air transport service to the United States and the far reaches of the British Empire and the Commonwealth.

Contents

Development

Short Brothers had built the Empire flying boats which were capable of operating long range routes across the British Empire but could only attempt the trans-Atlantic route by replacing passenger and mail-carrying space with extra fuel.

It was known that aircraft could maintain flight with a greater load than is possible to take off with; Major Robert H. Mayo, Technical General Manager at Imperial Airways (and later a designer at Shorts) proposed mounting a small, long-range seaplane on top of a larger carrier aircraft, using the combined power of both to bring the smaller aircraft to operational height, at which time the two aircraft would separate, the carrier aircraft returning to base while the other flew on to its destination. The British Air Ministry issued Specification "13/33" to cover this project.

Design

The Short-Mayo composite project comprised the Short S.21 Maia,[1] (G-ADHK) a design similar to the S.23 C class flying-boat,[2] and the Short S.20 Mercury[1] seaplane, the latter attached to a trestle-like pylon mounted on top of the fuselage of the former.

Although similar to the "C-Class" Empire boat, Maia differed in some considerable areas from that design: the sides were "tumblehome" rather than straight up to give a greater beam for better stability on the water; larger control surfaces; an increase in total wing area from 1,500 sq ft (140 m2) to 1,750 sq ft (163 m2) ; the engines were mounted further from the wing root to provide clearance for Mercury's floats and the fuselage was swept up towards the tail to raise the tailplane relative to the wing. Like the Empire boats, Maia could be furnished to carry 18 passengers.[3] Maia first flew (without Mercury) on 27 July 1937, piloted by Shorts' Chief Test Pilot, John Lankester Parker.[4]

The upper component, Mercury, was a twin-float, four-engine seaplane crewed by a single pilot and a navigator, who sat in tandem in a fully enclosed cockpit. There was capacity for 1,000 lb (456 kg) of mail. Mercury's flight controls, except for elevator and rudder trim tabs, were locked in neutral until separation. Mercury's first flight, also piloted by Parker, was on 5 September 1937.[5]

"All eight engines were used during combined flight but the controls of Mercury were locked. The airfoil designs of the two aircraft were such that Mercury's wings were carrying the major part of the air load at the speed and height chosen for separation. Safety locks prevented separation until this speed and height were reached and both pilots had an unlocking handle, both of which had to be pulled to cause release."[6]

The mechanism that held the two aircraft together allowed for a small degree of movement. Lights indicated when the upper component was in fore-aft balance so trim could be adjusted prior to release. The pilots could then release their respective locks. At this point the two aircraft remained held together by a third lock which released automatically at 3,000 lb. The design was such that at separation Maia would tend to drop while Mercury would climb.[7]

Operations

Just before the first trans-Atlantic flight, August 1938

The first successful in-flight separation was carried out from the Shorts works at Borstal, near Rochester, Medway, on 6 February 1938, Maia piloted by Parker and Mercury by Harold Piper. Following further successful tests, the first transatlantic flight was made on 21 July 1938 from Foynes, on the west coast of Ireland, to Boucherville,[8] Montreal, Canada, a flight of 2,930 miles (4,714.4 km). Maia, flown by Captain A.S. Wilcockson, took off from Southampton carrying Mercury piloted by Captain Don Bennett.[9] As well as Mercury, the launch aircraft Maia was also carrying 10 passengers and luggage.[10] Mercury separated from her carrier at 8 pm to continue what was to become the first commercial[note 1] non-stop East-to-West transatlantic flight by a heavier-than-air machine. This initial journey took 20 hrs 21 min at an average ground speed of 144 mph (232 km/h).[11]

The pair in Ireland.

The Maia-Mercury composite continued in use with Imperial Airways, including Mercury flying to Alexandria, Egypt, in December 1938. After modifications to extend Mercury's range, it subsequently established a record flight for a seaplane of 6,045 miles (9,726.4 km) from Dundee in Scotland to Alexander Bay (in South Africa) between 6 and 8 October 1938.

Only one example of the Short-Mayo composite was built, the S.21 Maia with the registration G-ADHK and the S.20 Mercury (G-ADHJ). The development of a more powerful and longer-range Empire boat (the Short S.26), the further development of in-flight refuelling and the outbreak of the Second World War combined to render the approach obsolete. Maia was destroyed in Poole Harbour by German bombing on 11 May 1941.[12] Mercury was flown to Felixstowe for use by 320 (Netherlands) Squadron RAF a Dutch seaplane reconnaissance unit serving with the Royal Air Force at RAF Pembroke Dock[clarification needed]. When this squadron was re-equipped with Lockheed Hudsons, Mercury was returned to Shorts at Rochester on 9 August 1941 and broken up so that its aluminium content could be recycled for use in the war effort.[13]

Operators

 United Kingdom

Specifications (S.20 Mercury)

Data from Barnes & James 1989 p.312

General characteristics

  • Crew: 2 (pilot and navigator/radio operator)
  • Payload: 1,000 lb (454 kg)
  • Length: 51 ft (15.5)
  • Wingspan: 73 ft (22.2 m)
  • Height: 20 ft 3 in [14] (6.17 m)
  • Wing area: 611 ft² (56.8 m²)
  • Empty weight: 10,163 lb (4,614 kg)
  • Loaded weight: 26,800 lb ()
  • Max takeoff weight: 15,500 lb (7,030 kg)
  • Powerplant: 4 × Napier Rapier VI 16-cylinder "H-block" piston engines, 365 hp (272.29 kW) each
  • * Normal composite launch weight: 20,800 lb (9,443 kg)
  • Record composite launch weight: 26,800 lb (12,160 kg)

Performance

Specifications (S.21 Maia)

Data from Barnes & James 1989 p.312

General characteristics

  • Crew: 3
  • Capacity: 18
  • Length: 84 ft 11 in (25.9 m)
  • Wingspan: 114 ft (34.7 m)
  • Height: 32 ft 7½ in[14] (9.95 m)
  • Wing area: 1,750 ft2 (162.5 m2)
  • Empty weight: 24,745 lb (11,234 kg)
  • Loaded weight: 38,000 lb (17,252 kg)
  • Powerplant: 4 × Bristol Pegasus XC radial engine, 919 hp (686 kW) each
  • *Takeoff weight (composite): 27,700 lb (12,580 kg)

Performance

In popular culture

  • The children's novel The Sound of Propellors by Clive King follows the adventure of an Indian schoolboy who stows away on a fictional test flight from England to India, which is sabotaged by a German spy.

See also

Related development

Related lists

Notes

Notes
  1. ^ The British flying boats Caledonia and Cambria had made several non-stop survey flights of the Atlantic route already
Citations
  1. ^ a b Maia, the Greek goddess, was mother to Hermes; Mercury was the Roman god equivalent to the Greek Hermes, the Messenger of the Gods
  2. ^ Flight 19 August 1937 p180
  3. ^ Barnes C.H. & James D.N. Shorts Aircraft since 1900. London (1989): Putnam. p. 560. ISBN 0-85177-819-4. 
  4. ^ J Lankester Parker OBE FRAeS Hon MSLAE started as a test pilot at Shorts in 1916, was Chief Test Pilot 1918 - 1945 and from 1943 a Director of Short Brothers and Harland, Belfast
  5. ^ Jackson 1974, p. 302
  6. ^ Avia.russian.ee
  7. ^ a b Flight 17 February 1938
  8. ^ Also contains an eye-witness account of the first in-flight separation
  9. ^ Captain Bennett was later the first commander of the RAF Pathfinder Force in WWII and became an Air Vice Marshal
  10. ^ "Mercury makes good" p80
  11. ^ "Mercury makes good" Flight July 28, 1938. pp79-80
  12. ^ Cassidy, Brian (2004). Flying Empires - Short ‘C’ class Empire flying boats. Queens Parade Press. p. 58. ISBN 0 9529298 2 1. 
  13. ^ Barnes and James, p.311
  14. ^ a b Angelucci 1984, p.226.

References

External links

External images
Sequence of photos taken during first public separation (at Flight PDF Archive)
External videos
British Movietone News film footage

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