Thu Mar 15, 2012 10:20 am
Thu Mar 15, 2012 11:39 am
Thu Mar 15, 2012 2:22 pm
Mon Mar 19, 2012 5:34 pm
The Inspector wrote:... near Hellensburgh in Scotland on The Isle of Grain.
The article made it sound like a wet version of Farnborough.
Mon Mar 19, 2012 5:44 pm
JDK wrote:The Inspector wrote:... near Hellensburgh in Scotland on The Isle of Grain.
Think you've concatenated two things there. The Isle of Grain is in England:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isle_of_Grain
(2 seconds on Google, btw)The article made it sound like a wet version of Farnborough.
Pretty much. The Marine Aircraft Experimental Establishment (MAEE) was where they tested, Farnborough style, the maritime aircraft.
It was at Grain 1918 - 1924, then Felixstow, then moved to Helensburgh (which is the one in Scotland) at the start of W.W.II as the other locations were at greater risk of enemy attack.
There's an excellent book I intend to get (missed a copy recently) by Hikoki on it:
http://modelingmadness.com/scotts/books ... eyears.htm
In the 1918 era the Kent accent would have been quite distinct to the ear, and probably even differing to as specific of the Hoo Peninsular area, yes. Nowadays it'll be 'Estry' which is pretty flat, and thanks to the ease of mass chav communications.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Estuary_English
The Saro Lerwick; serious contender for the worst production aircraft of W.W.II.
Regards,
Mon Mar 19, 2012 7:13 pm
Mon Mar 19, 2012 7:38 pm
JDK wrote:Yorkshire - yes, England's Texas might've been a problem. Still a testing station in Robin Hood's Bay would've been good...
Thing about the Lerwick was it was a production aircraft, and was designed to (essentially) do a similar job to the PBY Catalina, and should've been killed at birth before it killed a bunch of young men. The contrast to the Cat's success is stark.
Certainly Blackburn (a favourite of mine, btw) get some kind of award for the most failed designs of W.W.II. But let's be fair, there was nothing wrong with the B-20, it was an idea that needed to be tried (and then discarded) and there's a number of tried ideas that no-one expected to work but did, as well the thousands that didn't.
The critical Lerwick issue was it went into production - the B-20 was, after all, another bright idea prototype - of which...
Regards,