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Prior to finalising the design of the AW27 Ensign Armstrong Whitworth worked on a number of alternative airliner types
There is no indication on the drawings and all the numbers between AW15, Atalanta, and AW27, Ensign, appear to have been assigned to known projects. I suspect that they are early concepts that were not given official project numbershesham said:but can I ask you that,during middle of 1930s,the Type numbers was appeared,did
those airplanes belong to it or not ?,please see;
PMN1 said:What were the seating arrangements, 2 looks like a 1 + 1 while 3 and 4 look like a 1 + 2.
The fuselage construction looks to be the same as for the AW15 Atalanta rather than the metal monocoque adopted for the AW27 Ensign.PMN1 said:The narrowing towards the tail of options 2, 3 and 4 seems a bit excessive wasting potential space at the rear of the aircraft and wings look thick enough to walk an elephant on.
It is usually helpful to provide title and author:From, Kites, Birds & Stuff - Armstrong Whitworth Aircraft.
In reply #9, Stemp's drawing, copied from Tapper, shows the car ferry, its drawing's caption gives dimensions for the scaled-down Atalanta which turned out to be quadruple-, not twin-engined. Tapper made a mistake in an otherwise very nice read, Stemp repeated Tapper's mistake, compounding the mess by copying the wrong drawing. Stemp wasn't paying attention.
Other than that - everything tickety-boo.
Away from my bookshelves, but ISTR that's a Britten-Norman freighter design - Mainliner? - (if not that then a grown-up Skyvan), covered in Stuck on the Drawing Board by Richard Payne.So, the cargo aircraft is still an unknown?
Its bigger than a Shorts Skyvan which used two 715hp engines so I cannot see it doing anything but rolling along on the ground on two Genet Majors.
Excellent. Caption in drawing says two Tiger engines, which makes a lot more sense than two Genet Major for an aircraft this size - length 71 ft 6 in, span 90 ft. The same dimensions as the four engined AW15.Well here is a 2-engine version of the AW15 from an original un-numbered Armstrong Whitworth drawing with a tracing date of March 1934
There was a BN-4 Mainlander proposed. Four engines.Away from my bookshelves, but ISTR that's a Britten-Norman freighter design - Mainliner? - (if not that then a grown-up Skyvan), covered in Stuck on the Drawing Board by Richard Payne.
Several replies about 1958 AW car ferry project deleted from thread.So, the cargo aircraft is still an unknown?
Its bigger than a Shorts Skyvan which used two 715hp engines so I cannot see it doing anything but rolling along on the ground on two Genet Majors.