but the Percival P.97 was a jet naval aircraft Project ?.

I correct that at first,

and for my dear Lucamax,I can't ID them,maybe my dear Tony Buttler knows ?.

I’d suggest you check out Tony Butler’s excellent series of books on these topics for the answers and details you seek.
As opposed to your suggestion of him giving you all of that... for free....

 
I’d suggest you check out Tony Butler’s excellent series of books on these topics for the answers and details you seek.
As opposed to your suggestion of him giving you all of that... for free....

Who said that I want to give his Info for free,impossible of course,I just answer my dear Lucamax that,if
Mr. Tony Buttler had only the names of competitors,that's all.
 
Tony Buttler says:

"For the M.148T competition, the manufacturers who submitted designs were Armstrong Whitworth, Blackburn, Fairey, Hawker, Shorts and Westland. The original Ministry documents that assessed the competitors make NO reference to anybody else. Initially Percival asked for permission to submit, but then found they were unable to produce a complete design for such a complex aircraft, and so withdrew their interest. Saunders-Roe did draw some 'M.148-type' designs, but this was two months before the initial specification was issued and 8 months before the main proposals were submitted. Saro did NOT take part in the competition."
 
Many thanks to you my dears Overscan and Tony Buttler,

and as I remember the L+K magazine who said that,and of course the invitation was for more than 12 companies,
but most of them withdrew except the six main firms which mentioned here.
 
Hesham, you are getting mixed up between "invited to submit" and "submitted a proposal". 'Invited to submit' means a letter was sent to each of 12 companies informing them of the requirement and asking if they were interested in submitting a proposal. Of the 6 companies who declined to submit, Percival started a design but abandoned it.

Do you want to know the six companies who received the invitation but didn't respond?
 
No my dear Paul,

I just explain from where I get this Info and what happened to the contest to be in this form,and of course
invitation to submit differs from submit a proposal,I only confirm Mr. Tony's saying.
 
Hesham, you are getting mixed up between "invited to submit" and "submitted a proposal". 'Invited to submit' means a letter was sent to each of 12 companies informing them of the requirement and asking if they were interested in submitting a proposal. Of the 6 companies who declined to submit, Percival started a design but abandoned it.

Do you want to know the six companies who received the invitation but didn't respond?

Dear,
I suppose that the Percival initial or preliminary design is impossible to find, right? :D
In any case: thank you all for your help!
Best regards.
--
Lucamax
 
Hesham, you are getting mixed up between "invited to submit" and "submitted a proposal". 'Invited to submit' means a letter was sent to each of 12 companies informing them of the requirement and asking if they were interested in submitting a proposal. Of the 6 companies who declined to submit, Percival started a design but abandoned it.

Do you want to know the six companies who received the invitation but didn't respond?

Dear,
I suppose that the Percival initial or preliminary design is impossible to find, right? :D
In any case: thank you all for your help!
Best regards.
--
Lucamax

Impossible, no, but it's not in the National Archives as they didn't submit a brochure. It depends on how much work was done and whether any drawings or brochures survive.
 
I would suppose that the Percival 'ghost' design to research the aerodynamic use of engine compressor air would have been examined by the MoS, after all they did commission Percival to do the research work. I would guess there might be an RAE Tech Memo on the subject, so its possible a copy survives at Kew. But there are a lot of 'ifs' in my supposition.
But it will probably by a technical study with lots of algebra and tunnel tests rather than an aircraft study. It would be a generic datum design based on the requirements for M.148T, not a detailed aircraft proposal.
 
Hi! A.W.168 mockup.
Source : US & British Experimental & Projected Aircraft after W.W.Ⅱ, DELTA Publishing , Tokyo.
 

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    A.W.168.JPG
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Obviously a rush job by Hawker. Clearly with enough time they could have figured out how to over complicate the windscreen, give it bubble side windows, transition the design to a T-tail, imbed air intakes into the wing, and create a curved compound wing that took twice as long to build. Maybe even add another engine to each wing. But I have to give them credit for the short amount of time they had, it looks pretty nice.
 

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