The Alula wing design and its applications

Hi,


here is anther drawing and picture to Alula from L'Aerophile 8/1920.
 

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Clearly identified as a Blackburn design in the last picture's caption.
 
Indeed, there wasn't a British company with that name, the two Flight articles already are
clearly indicating, that "Alula" was the name given to that wing design and Blackburn started
to draw some designs utilising it.
As we still had no general topic for Blackburn, I renamed this one.

And at the risk of being the man with the moustache and rasping voice again, please, please
folks, read your sources carefully ! If you have doubts, because having problems understanding
the particular language, just ask a native-language forum member !
Please try to keep the quality of this forum on a high level !
 
I would rather like to let the Sidney/Nile thread on its own, as we already have quite a lot of material
about those types and generally more specific threads are better to handle, both for the mods/admins
and for the members. Such general threads are good for types or concepts, that actually didn't got a
designation, or for those, we have very few information about. And if we have a handful of posts with,
say, "Unknown Blackburn Type", we just can merge them in a single thread. ;)
 
By the way,


I called Alula as the book,British Civil Aircraft since 1919,volume one.
 

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"Alula" was just the name of the wing design. "Alula D.H.6" was an Airco D.H.6 fuselage mated with an Alula-type wing.
 
Correct ! The name Alula refers to some features on a bird wing....
Not a company as Jemiba and Star..stated.
 
lark said:
Correct ! The name Alula refers to some features on a bird wing....
Not a company as Jemiba and Star..stated.


That's right my dear Lark.
 
lark said:
Correct ! The name Alula refers to some features on a bird wing....
Not a company as Jemiba and Star..stated.


Wrong. I am the one who said it was NOT a company name!
 
... and the caption in "British Civil Aircraft since 1919" clearly says "... Conversion by
the Blackburn Aeroplane and Motor Co.Ltd.".
That's what I meant with "reading sources carefully" . ;)
 
Name of topic changed.

Here's yet another hypothetical Alula wing design (seemingly related to Handley Page, whom the article claims fathered the concept), "The Pelican Four-Ton Lorry", a proposed colossal cargo cantilever monoplane capable of carrying four tons (Scientific American, October 1929):
 

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Reading the various articles shows that the ‘Alula’ wing was conceived by A.Holle and marketed in the UK by The Commercial Aeroplane Wing Syndicate. I did a quick search but could not find any patents in the name of Holle but the ‘Pelican’ cargo carrier is shown in a 1920 patent held in the name of the Syndicate and Harris Booth (GB167068A). Booth was a designer who worked for the Air Department of the Admiralty in the war and then moved to Blackburn, hence the link to that company. I cannot find any note as to who the Syndicate members were or why Booth became associated with them.

The reference to Handley-Page in the Scientific American article concerns their slotted wings and not the ‘Alula’, so the aircraft design will be Booth again although probably not Blackburn as he had left in 1924

(Edit 2022 - Holle patents are GB128341 and GB179276 and Harris Booth was no longer living near Blackburn's works in 1920 so had probably left and working freelance)
 

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From "The Speed Seekers" (Thomas G. Foxworth, 1975), details of the modification of the Martinsyde Semiquaver biplane racer (Aerial Derby 1920) into the monoplane with Alula wing.
 

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Skyblazer said:
"The Pelican Four-Ton Lorry", a proposed colossal cargo cantilever monoplane capable of carrying four tons (Scientific American, October 1929):

Is this really from October 1929? I ask because the article in Aeroplane mentioning the 4-ton lorry was published in July 1920 and described in detail in Aug 1920
 
Schneiderman said:
this really from October 1929? I ask because the article in Aeroplane mentioning the 4-ton lorry was published in July 1920 and described in detail in Aug 1920

Well I must admit it does seem strange to me as well... Unfortunately I do not have the original magazine, this was shared by one of my online contacts, and that's the date he gave for it...
 
Well Booth's design was definitely from 1920, in his Blackburn days, as in Hesham's first post. Sorry about the quality of the image.

(Edit 2022 - further research shows that Booth had already left Blackburn when this project was designed)
 

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Schneiderman said:
Well Booth's design was definitely from 1920, in his Blackburn days, as in Hesham's first post. Sorry about the quality of the image.

No problem! This is a great resource, and it can easily be enhanced. See? ;)
 

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Skyblazer said:
I've used the traditional English spelling "tonne" here instead of "ton".)

Well, as a Brit who goes back way before the metric era it's not a tradition that I was aware of :D Ton is correct, tonne is 'Olde English' of Shakespeare's era.

The image was a quick screen grab, I'll see if I can replace it with a better version
 
Schneiderman said:
Well, as a Brit who goes back way before the metric era it's not a tradition that I was aware of :D Ton is correct, tonne is 'Olde English' of Shakespeare's era.

I thought it was still in use during the 1920s, hence my use of it in the image.
I'll edit it to reflect your correction, thanks!
 
From
 

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The problems with the theory behind the alula wing are well covered in the attachments to various posts above so I thought I would add a bit of background regarding Holle. This is what I have found.

Alexander Albert Holle, Dutch and originally a tea planter, held many patents. The earliest appears to be UK Patent 12869 for Improvements in Steam and other Fluid Pressure Engines held in association with the S.M. Car Syndicate. He became a resident in Britain sometime prior to WW1
Holle established the Varioplane Co. Ltd in September 1913 to acquire the rights to his patents. Capital was £16000 in £500 shares, directors Holle, G.J.L.Nicholson and G.P.M Van Weel. The Syndicate also held patents in association with others applied for during the war years.
The patent for what became known as the alula wing, named after the small feathers on the leading edge of some birds wings, was applied for in 1918. The aim was to manage the flow of air over the wing’s surface through the application of wash-out and taper and to eliminate the need for drag-inducing ailerons by altering the air-flow and lift over the wing by the use of auxiliary aerofoils on the leading edge.
In 1919 a new company was formed to build and test an alula wing and exploit the potential. This was the Commercial Aircraft Wing Syndicate Ltd, with capital of £30000 in £1 shares. It was a co-venture between Holle, The Varioplane Co Ltd and Blackburn Aeroplane and Motor Co Ltd. Where Varioplane could appoint three directors and Blackburn two, which probably gives an indication of the split in funding.
A revised patent for the alula wing was then granted in 1921; this featured a more refined version of the auxiliary aerofoil. I would think that Handley-Page’s lawyers would have had a close look at this patent as it is very similar to their slot system in some aspects.
The story of the test flights of the alula wing and the projects proposed by Booth have been covered in this thread already.
Holle seems to have lost interest all in aircraft after 1921 as all his later patents refer to road vehicles.
 

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Thanks a lot for you highly valuable contributions to this topic, Justo Miranda and especially Schneiderman.
 
According to H. A. Taylor; "Fairey Aircraft since 1915", Putnam, 1974, p.63, Penrose gives some information about the Varioplane Co. in his "British Aviation: The Great War and Armistice", Putnam. Taylor suggests that (presumably Holle) had been experimenting with flexible wings for some time.
Has anybody got a copy of Penrose?

[Update]
Holle and a colleague called Judge patented a variable-camber aerofoil mechanism in 1916, while with the Varioplane Co. Some drawings are reproduced in L.F. Campanile; "Lightweight Shape-Adaptable Airfoils: A New Challenge for an Old Dream", Adaptive Structures: Engineering Applications (Ed. David Wagg, Ian Bond, Paul Weaver, Michael Friswell), Wiley, 2007, pp.89-129. Check it out on Google Books.
 
Alula plan form reminds me of the Schumann wing plan form employed by the highest performance, modern sailplanes and airliners. The designer's name is Wil Schuemann, though some writers use the simplified spelling of "Schumann." It has a straight trailing edge with a double-tapered leading edge than blends into an elliptical curve near the tip. Schliemann was trying to solve a tip-stall problem - on the predecessor to the Discus sailplane - by encouraging a bit of span-wise (towards wing tips) flow to delay that annoying tip-stall. Schuemann wings are really only practical with modern composite materials cured in female molds.
Modern airliners have Schuemann-ish curved wing tips to reduce the size (and drag) of wing tip vortexes.

Amusing that Alula has leading edge control surfaces. Many have experimented with leading edge controls, but none reached production. The text mentions that these novel controls were an attempt at circumventing the Wright Brothers' patents.
 
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Wow, interesting to see containerized cargo in an aircraft design this early. People were only just beginning to experiment with containerization on trucks and trains about the same time.
 
It has nothing to do with Blackburn. It was designed by Harris Booth who was a former Blackburn designer but produced after he had left in association with a group called The Commercial Aeroplane Wing Syndicate that held the commercial rights to the 'Alula' wing patented by Alexander Holle
 
It has nothing to do with Blackburn. It was designed by Harris Booth who was a former Blackburn designer but produced after he had left in association with a group called The Commercial Aeroplane Wing Syndicate that held the commercial rights to the 'Alula' wing patented by Alexander Holle


Ahh OK, thats twitter for you...
 
Does the Twitter source identify the original source of those illustrations?
 
Harris Booth had also worked at the National Physics Laboratory. Around 1912-13 he developed the analytical methods for stressing out the individual bays of a biplane, so that it could be made both light and strong. Dick (later Sir Richard) Fairey collaborated with him while working for JW Dunne's Blair Atholl Aeroplane Syndicate, but I am not sure if he stressed any of the planes that actually flew.
From 1915 Booth designed several unsuccessful types for the Admiralty, before continuing the tradition at Blackburn a while longer.

The Pelican's curious wing is the "Alula" wing. We already have an article on it, so I would suggest we merge these threads. https://www.secretprojects.co.uk/threads/the-alula-wing-design-and-its-applications.7447/
 
It has nothing to do with Blackburn. It was designed by Harris Booth who was a former Blackburn designer but produced after he had left in association with a group called The Commercial Aeroplane Wing Syndicate that held the commercial rights to the 'Alula' wing patented by Alexander Holle
Actually I should clarify this. In my reply of several years ago I noted that Blackburn were part of the Commercial Aeroplane Wing Syndicate as a result of their work constructing the first Alula wing, so, yes, they were associated with the design although it is not an official Blackburn project.
 
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