H.P.75 Manx
With design work starting in 1936, construction starting in 1938, first taxi trials in 1940, first flight in 1943 and allocation of name and HP design number in 1945, the gestation of the single H.P.75 Manx test aircraft was very protracted.
With the completion of the H.P.52 design programme, Lachmann further continued his work on designs eliminating the drag and weight penalties of conventional tail units, which he considered to be a totally parasitic appendage able to be minimised or removed with improved wing design.
Looking to hand build a prototype, the facilities at HP were too committed to building bombers, so the work had to be subcontracted out to a small glider manufacturing company, which eventually had to be bailed out from extreme financial problems. One aspect of the design that never reached flight status was a novel HP improvement to a standard canard forward wing, named a rider-plane. By adding a leading edge slat and trailing edge flaps the rider-plane is able to be 50% smaller than a canard, although with significantly increased complexity. The design of the rider-plane progressed even slower than that of the H.P.75, and was only completed and ready for flight testing by the time that the H.P.75 was already completed its flight programme.
With the start of WW2, Lachmann as still nominally a German citizen was interred and sent to Canada. Under special request from HP Lachmann was eventually transferred to the Isle of Man, but the imprisonment of the chief designer added even further delays to the programme.
The initial design had no fuselage vertical tail, fixed nose wheel but retractable main wheels. Initial taxi trials were started in early 1940 without a canopy as the locking and latching mechanism of the canopy was unworkable.
Before passing on to actual flight trials, an additional tail surface was added to the fuselage. Eventually painted in military colours, the aircraft first flew in 1943, and was revealed to the public in 1945, where it was named Manx and finally allocated an HP model number. The name Manx was doubly apt, both for the tail-less cat breed and for the site of Lachmann's imprisonment.
Modifications during the flight programme included modified air intakes to cure persistent engine overheating problems, a nosewheel fairing in a failed attempt to centre the nosewheel in flight, and the addition of a hand rail across the top of the airframe.
The test flight crew were both killed in the Hermes crash, and again the programme was put on hold, and the aircraft only flew another two times in 1946, before being withdrawn from service and destroyed in 1952.
The Manx's performance was poor, but it proved the soundness of the Lachmann's tailless wing planform design.