Good morning, guys!
Some british aircraft of the interwar period.
The De Havilland DH. 95 Flamingo was a British all-metal, twin-engined high-wing monoplane airliner, motorized by twin Perseus 9-cylinder, single row, sleeve valve radial aeroengine. With a crew of 2 pilots seated forward side by side and a radio operator behind them, and 12 to 17 passengers seats in the cabin. Flamingo first flown on December 1938. It was a modern and sound aircraft, capable of competing with the American Douglas DC-3 and Lockheed Model 10 Electra. One model, DH.95 Heresfordshire, was built to military specs, but due the war de 40 ordered were cancelled to free de Havilland factory to produce Tiger Moths trainers. Only 14 were built, and due the lack of spares, Flamingo was not a popular aircraft, despite beings Winston Churchill's favorite short/medium range transport and he flew it to visit Reynaud and the French leadership as the front collapsed on May 1940. Several aircraft survived the war, and were flown until the mid 1950s
The Cunliffe-Owen OA-Mk1 was a lifting-fuselage airliner designed and built by Vincent Burnelli. The only plane built was known as the Clyde Clipper. The sole aircraft was pressed into service by the RAF and was eventually turned over to the Free French Air Force in Africa (after a long flight, including a leg over ocupied France), where at one point it served as the personal transport of General Charles de Gaulle in 1941.
The Gloster F.9/37 was a British twin-engined cannon-armed heavy fighter. Intended for dispersed production by semi-skilled labour, the structure broke down into sub-assemblies. It was equiped with 1,060 hp Bristol Taurus radial engines, and in April 1939 demonstrated excellent performance, its maximum speed of 360 mph (580 km/h) being the best recorded by a British fighter at the time, but also was very manoeuvrable. Unfortunatelly, F.9/37 was not selected for production.
Finally, the Bristo Type 148, an all-metal, single engined, low wing monoplane, built as an army-cooperation aircraft. It lost in the competition to the well known Westland Lysander, which was prefered due the high wing and fixed landing gear, and did not progress past the two prototypes that were built.
Cheers.
PS: Do you know why two advanced valve sleeve radials as the Perseus and (specially) Taurus engines were not widely used? Thanks and cheers.
Edited: Done! Thanks, Hood!