The Short Type 827 was a 1910s British two-seat reconnaissance floatplane. It was also known as the Short Admiralty Type 827.
Short 827 and 830 | |
---|---|
Short Type 827 (8237), at Lee-on-Solent, 1918, drastically altered with equal-span constant-chord three-bay wings | |
Role | Reconnaissance |
National origin | United Kingdom |
Manufacturer | Short Brothers |
First flight | 1914 |
Primary user | Royal Naval Air Service |
Number built | 108 (Type 827) 18 (Type 830) |
Design and development
editThe Short Type 827 was a two-bay biplane with unswept unequal-span wings, a slightly smaller development of the Short Type 166. It had a box-section fuselage mounted on the lower wing. It had twin floats under the forward fuselage, plus small floats fitted at the wingtips and tail. It was powered by a nose-mounted 155 hp (116 kW) Sunbeam Nubian engine, with a two-bladed tractor propeller. The crew of two sat in open cockpits in tandem.
The aircraft was built by Short Brothers (36 aircraft,[1]) and also produced by different contractors around the United Kingdom, i.e. Brush Electrical (20), Parnall (20), Fairey (12) and Sunbeam (20).[2]
The Short Type 830 was a variant, powered by a 135 hp (101 kW) Salmson water-cooled radial engine.
Variants
edit- Type 827
- Production aircraft with a Sunbeam Nubian engine, 108 built.
- Type 830
- Variant powered by a 135 hp (100 kW) Salmson[3] 18 built.[1]
- S.301
- A batch of ten tractor seaplanes, officially listed as Type 830s,[where?] with a 140 hp (104 kW) Salmson-Canton-Unné engine, are sometimes described as Short S.301s after the sequence/construction number of the first aircraft. It was a hybrid design, with the wings and fuselage of the Short Type 166, and the straight-edged ailerons and forward observer's position of the Type 830.[4]
Operators
editSpecifications (Type 827)
editData from Orbis 1985[5]
General characteristics
- Crew: two (pilot, observer)
- Length: 35 ft 3 in (10.74 m)
- Wingspan: 53 ft 11 in (16.43 m)
- Height: 13 ft 6 in (4.11 m)
- Wing area: 506 sq ft (47.0 m2)
- Empty weight: 2,700 lb (1,225 kg)
- Gross weight: 3,400 lb (1,542 kg)
- Powerplant: 1 × Sunbeam Nubian water-cooled V-8 engine, 150 hp (110 kW)
Performance
- Maximum speed: 62 mph (100 km/h, 54 kn)
- Endurance: 3 hr 30 min
Armament
- Guns: 1 x .303 Lewis Gun on flexible mount in rear cockpit
- Bombs: Provision for light bombs on underwing racks
See also
editRelated development
Related lists
Notes
editBibliography
edit- Barnes C.H. & James D.N (1989). Shorts Aircraft since 1900. London: Putnam. p. 560. ISBN 0-85177-819-4.
- Bruce, J.M (1956). "The Short Seaplanes: Historic Military Aircraft No 14: Part II". Flight. No. 21 December 1956. pp. 965–968.
- Bruce, J.M (1957). "The Short Seaplanes: Historic Military Aircraft No 14: Part IV". Flight. No. 4 January 1957. pp. 23–24.
- Klaauw, Bart van der (March–April 1999). "Unexpected Windfalls: Accidentally or Deliberately, More than 100 Aircraft 'arrived' in Dutch Territory During the Great War". Air Enthusiast (80): 54–59. ISSN 0143-5450.
Further reading
edit- Taylor, Michael J. H. (1989). Jane's Encyclopedia of Aviation. London: Studio Editions. p. 801.
- The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Aircraft (Part Work 1982–1985). Orbis Publishing.
External links
edit- Short 827 – British Aircraft Directory