FlightGlobal.com
Home
Premium
Archive
Video
Images
Forum
Atlas
Blogs
Jobs
Shop
RSS
Email Newsletters
You are in:
Home
Aviation History
1957
1957 - 0131.PDF
133 FLIGHT, 1 February 1957 The author of this article is seen in the centre of the group above with h is senior Britannia Fleet executives and officers. From left to right: Mr. D. E. Speigal, base engineer; Mr. D. J. McAllister, senior technical officer; Mr. E. J. Curwood, fleet engineer manager; Capt. W. B. Houston, fleet manager; Capt. A. S. M. Rendall, flight superintendent; Capt. F. W. Walton, officer in charge of training; Capt. F. A. Taylor, flight captain. BRITANNIA PRELUDE Background to the Introduction of a New Airliner By CAPTAIN W. B. HOUSTON, A.F.R.Ae.S., Fleet Manager, Britannias, B.O.A.C. THE Romans called our country Britannia. Charles IIthought there ought to be a symbolic "Britannia" on ourcoins. He had a particularly attractive girl-friend at the time called Barbara Villiers, Duchess of Cleveland, and she waschosen as the model. No record remains, so far as we know, of Barbara's vital statistics; but, undaunted, Doctor Russell ofBristol Aircraft has managed to produce another good-looking Britannia, even though she has a sharp nose, a twelve-foot waist-line and a prominent rear end. This model is no hot-tempered mistress of men but a gentle giant, submissive, tractable andkindly; or, in the words of one of our B.O.A.C. captains, "... a very fast old lady." The Corporation has put into service many aircraft types alreadywell tried by others, but the Britannia was raw from the makers. Our task was another "Comet exercise." This was not just anotherpiston-engined aeroplane; it was new and revolutionary. B.E.A. had ploughed a parallel furrow before us. We talked to them andflew in their Viscounts. We are indebted to them for their unstinted help. The Bristol Company produced a flying machine. We had toturn it into an operational airliner fit for passengers to fly in. The writing of the operations manual was perhaps the majoroperational task. Every word in the book got there after its justification had been proved. Every procedure, technique, emer-gency drill, chart and diagram found its place after months and months of hard work and hard thinking by highly experiencedflying staff and technicians. A new, highly streamlined navigation procedure based on that evolved for the Comet was worked out,tested on the route to Johannesburg and polished to perfection. Characteristics of performance began to emerge. For instance, itwas found that the reduction in T.A.S. to achieve long-range cruise was only 25 knots, whereas in a piston-engined aircraft suchas the Douglas DC-7C the loss is 50 to 60 kt. Thus inaccurate wind forecasts are not quite so painful to the Britannia. We found,too, that the descent speed could be stepped up from 190 kt to 225 kt without affecting spar life. This will save about three minuteson each sector without using any more fuel. Cabin service was worked out in detail by experienced cabincrews who gave the B.O.A.C.-takes-good-care-of-you treatment to cabins full of "guinea-pig" staff. Many a good free meal hasbeen enjoyed in the process. Much of the Bristols' overseas flying was done by our crews.This was a typical example of the mutually beneficial back- scratching which has pervaded the project during the last three ILLUSTRATED WITH "FLIGHT" PHOTOGRAPHS TAKEN AT LONDON AIRPORT LAST WEEK
Sign up to
Flight Digital Magazine
Flight Print Magazine
Airline Business Magazine
E-newsletters
RSS
Events