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Viscount, Comet and Concorde: Legends of the Air 3
 
 
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Viscount, Comet and Concorde: Legends of the Air 3 [Paperback]

Australian Aviation (Author), Stewart Wilson (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)


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Book Description

September 1996 Legends of the Air, 3
The three great British postwar airliners come alive in this the third edition of the Legends of the Air series. One was a pioneer in jet air transport that paid the price of discovering a previously relatively unknown problem in airframe design - fatigue. One was a major commercial success by any standard and a leader in its field. The third was an incomparable technological success that did not find its anticipated world market for a wide variety of reasons.

But for the little appreciated effects of metal fatigue associated with the new art of pressurisation, de Havilland's Comet would have secured the destiny of the British aircraft industry for decades to come, so advanced was it compared with the competition.

Meanwhile, the Viscount had no such problems, some 444 were built and the type even met with success in the fiercely contested North American market..

The Anglo French Concorde, the 'Big Racer', is elegance personified in an airframe designed in the pre digital age and yet after more than two decades of ultra safe day to day supersonic service is now set to fly on till at least 2010.

Viscount, Comet & Concorde features around 70,000 words of text, hundreds of photographs, 48 specifically commissioned color sideview drawings, technical drawings, specification and production tables, and more.


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Editorial Reviews

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

Intensive Investigation

A Court of Inquiry was established by the British Minister of Transport and Civil Aviation to report on the findings of the investigations into the Comet crashes, concentrating on the Elba (G-ALYP) and Naples (G-ALYY) accidents.

The Comet's structural integrity was the obvious centre of attention and two key activities were used to shed some light on this: the RAE's water tank which contained the fuselage of Comet 1 G-ALYU, and the remains of the Elba Comet, which was being 'reconstructed' at Farnborough over a period of several months as parts were gradually recovered. In addition, Comet 1A G-ANAV (the surviving Canadian Pacific aircraft which had been allocated to BOAC) was test flown to check that uncontrolled flutter of some part of the airframe had not contributed to the accidents.

The water tank test specimen at Farnborough provided the breakthrough in July 1954 when the structure failed after 1,830 simulated 'flights' had been made, these in addition to the 1,239 real flights the aircraft had logged prior to its grounding. De Havilland's engineers were mortified by this as the failure occurred well before the company's own estimates of a 'safe' life, remembering that over 16,000 'flights' had been simulated during the Comet's early structural testing.

It was later realised that de Havilland's testing methods had been fatally flawed due to a lack of knowledge. The test cabins had been pressurised to more than twice their normal level in order to impose greater stresses and - or so it was thought - to provide a healthy safety margin. The effect was the opposite as the higher pressure tended to bed down component parts, change the molecular structure of the metal and actually make it more resistant to fatigue failure! Nothing was known of this phenomenon at the time.

Examination of the test fuselage in the Farnborough water tank revealed the initial failure had occurred at a rivet hole in the corner of one of the square cabin windows and spread, creating a tear in the cabin skin eight feet (2.4m) long. Hairline fatigue cracks were also found starting in the rivet holes for the square ADF antenna cutout on the top of the fuselage.


Product Details

  • Paperback: 200 pages
  • Publisher: Australian Aviation (September 1996)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1875671218
  • ISBN-13: 978-1875671212
  • Product Dimensions: 10.9 x 8.3 x 0.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,713,446 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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5.0 out of 5 stars Trend-Setting Book on Three Trend-Setting British Airliners, December 6, 2003
By 
Daniel L. Berek (Flanders, NJ, United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Viscount, Comet and Concorde: Legends of the Air 3 (Paperback)
In the 1950s and 1960s, three new British airliners forever changed the way we travel by air. They were the De Havilland DH.106 Trident, Vickers Viscount, and BAC/Aerospatiale Concorde. Two other pioneers were Sud Aviation SE-210 Caravelle, Tupolev Tu-104, and BAC-111; I would love to see these three treated together in another volume.

The Comet was the first production jet airliner, and the plane paid a heavy price for that distinction. Although De Havilland took strong precautions in designing a pressurized airliner that would fly higher and faster than anything before, the concept of metal fatigue was not well understood. Several well-publicized crashes doomed the success of the Comet; when the redesigned Comet 4 emerged, the British airliner was easily outclassed by the Boeing 707 and Douglas DC-8, both of which benefited from what was learned from the Comet.

The Viscount was the world's first turboprop airliner. The difference between the new turbine and previous piston engine was readily apparent and appreciated among passengers; the Viscount heralded a new standard of comfort and reliability in short- to medium-range air travel. Vickers sold 444 airframes, making it the most successful British airliner ever. The plane's engines themselves are an aviation classic; the superb Rolls-Royce Dart went on to power the Fokker F-27, Handley-Page Dart Herald, and Hawker-Siddeley HS.748 among other aircraft.

The Concorde speaks for itself. Though the Tupolev Tu-144 preceded Concorde, the Anglo-French airliner remains the only successful supersonic transport. With its recent 2003 retirement, the Concorde has attained somewhat of a cult status.

Mr. Stewart has presented three very different British designs, each it its own way a pioneer. Each section includes a detailed production list, data on types and subtypes, and detailed sketches. This book is a highly worthy addition to any commercial aviation enthusiast's bookshelf.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
The three aircraft covered in this volume - the Vickers Viscount, de Havilland Comet and BAC/Aerospatiale Concorde - in many ways sum up the British commercial aircraft industry in the postwar era. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Air France, British Airways, New York, Aer Lingus, British European Airways, Ministry of Supply, Hawker Siddeley, Capital Airlines, Brabazon Committee, All Nippon, Hunting Clan, Indian Airlines, New Zealand, Handley Page, Vickers Viscount, World War, Fred Olsen, London Heathrow, Aerolineas Argentinas, John Cunningham, Pan American, Royal Dutch, Sudan Airways, Central African, Channel Airways
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