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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Design and development  





2 History  





3 Operators  





4 Specifications  





5 See also  





6 References  





7 External links  














Slingsby Falcon






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


T.1/T.2 Falcon
Role Sport Glider
National origin United Kingdom
Manufacturer Slingsby Sailplanes
Designer Alexander Lippisch
First flight 1931
Number built 11 (1 x T.1 Falcon, 1 x T.2 Falcon 2, 8 x T.1 Falcon, 1 x reproduction)
Developed from Lippisch Falke
Variants Slingsby T.4 Falcon 3

The Slingsby T.1/T.2 FalconorBritish Falcon) was a single-seat sport glider produced, in 1931–37, by Fred SlingsbyinScarborough, Yorkshire.

Design and development

[edit]

The Falcon was constructed from plans supplied by the Rhön-Rossitten Gesellschaft (the controlling body for glidinginGermany). Originally designed by Alexander Lippisch, the T.1 was a single-seat sport glider of moderate performance for its day. The fuselage was primarily of wooden construction with six longerons, built-up frames, plywood skinning forward of the central pylon and fabric covering aft. The parasol wings were conventional in design and construction with built-up ribs and spars, plywood covering forward of the main spars and fabric aft. They were swept at 12.5o but carried ailerons with unswept hinges and rounded trailing edges. The wings were built in two parts joined at the centre, supported by a pylon and a total of eight struts, four vertical from the top longerons and four in vee pairs from the bottom longerons to approx 1/3-span. The tail surfaces were constructed in a similar fashion also braced with struts.

History

[edit]

Fred Slingsby had noticed the lack of 'Intermediate' gliders available in England. At the recommendation of Guenther Groenhoff he acquired the plans for Lippisch's Falke and built ten aircraft: the Falcon, Falcon 2 and eight further Falcons (a.k.a. British Falcon). These aircraft were flown successfully for many years, but gradually succumbed until none were left airworthy. One was exported to Canada, and one was converted to a flying-boat glider for use by the Air Training CorpsonWindermere, surviving to this day in the Windermere Steamboat Museum. During 1984-5 Ken Fripp of Southdown Aero ServicesatLasham built a reproduction Falcon from original plans for Mike Russell, bringing the total built to eleven.

Operators

[edit]
 United Kingdom

Specifications

[edit]

Data from [citation needed]

General characteristics

Performance

See also

[edit]

Related lists

References

[edit]
[edit]
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Slingsby_Falcon&oldid=1117960767"

Categories: 
1930s British sailplanes
Glider aircraft
Slingsby aircraft
Aircraft first flown in 1931
Parasol-wing aircraft
Hidden categories: 
Articles with short description
Short description matches Wikidata
Use dmy dates from December 2016
Use British English from December 2016
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Articles lacking in-text citations from January 2010
All articles lacking in-text citations
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This page was last edited on 24 October 2022, at 13:10 (UTC).

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