Short Sarafand

S.14 Sarafand
The prototype and only Sarafand at Felixstowe in 1932
Role Flying boat
Manufacturer Short Brothers
First flight 30 June 1932
Retired 1936
Primary user Royal Air Force
Number built 1
Developed from Short Singapore

The Short S.14 Sarafand was a British biplane flying boat built by Short Brothers. It was planned as a general reconnaissance aircraft for military service. When it was built in 1932 it was the largest aeroplane that had been built in the United Kingdom.

The Sarafand was first proposed by Oswald Short in 1928 as an enlarged development of the Singapore II, to provide transatlantic range capabilitity. Short managed to persuade first his chief designer Arthur Gouge and then the Chief of the Air Staff, Sir Hugh Trenchard (later Viscount Trenchard) of the feasibility of such a large aircraft and Air Ministry specification R.6/28 was drawn up to define the project. It was conducted as a public/private joint venture, the Air Ministry funding it with £60,000 and Short Brothers providing the rest.[1] The aircraft was originally designated the Short R6/28 before being named the Sarafand.

Design

The Sarafand was a six-engined biplane flying boat with equal span wings. Due to the high wing end loads, Gouge specified corrugated steel spars for both upper and lower wings. The six engines, in tractor/pusher pairs, were housed in monocoque nacelles mounted between the wings on integral girders; the central nacelle was further supported by two pairs of splayed struts to the lower wing-roots. The hull, largely constructed of anodised Alclad, had a stainless-steel planing bottom.[2] It had a monoplane tail unit with one large fin and two small auxiliary fins on the tailplane.

Operational history

The maiden flight, with Shorts' Chief Test Pilot, John Lankester Parker at the controls and Oswald Short as co-pilot, was made at Rochester on the River Medway on 30 June 1932.[3] Only one S.14 was built (serial S1589) and it was later used for experimental flying at the Marine Aircraft Experimental Establishment at Felixstowe. The Sarafand was scrapped there in 1936.

Operators

 United Kingdom

Specifications

Data from The Short "Sarafand" [4]

General characteristics

Performance

Armament

See also

Related development
Aircraft of comparable role, configuration and era

References

  1. Barnes & James, p. 257
  2. Barnes & James, p. 257-260
  3. Barnes & James, p. 259
  4. Flight 13 June 1935, p.634.
  5. Barnes & James, p. 260

External links

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