Beagle M.218
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The Beagle B.218X (also known as the Beagle-Miles M.218) was a 1960s British four-seat twin-engined light transport monoplane built by Beagle Aircraft Limited at Shoreham Airport. The prototype was modified into the Beagle B.242X but neither variant entered production.


Design and development

Before it became part of Beagle, F. G. Miles Ltd had looked at producing replacements for the (single-engined)
Miles Messenger The Miles M.38 Messenger is a British four-seat liaison and private owner aircraft built by Miles Aircraft. Design and development The Messenger was designed to meet an informal request from a group of British Army officers for a robust, slow ...
and (twin-engined) Gemini. Three low-wing monoplane designs were considered, the single-engined fixed landing gear Miles 114 in two and four-seat versions and the retractable landing gear twin-engined four-seat Miles 115. When Beagle was formed it was decided to build a prototype of the Miles 115 design designated the Beagle-Miles M.218X; it was also decided to build a prototype of the Miles 114 as the M.117 but in the end it was not built. The M.218 was of plastic and metal construction; the wing spar box and the rear lower fuselage were made from aluminium alloy which formed a T-shaped load bearing structure which carried the metal tailplane and all the plastic components. It was powered by two
Rolls-Royce Continental O-300 The Continental O-300 and the C145 are a family of air-cooled flat-6 aircraft piston engines built by Teledyne Continental Motors.Christy, Joe: ''Engines for Homebuilt Aircraft & Ultralights'', pages 60-63. TAB Books, 1983. First produced in ...
piston engines and had a retractable tricycle landing gear. Construction started at the end of 1961 and it made its first flight at Shoreham on 19 August 1962.
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''G-ASCK'' it was displayed at the 1962
Farnborough Air Show The Farnborough Airshow, officially the Farnborough International Airshow, is a trade exhibition for the aerospace and defence industries, where civilian and military aircraft are demonstrated to potential customers and investors. Since its fir ...
priced at £9,800, it did create interest from customers although they had a preference for metal built aircraft rather than the plastic M.218. The production aircraft were to be named ''Martlet'' but the company did not have the money to put it into production due to the overspend on the
Beagle B.206 The Beagle B.206 is a 1960s British seven-seat twin-piston engined liaison and communication aircraft built by Beagle Aircraft Limited at Shoreham Airport and Rearsby Aerodrome. Design and development The design of a twin-engined light tr ...
. In May 1963, George Miles left Beagle and the M.218 designation was changed to B.218. The prototype was grounded in February 1964 for extensive modification. The majority of the glass fibre components were replaced in light alloy, which incorporated the original T-frame structure, with more powerful IO-360 engines fitted. Now re-registered ''G-ASTX'' and designated as the Beagle B.242X, it flew again on 27 August 1964. The aircraft was issued with a certificate of airworthiness on 18 June 1965 but the company was focussed on the production of the twin-engined Beagle B.206 and the design of the single-engined Beagle Pup and could not afford to further develop the type or put it into production, although a second airframe was commenced. The prototype was withdrawn from use in 1966 and subsequently destroyed in a building fire in August 1969. The Beagle M.218 was unsuccessful as it became a political football in the internal strife between the former Miles Aircraft directors and the Beagle board; although it was attractive to Beagle distributors, it was seen as a competitor to the Beagle 206. Over £300,000 was spent on the project for which Beagle had neither a cohesive plan nor the necessary resources to produce.


Variants

;Beagle B.218X :Prototype with O-300 engines, 1 built. ;Beagle B.242X :M.218 rebuilt with extensive modifications and fitted with IO-360 engines.


Specifications (B.218X)


See also


References

;Notes ;Sources * * * * {{Miles aircraft 1960s British civil utility aircraft B218 Low-wing aircraft Aircraft first flown in 1962 Twin piston-engined tractor aircraft