Shackleton-Murray SM.1
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The Shackleton-Murray SM.1 was a single-engined two-seat light aircraft designed in Britain and flying in 1933. It was a pusher driven parasol winged monoplane. Only one was built.


Development

William Shackleton designed the
Beardmore Wee Bee The Beardmore Wee Bee was a single-engined monoplane built only once and specifically for the Lympne two-seat light aircraft trials held in the United Kingdom in 1924. This plane won the major prize. Design and development The Beardmore W.B.XX ...
that won the first prize at the Lympne light aircraft trials#1924. He then set up in partnership with a fellow Australian, Lee Murray who wanted a machine of his own and had been impressed by the
Curtiss-Wright Junior The Curtiss-Wright CW-1 Junior, originally named the Curtiss-Robertson CR-1 Skeeter is a light sports aircraft produced in the United States in the 1930s. It had been intended to sell it for the price of a mid-range automobile. The Junior had tw ...
, a parasol-wing pusher driven two seater that had sold well in the United States. The influence of the Junior was clearly seen in the Shackleton-Murray SM.1, though in detail they were quite different. The SM.1 was a wooden-framed, fabric-covered parasol monoplane. The wing had constant chord and only slightly rounded tips, the latter built out of papier-mâché. It carried a pair of narrow ailerons, inboard of which were wing-folding boxes, hinged sections of the trailing edge which could be lifted up to allow the wings to fold backwards against the fuselage. All four spars were identical and the pairs of ailerons and wingboxes were interchangeable to keep the costs of spares low. Pairs of V-shaped lift struts ran from the lower fuselage longerons to the two wing spars. There were pairs of tall centre section struts to the wing from the top longerons in front of and behind the rear cockpit, keeping the wing high enough to provide easy access. The rear pair also supported the front of the Hirth HM 60 four cylinder inverted in-line engine mounted on the underside of the wing, assisted by another pair at the rear of it. The Hirth drove a two-bladed pusher propeller. With the engine high amidships, the pusher arrangement allowed the fuselage to sit close to the ground, making cockpit access easy. The fuselage was deep in the nose, and the front cockpit well forward. The rear cockpit was under the forward part of the wing; dual controls were fitted. Behind the rear cockpit the fuselage became less deep, providing clearance for the propeller tips and further aft was quite slender. A conventional fin and balanced rudder carried the rectangular tailplane, with its split elevators, about halfway up and strut-braced from below. The undercarriage was a split-axle design, with the main legs attached to the upper longerons just behind the rear cockpit and with pairs of bracing struts from the lower longerons. Though the wheels were small in diameter, they used low-pressure tyres. Unusually, the rear wheel was not at the tail but halfway between the trailing edges of wing and rudder. The SM.1 was built by Airspeed, starting at their York works and following them down to Portsmouth Airport in 1933. The date of its first flight, made from
Sherburn-in-Elmet Airfield Sherburn-in-Elmet Airfield is located east of Sherburn in Elmet village and west of Selby, North Yorkshire, England. Pre-War and Wartime history In the 1920s, the Yorkshire Aeroplane Club began operating here. The novelist, pilot, and aeron ...
is not recorded, but in September 1933 it went from London Air Park, Hanworth to Martlesham Heath Airfield for certification. Plans to put the SM.1 into production, using a
Pobjoy R The Pobjoy R is a British seven-cylinder air-cooled radial aircraft engine designed and built by Pobjoy Airmotors. Introduced in 1926, it was a popular engine for ultralight and small aircraft in the 1930s. A notable feature of the Pobjoy R was ...
radial were announced in May 1933, but came to nothing. The sole SM.1, registered ''G-ACBP'' in January 1935 was later sold to Lord Apsley of the Bristol and Wessex Aero Club, but came down in the sea off the Isle of Wight after the engine failed on 22 July 1936. Lord Apsley was picked up by a passing yacht.Western Daily Press - Friday 24 July 1936


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Cited sources

* {{refend 1930s British sport aircraft Parasol-wing aircraft Single-engined pusher aircraft Aircraft first flown in 1933