Vickers Viget
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

The Vickers Viget was Vickers' entrant for the first Lympne light aircraft competition, held in 1923. It was a single-seat, single-engined biplane with folding wings.


Development

In 1923 the Royal Aero Club (RAeC) organised what became known as the Lympne Light Aeroplane Trials, although the RAeC referred to the competing aircraft as motor-gliders. They were required to be single-seaters. The intention was to encourage the development economical private aviation, so the engine size was limited to 750 cc. Various sponsors provided the prizes, particularly the total of £1500 jointly from the Duke of Sutherland and the Daily Mail. The event took place from 8–13 October 1923. There were many entrants from the British aviation industry, including the
de Havilland Humming Bird The de Havilland DH.53 Humming Bird is a British single-seat, single-engine, low-wing monoplane light aircraft first flown in the 1920s. Design and development In response to the ''Daily Mail'' Light Aeroplane Competition of 1923 de Havilland ...
and the
Gloster Gannet The Gloster Gannet was a single-seat single-engined light aircraft built by the Gloucestershire Aircraft Company Limited of Cheltenham, United Kingdom, to compete in the 1923 Lympne Trials. Engine development problems prevented it from taking ...
. The Type 89 Viget was Vickers' entry. It was a small single-bay biplane with constant chord wings of no stagger. There was dihedral on the lower plane only. Full span ailerons were fitted on both upper and lower wings. The lower wing was mounted on the bottom of the fuselage and the upper one well clear of the head of the pilot, who sat under it in an open cockpit. The wings folded, as the competition rules required this for ease of storage. The fuselage was deep for its width and carried a conventional, rather square cut empennage with unbalanced control surfaces. The single-axle undercarriage was braced to the front and rear wing spars at the roots, the legs splayed out to broaden the track. A 750 cc
Douglas Douglas may refer to: People * Douglas (given name) * Douglas (surname) Animals * Douglas (parrot), macaw that starred as the parrot ''Rosalinda'' in Pippi Longstocking *Douglas the camel, a camel in the Confederate Army in the American Civi ...
motorcycle engine was mounted horizontally, with the cylinder heads protruding either side below the propeller boss. The Viget flew well enough at Lympne in the hands of Stan Cockerell, but failed to win prizes. It did win some publicity after a rocker arm failure led to a forced landing about six miles from Lympne. Cockerell folded the wings and pushed the aircraft home, stopping at a pub. When he returned to the aircraft for the final leg, he found an expectant crowd who had mistaken it for a Punch and Judy booth. Vickers attempted to sell the Viget, advertising it in 1924 as suitable for "Sports, commercial and training purposes". Despite the suggestion in the advertisement that it could be fitted with a Bristol Cherub or an unspecified Blackburne engine, there is no evidence that either of these was installed. Only one Viget, registered ''G-EBHN'',CAA registration
/ref> was built. It was registered on 3 August 1923 and deregistered on 21 January 1929.


Specifications


References


Notes


Bibliography

* * {{Vickers aircraft 1920s British sport aircraft Viget Biplanes Single-engined tractor aircraft Aircraft first flown in 1923