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Armstrong Whitworth Aircraft
Template:Infobox Defunct Company Sir W. G. Armstrong Whitworth Aircraft Company, or Armstrong Whitworth Aircraft, was a British aircraft manufacturer.
History
Armstrong Whitworth Aircraft was established as the Aerial Department of the Sir W. G Armstrong Whitworth & Company engineering group in Newcastle-upon-Tyne in 1912.
In 1920, Armstrong Whitworth acquired the engine and automobile manufacturer Siddeley-Deasy. The engine and automotive businesses of both companies were spun off as Armstrong Siddeley and the aircraft interests as the Sir W. G. Armstrong Whitworth Aircraft Company. When Vickers and Armstrong Whitworth merged in 1927 to form Vickers-Armstrongs, Armstrong Whitworth Aircraft and Armstrong Siddeley were bought out by J. D. Siddeley and did not join the new grouping. This left two aircraft companies with Armstrong in the name Vickers-Armstrongs (known usually as just "Vickers") and "Armstrong-Whitworth"
In 1935, J. D. Siddeley retired and Armstrong Whitworth Aircraft was purchased by Hawker Aircraft, the new group becoming Hawker Siddeley Aircraft. The component companies of Hawker Siddeley co-operated, but operated as individual entities.
Armstrong Whitworth Aircraft was eventually merged with another Hawker Siddeley company, Gloster Aircraft Company, in 1961. In 1963, Hawker Siddeley dropped the names of the component companies from its products, the last Armstrong Whitworth product, the Argosy, becoming the Hawker Siddeley Argosy.
Products
Date of first flight in parenthesis. Template:Listdev
- Armstrong Whitworth F.K.3 (1915)
- Armstrong Whitworth F.K.8 (1916) - "Big Ack" (1,200 built)
- Armstrong Whitworth F.K.9 (1916)
- Armstrong Whitworth F.K.10 (1917) - "Quadriplane" (8 built)
- Armstrong Whitworth Armadillo
- Armstrong Whitworth Ara
- Armstrong Whitworth Tadpole
- Armstrong Whitworth Siskin (1919)
- Armstrong Whitworth Awana (1923)
- Armstrong Whitworth Wolf (1923)
- Armstrong Whitworth Atlas (1925)
- Armstrong Whitworth Ajax (1925)
- Armstrong Whitworth A.W.14 Starling
- Armstrong Whitworth Ape (1926)
- Armstrong Whitworth Argosy (1926)
- Armstrong Whitworth A.W.16
- Armstrong Whitworth A.W.17 Aries (1930)
- Armstrong Whitworth A.W.15 Atalanta (1932)
- Armstrong Whitworth A.W.19 (1934)
- Armstrong Whitworth A.W.23 (1935)
- Armstrong Whitworth A.W.35 Scimitar (1935)
- Armstrong Whitworth A.W.38 Whitley (1936)
- Armstrong Whitworth A.W.27 Ensign (1938)
- Armstrong Whitworth A.W.41 Albermarle (1940)
- Armstrong Whitworth A.W.52 (1947) - flying wing, prototype only
- Armstrong Whitworth Apollo (1949)
- Armstrong Whitworth Argosy (AW.650 / 660) (1959)
- Armstrong Whitworth AW.169 - proposed design for Operational Requirement F.155 high altitude supersonic interceptor
- Armstrong Whitworth AW.171 - supersonic VTOL flying wing
- Hawker Sea Hawk - produced as part of Hawker Siddeley Aircraft
- Gloster Meteor NF.11 - produced as part of Hawker Siddeley Aircraft
Airships
- R25- airship
- R29 (airship)''R29'' - airship
- R33 - airship
Missiles
External links
See also
Lists relating to aviation | |
---|---|
General | Timeline of aviation · Aircraft · Aircraft manufacturers · Aircraft engines · Aircraft engine manufacturers · Airports · Airlines |
Military | Air forces · Aircraft weapons · Missiles · Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) · Experimental aircraft |
Notable incidents and accidents | Military aviation · Airliners · General aviation · Famous aviation-related deaths |
Records | Flight airspeed record · Flight distance record · Flight altitude record · Flight endurance record · Most produced aircraft |
de:Armstrong Whitworth Aircraft
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Armstrong Whitworth Aircraft". |