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Avions Fairey Junior

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The Avions Fairey Junior, also known as the Tipsy Junior was a single-seat light aircraft built in Belgium following World War II.

Development

The Junior was one of a series of light aircraft[1] designed by and named after E.O.Tips of Fairey Aviation's Belgian subsidiary, Avions Fairey. Of wood and fabric construction, it was a conventional, low-wing monoplane with a tailwheel undercarriage and a single seat, open cockpit[2], though there was the option of a bubble hood.[3] The constant chord wings were almost square ended and the tailplane, fin and rudder also angular. Both completed aircraft were initially powered by the 36 hp (27 kW) Aeronca JAP J-99 engine, later replaced by the more powerful, 62 hp (46 kW) Walter Mikron 2[2][4].

The Junior, registered OO-TIT, flew for the first time on 30 June 1947 from Gosselies in Belgium.[3]

Operational history

The first Junior was written off after a hard landing in 1948.[5]

The second example (construction number J.111, registration OO-ULA) was bought by Fairey and taken to England in 1953, where it was registered as G-AMVP.[2][4] In 1957, it was used in a publicity stunt when Fairey test pilot Peter Twiss landed it on the aircraft carrier HMS Ark Royal. For part of its time it had the bubble canopy. Rebuilt after a long time in storage following a forced landing in 1993[5], it flew again late in 2006.[5] It had a minor landing accident in 2008[6] but had a permit to fly until May 2009.[7]

The Junior did not sell, and the third airframe was cancelled before completion. It was purchased incomplete by Fairey in 1961 and has been under construction in the hands of a number of owners in the intervening years, but never finished.[5]

Specifications

File:Fj4.jpg
Flying scale model of Avions Fairey Tipsy Junior, built by Donald Granlund

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References

Notes

Bibliography

  • Taylor, H.O. (1974). Fairey Aircraft since 1915. London: Putnam Publishing. ISBN 0 370 00065 X. 
  • Jackson, A.J. (1960). British Civil Aircraft 1919-59 vol 2. London: Putnam Publishing. 
  • Taylor, Michael J. H. (1989). Jane's Encyclopedia of Aviation. London: Studio Editions, 90. 
  • Simpson, R. W. (1995). Airlife's General Aviation. Shrewsbury: Airlife Publishing, 387. 

See also

Template:Fairey aircraft

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Avions Fairey Junior".